RawStory

Opinion

Can we cure the toxicity of traditional masculinity and the resulting illnesses it creates?

This article first appeared at Yes! Magazine.

The traditional rules about how to be a “real man” in America are breaking down. Economic upheaval has shifted wage earning from men to their wives or partners. The rise of men as primary caregivers of their children is challenging our most fundamental assumptions about gender. The gay rights and trans rights movements are creating expansive new definitions of masculinity. Millennials are leading a much broader acceptance of diversity.

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Bill Moyers: Republicans seek to prove ignorance is strength while they rip the country apart

For reasons hard to fathom, the Republicans seem to have made up their minds: they will divide, degrade and secede from the Union.

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Liberals bear a share of the responsibility for war fever

MythicAmerica explores the mythic dimension of American political culture, past, present, and future. The blogger, Ira Chernus, is Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Colorado at Boulder and author of Apocalypse Management: Eisenhower and the Discourse of National Insecurity

In the wake of the Islamic State (IS) attacks in Paris, many American liberals, from the president on down,  have accused conservatives of something like warmongering – rushing to demand large-scale U.S. military force in response to a perhaps exaggerated IS threat. There is plenty of truth to the charge. But before they point the finger of blame, liberals should take a good look in a mirror framed by historical perspective and consider their own role in the move toward wider war.

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The rise of ISIS, the war on terror, the attack on Paris -- these are symptoms of a civilization in its twilight

This article was originally published at Yes! Magazine.

In much the same way that 9/11 saw the birth of a new era of perpetual war in the Muslim world, the 11/13 Paris attacks are giving rise to a new phase in that perpetual war: a relentless state of emergency, in which citizens are expected, in the words of British Home Secretary Theresa May, to possess “vigilance”—a euphemism for constant paranoia, suspicion, and fear in their everyday dealings with other citizens.

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Believing Trump will inevitably fail is just wishful thinking

This article was originally published at The Washington Spectator

One of the reasons I’ve been writing so much about the Donald Trump phenomenon has little to do with Trump himself. Rather, it concerns a subject of deeper fascination to me: the moeurs of America’s pundit class. That in any given era, the content of their opinioneering says more about them as a class than any particular subject of their maunderings. In these Disunited States, those who rise to rarified heights in the profession of opinion-mongering almost always do so by dint of their success in stretching our messy reality to fit a certain single socially approved conclusion: that America is in fact united. That extremes always revert to the mean, and that radicalism of any stripe always eventually fails, or falls away. They pronounced that Barry Goldwater, because he was on the verge of running for president, was going to quit being conservative, a “fascinating biological process, like watching a polliwog turn into a frog (The New Republic’s TRB, in 1963). “This is probably the end of Reagan’s political career,” they said in 1976 after he lost the Republican nomination to moderate Jerry Ford (the New Yorker’s Elizabeth Drew). And in 2002, they prophesized that the conservative movement was on its deathbed because it was “mired in ideological warfare at a time when the nation demands ideological peace” (Nina Easton of Fortune).

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Georgia man suffering mental health crisis dies after getting repeatedly tasered by police

American police have once against demonstrated that their agenda is not to protect and serve, but to dominate and control by any means necessary. On November 20th, sheriff deputies in Coweta County, Georgia were summoned to help subdue a man having a psychotic breakdown and ended up tasing him to death.

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Can anyone save atheism from New Atheists like Richard Dawkins and Sam Harris?

Why are the New Atheists such jerks? Case in point: Richard Dawkins’ continuing pursuit of Ahmed Mohamed, the Texas 14-year-old humiliated in school after authorities mistook his homemade clock for a bomb.

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Our culture and laws enabled Colorado's Planned Parenthood shooter -- whatever his motive

The Planned Parenthood shooter had easy access to guns and a movement dedicated to demonizing reproductive choice. Is his motive really a question?

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High-tech consumerism -- a global catastrophe happening on our watch

This article is part of the Democracy Futures series, a joint global initiative with the Sydney Democracy Network. The project aims to stimulate fresh thinking about the many challenges facing democracies in the 21st century.

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Consumerism makes us live with affluenza -- but without fulfilment

This article is the first in a new series, On Happiness, examining what it means and how it might be achieved in the 21st century.

In a short story, Grief, Anton Chekhov tells of a wood-turner named Grigory Petrov, a drunkard and bully who for 40 years regularly beat his wife. One night he arrives home drunk and brandishing his fists. This time, instead of shrinking from him, his wife gazes at him sternly, “as saints do from their icons”, wrote Chekhov.

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The US Space Act is dangerous and potentially illegal

An event of cosmic proportions occurred on November 18 when the US congress passed the Space Act of 2015 into law. The legislation will give US space firms the rights to own and sell natural resources they mine from bodies in space, including asteroids.

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Why Thanksgiving is a great American paradox

Thanksgiving has been a focus of autumn grade-school curriculum for a hundred years.

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An honest Thanksgiving: Why I killed my own turkey -- and what I learned about myself

Slaughtering and plucking your own Thanksgiving turkey When he sets out to kill his own turkey for Thanksgiving, NJ Advance Media commentator Brian Donohue winds up getting both a kick in the head from the turkey and an emotional hands-on lesson in where our food comes from. (Video by Adya Beasley and Brian Donohue | NJ…

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