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10 votes
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Data Propria, run by Cambridge Analytica alumni, working on Trump 2020 campaign
19 votes -
Iván Duque wins election to become Colombia's president. Conservative opponent of Farc peace process wins long and divisive campaign
7 votes -
Governments fight back against tech disruption
4 votes -
Huckabee-Sanders Defends Ripping Children From Parents, Because It's "Very Biblical to Enforce the Law"
16 votes -
From Canada, to our U.S. friends: Might is not always right
9 votes -
Social media allegations, the spirit of due process, and you!
It's hard to have a neutral position or tone about sexual assault. I think we can all agree that sexual assault is bad and should be punished when credible evidence exists, and I think most of us...
It's hard to have a neutral position or tone about sexual assault. I think we can all agree that sexual assault is bad and should be punished when credible evidence exists, and I think most of us can also agree to the corollary that it's hard to prove allegations of sexual assault on a good day, let alone 10, 15, 20, or 30 years after the event happened (which is after the statute of limitations expires in many states anyway).
So from this starting point (sexual misconduct = bad, proving sexual misconduct = hard), let's talk about that lovely and unique junction we've been finding ourselves in, in the current year: (1) the use of social media to amplify stories of sexual misconduct and (2) to organize economic punishment of famous persons who have engaged in such conduct (when it is credible enough).
Let us take the case of Kevin Spacey. After Anthony Rapp publicly accused Spacey of sexual advances while Rapp was 14 years old, about a dozen similar stories surfaced to show a fairly similar trajectory of behavior. Even if nothing ever crosses the line into "rape," a clearer picture seems to emerge from these myriad stories of a pretty damn creepy, repressed dude. Spacey lost several acting jobs as a direct reaction to these stories.
We might also look to Al Franken for further insight. In this case, eight women to my knowledge have separately accused Franken of violating behavior, with one pretty outrageous photo as proof of the most famous initiating accusation.
There are plenty of other serial predators that have been exposed in the last year and change too. Let me be clear on this: I see exposing serial predators as a good thing. I hope you do too. There can be a problem of believing claims too quickly, which I think we're all aware of and need to be careful of, but as far as exposing and at minimum economically punishing serial abusers, I think that's pretty much a good for society as a whole, especially when done through legal channels (i.e., a Hot Cosby).
So to the questions:
- How should we as a society deal the increased ability to share horrific stories of sexual misconduct and abuse?
- How can our governments adjust to better handle cases of unaddressed sexual assault?
- How should we individually react when someone we know (famous or otherwise) is accused of sexual misconduct? Along these lines, should we make economic choices based on the allegations that surface about some person?
16 votes -
US judge orders former Donald Trump Campaign Chairman Paul Manafort to be jailed on witness tampering charges
27 votes -
California? Or Cali-Three-Nia? Proposal to split state will be on ballot in November.
13 votes -
Inside Casa Padre, the converted Walmart where the US is holding nearly 1,500 immigrant children
14 votes -
Taking a look at world peace critically
I wrote this thinking about how people think that world peace is something worth moving towards in a lot academic spheres. It is being used to justify modern continued injustice and i have a lot...
I wrote this thinking about how people think that world peace is something worth moving towards in a lot academic spheres. It is being used to justify modern continued injustice and i have a lot of problems with that. I think that this more 'peaceful' world isn't that great of one if it comes at the sacrifice of our many current problems we face today. I look at few major academic theorists like Ian Morris and Pinker. I was thinking of actualy discussing both in more detail but i just gave their wiki sums for their books though i have read them becaause i was a little lazy. i should change that in a possible follow up but i wanted to hear what people thought about this before that. https://diogenesoftoronto.wordpress.com/2018/06/05/a-closer-look-at-world-peace/
9 votes -
US Inspector General report: James Comey 'deviated' from procedure in Hillary Clinton probe, but was not politically biased
6 votes -
N.Y. Attorney General Sues Trump Foundation Over Self-Dealing
21 votes -
What are your thoughts on a Universal Basic Income?
With the incredible pace of automation and AI taking place across all sectors of our Global Economy, countries/governments/citizens need to start seriously thinking about how we can continue to...
With the incredible pace of automation and AI taking place across all sectors of our Global Economy, countries/governments/citizens need to start seriously thinking about how we can continue to survive when there are simply not enough jobs to be had. UBI is one option that countries have attempted to "beta test" with varying results. What is ~'s[sic] opinion on UBI and automation and AI "taking our jerbs"?
41 votes -
The EU's Copyright Directive, Article 13
Next week the EU parliament will vote for their new copyright directive. In general it contains some good ideas, but also some extremely bad ones, such as article 13. It will require all uploaded...
Next week the EU parliament will vote for their new copyright directive. In general it contains some good ideas, but also some extremely bad ones, such as article 13. It will require all uploaded content to be scanned, and deleted if it might contain references to other copyrighted material.
The issue here is the word might. Due to the possible fines for companies that accidentally leave up something that contains a copyrighted work, they are incentivized to act more harsh than often necessary. It's safer for them to delete everything that looks like it might infringe copyright than risk the fine.
This could be disastrous for the Internet as we know it. And this is why many movements are speaking out against it. One such example would be the open letter to EU parliament. More information is available on https://saveyourinternet.eu/resources/, and you can find much more about it all over the Internet if you search with your favourite search engine.
What's your opinion on article 13, and have you done anything to make your voice heard?
