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16 votes
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Judge rules in favor of Montana youths in landmark climate decision
46 votes -
US Education Department readies latest tranche of student debt relief but faces new legal challenges to the program
18 votes -
Growing segregation by sex in Israel raises fears for women’s rights
71 votes -
We need to raise a lot more in tax from the wealthy but that does not convince me that we need a wealth tax
39 votes -
Massachusetts passed a 4% millionaire's tax last year. Now every public-school student is going to get free lunch.
71 votes -
Finland should aim to leave the European Union in the long term, the far-right Perussuomalaiset's Jussi Halla-aho said ahead of his party congress
19 votes -
Helsinki could become a 'sanctuary city' for medical treatment, as the new right-wing government continues to crack down on undocumented migrants
8 votes -
What a green monetary policy could look like
8 votes -
Environmental experts have criticised the Swedish government's plan to build at least ten nuclear reactors in the next twenty years
22 votes -
The EPA’s ambitious plan to cut auto emissions receives pushback from US automakers
29 votes -
US President Joe Biden to designate a new national monument surrounding the Grand Canyon
45 votes -
Norway's ongoing journey to optimize breastfeeding support – rates of breastfeeding in the WHO European Region are the lowest in the world
10 votes -
Japan’s Fumio Kishida hopes to further strengthen strategic cooperation with US and South Korea at summit
5 votes -
A charge on supermarket single-use plastic bags has led to 98% drop in use in England since 2015
88 votes -
The UK NHS in crisis - evaluating radical alternatives
10 votes -
How to quickly get to the important truth inside any privacy policy
18 votes -
Why India's rice ban could trigger a global food crisis
44 votes -
US President Joe Biden's IRA shuts Africa out of critical minerals supply chains
6 votes -
Campaign launched on Thursday to boycott the Faroe Islands over their highly controversial slaughter of pilot whales and dolphins
38 votes -
Denmark is considering banning protests involving burning the Quran or other religious texts over security and diplomatic concerns – Sweden looking to follow suit
18 votes -
Portugal’s bid to attract foreign money backfires as rental market goes ‘crazy’
45 votes -
Mastercard move at cannabis shops intensifies call for US decriminalization
42 votes -
Democratic Senator Jeff Merkley of Oregon says US President Biden must stop approving new fossil fuel projects
28 votes -
Bernie Sanders 'disappointed, but not surprised,' as US Senate rejects 10% military spending cut
17 votes -
California cement industry marks near-term progress on carbon neutrality goals
11 votes -
The bewildering architecture of skybridges
4 votes -
US requires airline lavatories to be more accessible for wheelchair users
42 votes -
Italy needs immigration, admits Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni as she softens her stance
13 votes -
Decades of public messages about recycling in the US have crowded out discussion and implementation of more sustainable ways to manage waste
33 votes -
What the data says about food stamps in the US
10 votes -
Regarding the eviction of the self-organized refugee camp in Lavrio, Greece. How Turkey's war on Kurds and the European Union’s War on migrants intersect
8 votes -
One year old, US climate law is already turbocharging clean energy technology
34 votes -
How can we make public transit easier for kids?
28 votes -
Just give kids school lunch
34 votes -
New Jersey files federal lawsuit to block NYC’s congestion pricing plan; Staten Island sets up legal action
25 votes -
How climate change could cause a home insurance meltdown
30 votes -
Digging into India's drive to acquire critical minerals
5 votes -
Cleveland: New city policy would eliminate mandatory parking near transit corridors
12 votes -
How Portugal decriminalized drugs
8 votes -
Turkey is heading for a classic currency crisis. All of its reserves and then some are borrowed.
28 votes -
Danish environmental campaigner Merijn Tinga has windsurfed up the Thames to return plastic bottles from the UK which he found in Sweden
10 votes -
A new bill would force internet companies in the USA to spy on their users for the Drug Enforcement Administration
45 votes -
Why does market fundamentalism have so much clout in economics?
There's a couple of other words that describe what I'm talking about - neoliberalism, lassez-faire capitalism, and in a more general sense, the Chicago school of economics - but I chose market...
There's a couple of other words that describe what I'm talking about - neoliberalism, lassez-faire capitalism, and in a more general sense, the Chicago school of economics - but I chose market fundamentalism because it seemed to best describe precisely what I'm talking about. I mean the belief that the market is capable of self-regulation and that governmental intervention will cause damage to the economy.
I'm asking this because there's still a lot about economics that I don't know about and so I was hoping someone with a background in the subject who would be able to better answer the question. But I realize it's probably also a political question. I wonder if it's more of an issue of our politicians pressing these views than economists and academics.
Personally, with my life's experience, it seems almost obviously wrong. I've lived through several market downturns and even a crash, and looking through history it seems like every market crash can be attributed to the market failing to correct itself.
21 votes -
EU passes nature restoration law in knife-edge vote
19 votes -
Some major cities in the US are getting rid of bus fares
71 votes -
Prime Minister Mark Rutte hands in resignation as Dutch government collapses over asylum row
19 votes -
Australia legalises psychedelics for mental health
29 votes -
Oil is hard to quit, even in Norway where electric cars rule the road
15 votes -
Barriers to transgender health care lead some to embrace a do-it-yourself approach
22 votes