RawStory

Opinion

Are police shootings really like lynchings? Here is the sad truth

The tragic shooting deaths of 17-year old Trayvon Martin in 2012 and 18-year old Michael Brown in 2014 reawakened the nation to the epidemic of killings of unarmed blacks by private citizens and law enforcement officers. Sadly, the shooting of unarmed blacks seemingly continues unabated despite the numerous nation wide street protests, town hall meetings, and pledges from politicians and law enforcement agencies to address this systemic problem. According to the Washington Post, “Although black men make up only 6 percent of the U.S. population, they account for 40 percent of the unarmed men shot to death by police in 2015. What is more, the Post’s analysis documents that black men were seven times more likely than white men to die by police gunfire while unarmed. Whereas in 2012, Trayvon Martin was literally the poster child for unjustified killings of unarmed blacks, today there are a litany of black victims (Eric Garner, Walter Scott, Tamir Rice to name a few) that can fill that role.

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Trump's rise shows conservatives are willing to destroy the America our founders envisioned

What started as a joke in the summer and fall, and became worrying in the winter, now becomes terrifying in the spring. That Donald Trump, a seemingly stupid, foolish, little man, could be on the verge of presidential nomination to the party of Abraham Lincoln is an obscenity. Pundits long predicted and awaited a rhetorical or electoral loss for the candidate, and the going assumption concerning his ambition chalked it up to a mere marketing stunt.

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Hillary Clinton's comments on the Reagans and AIDS demand more than apology

It is hard but important for those who care about AIDS to criticize the frontrunner of the Democratic party, who takes the support of gay voters for granted

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The shocking story isn't Donald Trump -- it's how the GOP morphed into a party of hate and obstruction

Ah, the crescendo of complaint! The Republican establishment and the mainstream media, working hand in hand in their unprecedented, non-stop assault on the “short-fingered vulgarian” named Donald Trump, would have you believe that Trump augurs the destruction of the Republican Party. Former Reagan speechwriter and now Wall Street Journal/CBS pundit Peggy Noonan expressed the general sentiment of both camps when she said on Super Tuesday that “we’re seeing a great political party shatter before our eyes.”

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The Trumpification of the US media: How the commercialization of news distorts politics

Outside the US, the prospect of Donald Trump being elected president is typically met with a mixture of amusement and alarm. After all, how can a billionaire reality TV star become the most powerful leader in the world when he proposes building a giant wall to prevent Mexican immigrants coming to the US and banning all Muslims from entering the country?

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Robert Reich explains why he was hesitant to call Trump a fascist -- but isn't any more

I’ve been reluctant to use the  “f” word to describe Donald Trump because it’s especially harsh, and it’s too often used carelessly.

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A retired major general sets Trump straight after he advocates war crimes

As a retired military officer, I do not publicly endorse candidates.

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Four things we believed a century ago -- and need to remember now

Commodity prices wobble, and disaster looms, perhaps. We have been here before, if we could but remember. We are not the first – or the last – to feel that markets beyond our ken and beyond our control shape the realities of our lives, draw in the horizons of our aspirations. We live in an impoverished age. Not a poverty of money, but a poverty of ideas, a poverty of possibilities. A century ago, anything was possible, but today we have convinced ourselves that nothing can be done.

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Gawker — and First Amendment — may receive body blow from another thin-skinned wrestler

Who knew that professional wrestlers could be so sensitive? And that their antics could have potentially grave First Amendment implications?

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Evangelical Christianity destroyed its own brand -- here's why they are now widely despised

“The Evangelical “brand” has gone from being an asset to a liability, and it is helpful to understand the transition in precisely those terms.”

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Teacher gets punished after student steals her racy pictures

How many women are going to get fired from their jobs simply for having sexualized body parts that have been documented in photos? That's the question I asked myself after coming across the story of a South Carolina engineering teacher who was just forced to resign because one of her students violated her privacy and sent her semi-nude photos to his classmates.

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Trump's success shows many Christians don't actually believe in God -- just America

It has long been presumed that America is more Christian than Europe. But it’s a myth. Of course, way more people go to church in America. And you can’t become president without holding up your floppy Bible and attending prayer breakfasts. But what the Donald Trump phenomenon reveals is what several intelligent Christian observers have been saying for some time: that a great many Americans don’t really believe in God. They just believe in America – which they often take to be the same thing. God was hacked by the American dream some time ago. “The evangelical church in America has, to a large extent, been co-opted by an American, religious version of the kingdom of the world. We have come to trust the power of the sword more than the power of the cross,” writes Gregory Boyd in The Myth of a Christian Nation.

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The momentum story: How the Bernie Sanders crowd can still win

The media and the political class have called it -- Bernie Sanders has lost the Democratic Presidential nomination. They are flat wrong, and not for the first time.

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