RawStory

Opinion

Dr Oz, and how Oprah’s weakness for crackpot theories tarnishes her legacy

I view my weakness for Oprah Winfrey – which has been lifelong and surprisingly dedicated – akin to my fondness for Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups and 1980s Steve Guttenberg movies: inexplicable to the non-devoted and deeply, deeply American. I’ve loved Winfrey since I started watching her talkshow as a teenager. Her warmth and enthusiasm – by now so heavily parodied by Saturday Night Live and others – were downright entrancing to me when I was growing up in Britain in the 90s, where any display of emotion that wasn’t couched in irony or cynicism was derided as embarrassing.

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Police procedural 2015: Kill all suspects

American Policing 101, for the year 2015: Principles to memorize.

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Right-wing bigots destroyed LGBT lives for decades -- and now they claim to be victims

As a gay man, I admit that I am encouraged by what I see as a more LGBT-inclusive American society.

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Why blacks running from cops is entirely logical -- and so common

Michael Brown. Walter Scott. Eric Harris. Freddie Gray.

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Americans think prison rape is funny because of who gets hurt

Prison rape is a staple of American comedy because nothing is as hilarious as bad people getting their comeuppance – especially if they are black men

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The state still controls women's bodies -- especially brown and black ones

Minorities experience higher levels of discrimination when it comes to accessing reproductive healthcare. Yet their stories are absent from the mainstream

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Robert Reich: The new flexible economy is making workers’ lives hell

These days it’s not unusual for someone on the way to work to receive a text message from her employer saying she’s not needed right then.

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A woman president would be cool, but I’m not sold on Hillary Clinton yet

The feminist establishment has declared her our candidate. However, many of the same women once chose politics (and Bill Clinton) over sisterhood

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A new civil rights movement emerging in the wake of police shootings

Recent widespread attention to shocking instances of alleged police misconduct – the killings of Michael Brown, Eric Garner, Tamir Rice, and now Walter Scott – have rallied voices across the country in defense of equal protection under the rule of law.

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Why do white people think people of color are obligated to teach them about race?

[People of color] are expected to educate white people as to our humanity. Women are expected to educate men. Lesbians and gay men are expected to educate the heterosexual world. The oppressors maintain their position and evade their responsibility for their own actions. —Audre Lorde

America loves teachable moments, those real-life Very Special Episodes of supposed cross-cultural exchange and transracial learning.

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Rubio and Cruz as 'Great Brown Hopes' show how little Republicans know about Latinos

They are terrible candidates for the Republicans to pick if the goal is to recruit the constituency they so desperately need to stay relevant

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The silence on abuse of transgender inmates in US prisons is deafening

Ashley Diamond, a transgender inmate who was denied medically necessary hormones by the Georgia correctional system, was raped seven times, called a “he-she thing”, and thrown into solitary confinement for “pretending” to be a woman.

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Reflections of a black female scholar: I know what it feels like to be invisible

A new insurance commercial shows comedian Mindy Kaling embracing what it means to be invisible: As Kaling walks down the grocery aisle messily eating ice cream, she uses her “cloak” of invisibility to feel up the muscles of a handsome basketball player.

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