RawStory

Opinion

Here is the utterly satisfying irony of Donald Trump's demise

There are all sorts of lessons to be drawn from Donald Trump’s “Access Hollywood” video. This is the one I draw because I think it speaks most forcefully to the Trump media barrage: a candidacy launched by television has now most likely come undone thanks to television, particularly one aspect of television — its macho culture.

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Trump stalked Clinton onstage at the debate — and women recognized him as a threat

The Sunday event that had been promoted as a "town hall debate" should have come with a trigger warning for survivors of sexual violence. In a debate performance described by the New York Times as "Mr. Trump Goes Low," Donald Trump stalked Hillary Clinton in the enclosed space of the stage, causing many, including W. Kamau Bell and others to report that Trump was "creeping up" on her while she was talking.

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How a committed agnostic learned to embrace 'spirituality' to explain life and death to his exceptional intellectually disabled child

I have no regrets about having Jamie; quite the contrary—I am thankful for his presence in my life every single day. But at one point in our lives together, I did feel a pang of regret about the way I was raising him. It was at the 2005 conference of the Canadian Down Syndrome Society, and one of the keynote speakers was talking about how and why we need to attend to the “spiritual development” of children and young adults with Down syndrome. One of her examples involved bringing a young man with Down syndrome to the cemetery in which his grandparents were buried, so that he could come to terms with their death.

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Latest jobs report shows why Congress needs to get into the game

The U.S. economy added 156,000 new jobs in September, slightly below the 172,000 expected by economists in a Bloomberg survey and lower than the 167,000 in August, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. While the latest data signal that the economy is continuing to strengthen – though perhaps not enough to simplify Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen’s case for raising rates this year – the numbers also reveal signs of weakness.

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Here is why Hillary Clinton isn't thrashing Donald Trump in the polls

The other day, Hillary Clinton asked a union audience this question of questions: “Why aren’t I 50 points ahead?” Why indeed? She’s neither the first nor the last to ask. In recent days, I’ve heard the same words, the same incredulity, from a reporter and a retired historian from Paris, from professors and graduate students and the democracy-campaigning barrister Martin Lee in Hong Kong.

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The DEA's decision to cut legal production of opioids is sure to backfire

The DEA has announced that it will cut the permitted production quantities of almost all prescription opioids in the US by 25 percent in 2017, allegedly to address rates of addiction and overdose. A handful of medicines will be reduced by even more, such as hydrocodone, which will be produced at 66 percent of last year’s level.

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Dear Donald Trump: I treat combat veterans with PTSD -- and they are not weak

Mr. Trump, there’s someone I’d like you to meet.

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Donald Trump not accepting the victory of his opponent would be unprecedented -- and treasonous

Ronald L. Feinman is the author of Assassinations, Threats, and the American Presidency: From Andrew Jackson to Barack Obama (Rowman Littlefield Publishers, August 2015). A paperback edition is coming in March 2017. 

There is a growing danger of civil disorder when the Presidential Election of 2016 is over, if Donald Trump were to refuse to accept defeat, no matter what the margin of victory. He has hinted at such action, although leaving doubt after the first debate that he would follow through on an earlier threat to do so.

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'Deepwater Horizon' is shockingly fossil fuel-friendly for an oil rig disaster film

Early on in the new Peter Berg film, Deepwater Horizon, the daughter of chief electronics technician Mike Williams (Mark Wahlberg), using a coke can as a prop, explains how oil exploration works, talking proudly of how “my daddy tames the dinosaurs”. The can spectacularly explodes while the daughter admits that “oil is a monster”.

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Why the great philosopher Plato would have feared Trump's out-of-control obnoxiousness

Linguist Deborah Tannen’s research helped save my marriage – and if he could only get control of himself, it could improve Donald Trump’s abysmal performance in the American presidential debates. But I doubt Trump will listen.

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The selective doubt of white folks: why black experiences don't matter

White people spend a lot of time telling black folks what their stories mean. If it's not white writers insisting that they can tell a person of color's story better than a black writer can, or Trump running mate Mike Pence telling black people that they talk about systemic racism too much, or Iowa Congressman Steve King telling Colin Kaepernick what his protest against police brutality "really means," or folks who insist that "slavery wasn't that bad," there's no shortage of white folks who insist that they know better than black folks when it comes to interpreting what happens to black bodies. It would be tempting to dismiss it all as the ravings of a minority of kooks if it weren't for the ubiquity of the phenomenon. Everywhere, it seems, white people just can't help themselves.

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Why the pundits are wrong about Hillary Clinton dominating the debate

The vast majority of pundits declared Hillary Clinton the decisive winner of this week’s debate.

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