Opinion

What underlies the MAGA appeal? An aggressive form of whiteness

Cecil Rhodes (1853-1902) was an English mining magnate and fervent believer in the British Empire’s historical destiny in Africa. He was born into and lived in a society that viewed Western culture and civilization in general and the English, in particular, through its racial history. He believed the English race was the pinnacle of human evolution and, as such, the most adaptive and successful of all races. In 1877, whilst a student at Oriel College, he declared proudly: “I contend that we are the finest race in the world and that the more of the world we inhabit the better it is for the human race. Just fancy those parts that are at present inhabited by the most despicable specimens of human beings what an alteration there would be if they were brought under Anglo-Saxon influence.” Such a racist view was not only long in the making in Britain and elsewhere in Europe, but was also enduring; its lingering, disquieting presence is felt to this day.

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Something that Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg said years ago could haunt him amid the Cambridge Analytica scandal

A 2010 New Yorker profile of Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg could haunt him now amid Cambridge Analytica news. The profile, written by Jose Antonio Vargas, details a leaked exchange between the Facebook creator and a friend who wasn’t identified. Zuckerberg, who never disputed the tasteless conversation, later on said he “absolutely” regretted the chat.

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A psychologist explains how Trump won mindless loyalty from millions of Americans

Many Trump supporters are proud of their absolute faith in him. You see it in the way they beam proudly when they tell reporters that they’d support him no matter what he does. Now that’s unconditional love!

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Trump is moving into a more dangerous phase of his madness

Trump is moving into a new and more dangerous phase.

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New book unmasks hidden history of how US corporations gained legal personhood that trumps your rights

American corporate power has never been stronger. It’s not just the Trump administration’s crusade to gut government regulation; the federal courts have increasingly been granting corporations liberty rights once held only by individuals. In his new book, We The Corporations: How American Businesses Won Their Civil Rights, UCLA constitutional law professor Adam Winkler traces the history of how corporate America has successfully waged a civil rights movement on its own behalf since the country’s earliest decades. AlterNet’s Steven Rosenfeld spoke to Winkler.

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What Fresh Hell? Chaos Week is going swimmingly for Donald Trump edition

Welcome to another edition of What Fresh Hell?, Raw Story’s roundup of news items that might have become controversies under another regime, but got buried – or were at least under-appreciated – due to the daily firehose of political pratfalls, unhinged tweet storms and other sundry embarrassments coming out of the current White House.

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Why was this the generation that was cursed with the presidency of Donald Trump?

Here's a question we need to be thinking about.

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Here are 21 reasons Betsy DeVos is so widely disliked

Lesley Stahl: Why have you become, people say, the most hated Cabinet secretary?

Education Sec. Betsy DeVos: I’m not sure exactly how that happened… I’m more misunderstood than anything.

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Here are 5 examples of unhinged nonsense Katrina Pierson will be bringing back to the Trump campaign in 2020

On Tuesday, Donald Trump's new campaign manager, Brad Parscale, announced that Katrina Pierson would be joining Trump's 2020 presidential campaign as a senior adviser. This isn't Pierson's first stint with the president; in 2016, Pierson worked as a national—and frequently controversial—spokeswoman for Trump's presidential campaign.

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Here is why I am not an organ donor

Last fall’s story of A.J. Burgess, a 2-year-old boy unable to receive a life-saving kidney transplant from his previously incarcerated father has turned out well. Even though AJ’s father was rejected as a donor despite being a perfect match, AJ received a deceased donor kidney, and he has recently celebrated his third birthday. On the surface, it looks like the brouhaha was all for nothing. But this story allowed the public to get a brief glimpse behind the curtain of decision-making in organ transplantation. What that glimpse reveals reminds me why I’m not an organ donor. That’s right, I’m not an organ donor. I await the judgment of Mark Zuckerberg, Selena Gomez, and people I actually know.

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Paul Krugman just issued a prescient warning in the wake of Rex Tillerson's ouster

Donald Trump has nursed petty, personal grudges his entire life. Previously, their impact was limited to his businesses and anyone who had the misfortune of working with him. Now that he's president, however, he's free to indulge his vindictiveness on the world stage, with some help from his team of enablers.

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'This is your brain on Trump': Professor explains why he can't help calling Trump supporters 'the fools they objectively are'

Do you ever find yourself wondering what the story is with those thrilled faces behind Donald Trump at his rallies?

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