RawStory

Opinion

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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Here's why you need to stop saying that raped women are 'damaged for life'

Girls need to know that a sexual assault doesn’t have to mean a lifetime of suffering.

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Trump, his virus and the dark age of unreason

There’s a virus infecting our politics and right now it’s flourishing with a scarlet heat. It feeds on fear, paranoia and bigotry. All that was required for it to spread was a timely opportunity — and an opportunist with no scruples.

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In the wake of tragedy, Trump takes rhetoric of fear to a whole new level

Donald Trump’s remarks in the aftermath of the Orlando shooting massacre – especially the reiteration of his call to temporarily ban Muslim immigration to the United States – angered leaders across America’s political spectrum.

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Trump's attack on the press sounds like Nixon

Donald Trump decided in the past week to launch another frontal attack on the press. "I find the political press to be unbelievably dishonest,” he said recently in a confrontational news conference at Trump Tower where he spoke about the money he raised for veterans. His comments were nothing new. In the past, he has labeled members of the media “sleazy,” “disgusting,” “slime,” and “among the worst human beings” he has ever encountered.

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Why medievalists should stop talking about Game of Thrones

Last month, medieval historians went to war with English Heritage, the charity which manages England’s historical sites. Normally a peaceable bunch, medievalists have taken offence at English Heritage’s use of the term “The Dark Ages” to describe the period from c.400 to c.1066.

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In Trump's world, everything's a conspiracy and reality's turned upside down

After the weekend’s carnage in Orlando, Donald Trump didn’t wait long before launching yet another guided missile full of insinuation. He didn’t exactly say that the massacre was the doing of an unreconstructed Mau-Mau descendant born in Kenya. Trump is craftier than that. Monday morning, he told Fox News:

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LGBT equality doesn't exist -- but here's how to fight for it

When I came out as gay in my sophomore year of college, I absolutely loved going to Tigerheat – a kitschy 18-and-over gay club in Los Angeles. I mostly remember my nights there as frivolous fun, but they also had deeper meaning. That’s where I first learned how to openly and unabashedly celebrate being gay.

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Orlando massacre shows our understanding of 'terrorism' is too focused on jihad

In many respects, the aftermath of the US’s latest mass shooting in Orlando followed a familiar pattern. Calls for gun control were met with opposing calls to protect the Second Amendment of the US Constitution and to resist making political capital from such a tragic event. But once it was established that the killer, Omar Mateen, had pledged allegiance to Islamic State, concerns about over-politicising the attack were quickly forgotten.

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