Opinion

Republicans hijacked a bill designed to 'Help America Vote' -- and used it to suppress Democratic voters

There’s a fascinating history to what Joe Madison calls “James Crow, Esq., voting suppression”—and that history tells us what we can do to solve the problem of Republicans using the Help America Vote Act to block people from voting in largely Democratic areas.

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Paul Krugman explains why the rural-urban divide in the US is more 'bitter' than ever — 'but the better angels of our nature can still prevail'

The United States’ 2018 midterms found Trumpism being vehemently rejected in urban and suburban areas while prevailing to a large degree in rural areas. Democrats recaptured the House of Representatives with a net gain of at least 37 seats, yet a strong turnout among white rural voters enabled Republicans to slightly increase their majority in the U.S. Senate. And in his most recent column for the New York Times, liberal economist Paul Krugman asserts that the midterms underscored that “bitter” divide between urban and suburban Democratic voters on one hand and rural white Republicans voters on the other.

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Here's why the Trump administration nuclear weapons policy could lead us to disaster

In July 2017, by a vote of 122 to 1, with one abstention, nations from around the world attending a United Nations-sponsored conference in New York City voted to approve a treaty to ban nuclear weapons.  Although this Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons received little coverage in the mass media, its passage was a momentous event, capping decades of international nuclear arms control and disarmament agreements that, together, have reduced the world’s nuclear weapons arsenals by approximately 80 percent and have limited the danger of a catastrophic nuclear war.  The treaty prohibited all ratifying countries from developing, testing, producing, acquiring, possessing, stockpiling, using, or threatening to use nuclear weapons.

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Ex-Republican professor explains why the GOP became so 'corroded' and 'humiliated' that he had to leave

The Democratic Party won substantial victories in the 2018 midterms. It will now control the House of Representatives next year and also won many important state and local offices. However, Donald Trump and the Republican Party were able to maintain control of the United States Senate and key governorships in Georgia, Florida and Ohio -- largely through voter suppression, gerrymandering and other methods of subverting the will of the American people. Despite that setback, the Democratic Party is now reinvigorated and more empowered in its battle against Trumpism.

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Here's how the GOP's tax scam backfired spectacularly and helped Democrats win key midterm races

When Republicans finally passed their tax cuts bill at the end of 2017, the party seemed to genuinely believe that the accomplishment would produce a wave of enthusiasm that they could ride to success in the 2018 midterm elections.

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The GOP has become the greatest threat to American democracy since the Civil War

The transformation of the Republican party from a recognizable centre-right conservative political party to what it has become under Donald Trump began a half century ago.

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Republicans have managed to unify rural white voters -- while scaring away everyone else

If there was one demographic group that blunted the force of the “blue wave” in this month’s midterm elections, it was rural white voters. Even as Republicans lost control of the suburban areas that had been their strongholds in the 1980s and 1990s, Republicans extended their hold over rural America. The GOP is now on the verge of uniting nearly all rural white voters into a single party – which has never happened before.

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Donald Trump is the most inept Commander-in-Chief in US history -- and it matters

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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Donald Trump’s fascist politics and the language of disappearance

Somewhere every culture has an imaginary zone for what it excludes, and it is that zone we must try to remember today.

-- Catherine Clement

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The biggest myth about the ’Trump economy'

With unemployment near record lows, President Donald Trump deserves substantial credit for the strength of the economy, right?

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Here are 5 signs extreme wealth deadens the 'empathy' and 'honesty' parts of the brain

As we try to grasp the reasoning behind cuts to life-saving programs while billion-dollar incomes and trillion-dollar profits are being made, we must understand that extreme wealth deadens parts of the brain. Empathy and honesty go first. Then rationality, as evidenced by some of the outlandish excuses given by the very rich for their abuses.

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This book was beloved by evangelical Christians — but the author now says it's harmful bunk

If the road to hell really is paved with the finest of intentions, one of the best examples is the right-wing anti-sex chastity movement—which has gone hand in hand with abstinence-only sex education in the Bible Belt. The data clearly shows that sexually liberal countries like the Netherlands, Sweden and Norway actually have much lower rates of sexually transmitted diseases and unplanned pregnancies than the U.S. Regardless, Joshua Harris’ 1997 anti-sex book, “I Kissed Dating Goodbye,” was a favorite in right-wing evangelical circles. But in a new Washington Post op-ed, Christine Emba explains how badly debunked the book has been in recent years—so debunked that even Harris is now distancing himself from it.

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