RawStory

Opinion

Sorry, right-wing xenophobes: Patriotic radicals and progressives are what made America great

July 4 is an occasion for Americans to express their patriotism. But the ways we do so are as diverse as our nation.

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How the digital divide afflicts US politics with divisiveness, paralysis and seething anger

When we talk about the media’s effect on our political discourse, usually we’re referring to the way politics are reported. There are, of course, lots of other ways in which media mediate the political process, from ads to organizing to community building to fundraising, all of which play major roles in our elections. Yet much larger than any of these may be the way the media alter our thinking about politics — purveying not just narratives that often decisively shape our opinions of a Trump or a Clinton or a Sanders, but also the larger psychological context in which we conceptualize our world and ourselves.

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The West's Christian world view is a hindrance to peaceful co-existence

How do you identify yourself within the human race? Religion and ethnicity may both play a part, and at first glance seem to be distinct categories. We may think of religion as a choice we make freely, whereas our ethnicity or race is stamped at birth. But there are complex overlaps between these elements.

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Sorry, but I have no sympathy for old England-First cranks and soccer hooligans

We tend to bend over backwards to understand what motivates awful white people to be awful. If they’re lashing out against immigrants or people of color, it can’t be because they’re bigots – it’s because they’ve been savaged by globalization. We tut-tut about their sense that their culture is slipping away, even if that culture embraces Confederate romanticism or football hooliganism. Oh, yes, we tell ourselves, the elites clearly have driven a massive increase in economic insecurity, so it’s perfectly understandable that they’d be drawn to Donald Trump or UKIP. Or vote leave.

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Deadlocked: what a nine-word decision means for five million undocumented immigrants

Yesterday, the Supreme Court deadlocked on U.S. v. Texas, the most important immigration case of the year.

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By riding the tiger of populism, the Conservatives may have destroyed the UK

It’s a familiar cliché that the Conservative Party is the most successful political party in the democratic world. Once called the natural party of government, it has been in power for most of the last 150 years and, for good or ill, has shaped modern Britain. The UK is a conservative country in all senses of the word.

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Five things progressives need to do to rebound from the Brexit disaster

As the United Kingdom votes to leave the European Union, people on both sides of the Atlantic scramble to find who’s responsible. But there’s plenty of blame to go around.

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Evangelicals love Trump because he is like the petty, jealous, wrathful God of the Old Testament

Is it Trump’s god-complex or God’s Trump-complex?  Either way Trump and Jehovah have an awful lot in common.

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What would Trump fascism look like? A look at a dystopian future

Given how immigrant bashing is central to his appeal, it’s best to rebrand Mr. Drumpf (Trump) by his original family name. The man best known for hatred of immigrants has a grandfather, mother, wife, and ex-wife who are immigrants. Some accounts point to the grandfather changing his name during the height of anti-German hatred during World War I.

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Corporate wrongdoing is underpinned by a morality that many of us have voted for

Corporate fraud is not just present, but is widespread in many neoliberalised economies of both income-rich and income-poor countries. Volkswagen’s emissions cheating scandal is perhaps the most recent and most startling example, but the automobile industry is only one of many sectors, including banking and the arms industry, where scandals have become commonplace. Certain practices and norms that many people in the global North considered shocking only a while ago have become routine in public life.

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Environmental doom, Trump's glorification of consumption and the flimflamming of a fool

In the 1970s two important voices warned us that us that the American materialism of the time was dangerous. One came from the economist/environmentalist E. F. Schumacher (1911-1977), the other from President Jimmy Carter. We did not heed the warnings of either man. Today, many years of environmental deterioration and U. S. war-waging in Afghanistan and Iraq later, the consequences of not heeding their warnings is clearer than ever. To make matters worse, one of our two major contenders for the U.S. presidency, Donald Trump, epitomizes the dangers about which Schumacher and Carter warned us.

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Robert Reich says Hillary Clinton needs to offer a ‘big idea’ to win -- but will she listen?

If Donald Trump continues to implode, Hillary Clinton will win simply by being the presidential candidate who isn’t Trump.

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Meet the shock troops of Trump's America

The Portland State University Students for Trump gathered on a Friday afternoon in June on the downtown campus to build a replica of “the great wall of Trump.” The wall was four pieces of plywood painted to look like red bricks, and plastered with a black “T” and photocopies of Trump’s head. The Facebook post for the event announced, “Mexico and Black Lives Matter are going to need help paying for the wall so we'll be holding a collection.”

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