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17 votes
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Anyone can defeat Goku now
5 votes -
How China conquered the keyboard
5 votes -
The Internet Is Not What You Think It Is: A history, a philosophy, a warning
9 votes -
The case for nudity
8 votes -
Our fundamental right to shame and shun The New York Times
16 votes -
The airport: A story of the fall of Kabul
8 votes -
/r/antiwork: A tragedy of sanewashing and social gentrification
19 votes -
How wine bricks saved the US wine industry during Prohibition
8 votes -
In 1965, Teté-Michel Kpomassie left his Togo homeland for a new life in Greenland; the first African man to set foot there
5 votes -
The Mexican state does not live up its inheritance
9 votes -
How our ancestors used to sleep can help the sleep-deprived today
7 votes -
Why you're christian
7 votes -
Dutch museums and concert halls open as hair salons to protest Covid rules
6 votes -
Inside the online movement to end work
12 votes -
The great offline - The concept of “offline” is built on the earlier concept of “wilderness,” inheriting its flaws and hazards
8 votes -
Toxoplasma of rage
6 votes -
Birds aren't real, or are they? Inside a Gen Z conspiracy movement
17 votes -
Hackers are spamming businesses’ receipt printers with ‘antiwork’ manifestos
13 votes -
Why I'm tired of hearing about wokeism
7 votes -
Diners, Drive-ins, and Dives speaks to a homesick America
8 votes -
Witness History spoke to photographer Mark Edwards, who was given unique access to document a famously photo shy community of Christiania in Denmark
11 votes -
Portugal makes it illegal for your boss to text you after work in 'game changer' remote work law
16 votes -
Ace Linguist: Dialect Dissection: ABBA
5 votes -
American unreality - In breaking the link between politics and objective truth, the United States seeks to fashion a new world – but it is one built on shifting sands
3 votes -
What is Day of the Dead?
2 votes -
How mental health became a social media minefield
13 votes -
Denmark's hippie, psychedelic oasis Christiania turns fifty – celebration over four days includes parades, speeches, exhibitions, workshops, shows and concerts
4 votes -
The last glimpses of California's vanishing hippie utopias
12 votes -
A story about living in nature and the value of culture captures the spirit of Finland – Lizzie Enfield explores the remarkable legacy of 'Seitsemän veljestä'
9 votes -
Tech workers rebel against a lame-ass Internet by bringing back ‘GeoCities-style’ Webrings
26 votes -
Dubai is a parody of the 21st century
18 votes -
Online trolls actually just assholes all the time, study finds
28 votes -
Can we mock and/or threaten people into changing their beliefs? (And more importantly, should we?)
9 votes -
How the modern world makes us mentally ill – Dr. Jonathan Haidt
6 votes -
A case study in digital radicalism
4 votes -
Modern Luddism and the battle for your soul
11 votes -
Democracy should be sentimentalist not rationalist
6 votes -
Film-makers buckle under relentless appetite for Danish TV – a victim of its own success, the industry behind cult dramas such as The Killing struggles amid bullying claims
10 votes -
A different sense of privilege
9 votes -
Never Gonna Give You Up has passed one billion views on YouTube
@Rick Astley: 1 BILLION views for Never Gonna Give You Up on @YouTube ! Amazing, crazy, wonderful!Rick ♥️https://t.co/mzyLznTr4R #NGGYU #NGGYU1Billion pic.twitter.com/p5xnn0OZcZ
12 votes -
What's something you wish made a comeback?
Can be anything: art, culture, technology, society. What's something valuable that we left behind, and would be awesome to revive?
19 votes -
Cows using virtual reality and the future of work
5 votes -
What do you think are some good things about the US?
Admittedly independence day was a week ago so this is kind of late. Most people in the left consider the US to be one of, if not the worst country in the (developed, unless you're a right wing...
Admittedly independence day was a week ago so this is kind of late.
Most people in the left consider the US to be one of, if not the worst country in the (developed, unless you're a right wing strawman) world and, we have listed the bad things about the US many, many times, so I think a thread about the good things about the US would be neat.
The 3 main things I think are good are:
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Honestly, I think party primaries where most people vote for president are good. While I do think they would be much more beneficial in a multiparty system as opposed to the US's 2 party system, I think it's better than having your presidential candidates be chosen by usually politicking with the party. I don't mean this to say the way party primaries are conducted in the US is the way because it isn't, but I think it's better than not having a primary.
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I also think midterm elections are good, because it means that if people dislike the course of the current government, they can vote for that in a midterm. In the US, this means they only had 2 years of a Republican trifecta led by Trump as opposed to 4 like here in Brazil and I suspect a lot of other places. I don't mean this to say elections every 2 years is unequivocally good, and for such elections you would definitely need shorter primaries so elected politicians don't need to spend most of their time campaigning which I've heard is often what they do.
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Lastly, I think the US is by far the country most concerned with things like electoral systems and methods, campaign finance, whether there should be an upper house or not (not that senate abolition is popular even among leftists, but it is much more popular than a place like, say, Brazil, where I live), and this is the third good thing about the US.
Of course, all of these originate from the worst parts of the US political system, but I think the fact that there's any public conscience of them existing is still a good thing.
One can argue the fact that the largest amount of influential companies being under US regulations means that if any positive changes to said regulation are implemented the entire world benefits (most obviously concerning the Internet), but the opposite is equally true and far more common.
There's also probably many good things about US culture, by virtue of that being true for most most cultures, but I don't know what US culture specifically is enough to list them.
12 votes -
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Tyranny, slavery and Columbia U - Interview with North Korea defector Yeonmi Park
4 votes -
Have you felt or do you still feel the optimism of the Internet / Web 2.0 in the early 2000s and 2010s?
Title is the question. It's left open for your interpretation. It'd be interesting to see people's different interpretations and reasons.
18 votes -
The internet feeds on its own dying dreams
4 votes -
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's jeremiad against online sanctimony
9 votes -
I am an object of internet ridicule, ask me anything
18 votes -
The rise of elevated stupidity - America’s hot-take economy has created a kind of smart that is indistinguishable from stupid
28 votes