Stacy Dash and the Republican addiction to conservative celebrities
Republicans latching onto dimwitted D-listers who bring little to the table but unmeditated blurting about the culture wars is, well, a bad look.
S.E. is a nationally syndicated columnist, author and commentator. She is author of the book “Losing Our Religion: The Liberal media’s Attack on Christianity” and co-author of the book “Why You’re Wrong About the Right.” She is a CNN contributor.
Republicans latching onto dimwitted D-listers who bring little to the table but unmeditated blurting about the culture wars is, well, a bad look.
Small solutions might not make for a jazzy op-ed or satisfy the righteous indignation of anti-gun activists. But on the upside, they might work.
High-profile women in Republican leadership are exposing a shocking disdain for what is good for women.
If you believe climate change is real and that we should be having smart conversations about how to best address it — and I do — this isn’t helping.
It’s equally stunning and disappointing that Donald Trump didn’t see this gift looking him in the face.
It was a smugness from the liberal media, which talked about Christian America as if it were a vestigial organ of some extinct, diseased dinosaur.
Straining to explain away Trump’s racist comments with cutesy semantics will not convince anyone that he didn’t say what he did.
Gimmicks like this are little more than shallow virtue-signaling.
Awareness is fine. Action is better.
Unless it’s to offer women a non-handsy hand, some words of support or a no-strings-attached job opportunity, don’t.
Less obvious a problem, though, than the odious detritus of the failed Moore campaign, is the great lie that Republicans told voters.
Remember Dec. 4 — the day Trump, GOP sold out to Moore
The World Health Organization recommends that countries decriminalize sex work to mitigate the violence prostitutes are subjected to.
In the safety of 2017, in an environment that is far less friendly to the accused, some are admitting the party may have covered for Bill too long.
There is no “over there,” when people born in the United States can be radicalized by ISIS and its propaganda.