13 votes -
Malcolm Turnbull to deliver national apology for child sexual abuse: Australian Prime Minister says the government has accepted 104 of the 122 recommendations from the child sex abuse royal commission
2 votes -
Republic of Northern Macedonia: Decision finally made on new name after decades of debate
5 votes -
It's a piece of cake to bake a pretty cake: LGBT+ discrimination
Well, there comes a time in every community's existence where someone gets an idea for discussion from another thread he wishes were better framed. So buckle in. This discussion is intended to sit...
Well, there comes a time in every community's existence where someone gets an idea for discussion from another thread he wishes were better framed. So buckle in. This discussion is intended to sit at an uncomfortable cultural crossroads.
In the EU, gay spouses are now able to have the same freedom of movement rights as straight spouses. The Supreme Court in the United States ruled that a baker was treated unfairly by a Colorado regulatory commission when they tried to suss out if he discriminated against a gay couple who wanted to purchase a wedding cake.
In Brazil (you thought I was going to let this one be), courts have explicitly allowed conversion therapy to continue.
In Chechnya (a part of Russia that I always seem to struggle to spell), you could be hunted down and tortured or killed if you were gay, with people turning their own family members over to the local government. The local government, in absurdity, claimed after the purge that there were "no gays" in Chechnya, so there could have been no purge.
The point I'm trying to make here is that LGBT+ discrimination is an issue that should touch just about everywhere.
Before we get too deep, a point on terms. Discrimination, strictly speaking, is separating one thing from another. It is not necessarily a hostile act. If I say "you can drive only if your vision is good enough to read signs while you drive," that is discrimination on the basis of your ability to see, but most people aren't likely to say it's unreasonable discrimination (there is a rather obvious safety implication, for starters). Similarly, if you tell women to go to the bathroom in one space, and men to go to the bathroom in another space, that is discrimination based on gender. Is it reasonable discrimination? That might depend on if you're trans, and what state you're in.
This topic has to be more limited than this set up implies it will be. We won't be able to narrow things well enough to have a meaningful discussion otherwise. Today, we're just going to touch on the simple (ha!) matter of whether baking a wedding cake is art, whether refusing a wedding cake to a gay couple is discrimination, and what a government should be expected to do about it. So, the questions:
- Is making a custom wedding cake for a wedding "art"?
- Is refusing a custom wedding cake to a couple because it would be for a cause you do not support discrimination on the basis of that couple's identity?
- How should a just government resolve a dispute between a couple who feel unreasonably discriminated against and an artist who feels compelled to use speech for a cause they do not support?
And a bonus question:
- What role should a judicial branch have in advancing various groups' rights? Does relying on this less democratic method for securing rights open a movement up to counter-reaction or is the counter-reaction simply an inevitable consequence of a movement's success?
22 votes -
Inside Palmer Luckey's bid to build a US border wall
10 votes -
Should we, in rich countries, open our borders to migrants, refugees and other immigrants?
Loads of people want to get to rich countries for various reasons: no war less crime better economic prospects no persecution no famine The list is almost endless. Should we, in countries not...
Loads of people want to get to rich countries for various reasons:
- no war
- less crime
- better economic prospects
- no persecution
- no famine
The list is almost endless.
Should we, in countries not affected by such problems, accept these folks that want to get away for whatever reason?
22 votes -
When the punishment feels like the crime: Brock Turner's twisted legacy—and a Stanford professor's relentless pursuit of justice.
3 votes -
Spain now has the most female cabinet in Europe
16 votes -
Digital IDs needed to end 'mob rule' online, says security minister Ben Wallace
6 votes -
Iraq election: Fire hits Baghdad ballots ahead of recount
4 votes -
Odds shorten on a Turnbull backflip to a spring poll
2 votes -
Austria to shut down mosques, expel foreign-funded imams
6 votes -
The tipping point when minority views take over
12 votes -
The Honest Ads Act hits a brick wall ahead of the midterms. Bill would level playing field between online and TV political ads.
6 votes -
The rules for rulers
5 votes -
Billions in US solar projects shelved after Trump panel tariff
8 votes -
US President Donald Trump has second highest “own party” approval rating of any president at the 500 day mark
11 votes -
Corruption and Rebuilding Trust in Brazil's Government
For those not in the know, Brazil is going to be having a presidential election this year. The reason the title of this thread is what it is relates to the scandals that engulf all three of the...
For those not in the know, Brazil is going to be having a presidential election this year. The reason the title of this thread is what it is relates to the scandals that engulf all three of the current and past presidents: Current President Michel Temer, and past Presidents (in order of most recently in office) Dilma Rousseff and Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. Lula was found guilty and began serving his 12-year jail sentence for accepting bribes in early April, maintaining his innocence and that his investigation and trial were politically motivated to prevent him from running in this year's election.
There are few countries as publicly wrestling with corruption allegations in explicit quid pro quo deals between politicians and companies as Brazil.
If you're interested in a pretty decent introduction into this wild ride, the wikipedia article on Operation Car Wash--and that is how this scandal gets referred to--is a good place to start.
So, using publicly available evidence (in Portuguese if you have to), what role does corruption play in the highest political offices in Brazil, and how can Brazil begin rebuilding what seems to be a clearly shattered reputation?
9 votes -
Overhaul for foreign interference laws in bipartisan deal
5 votes -
"Fuck Neoliberalism" - An academic paper by Simon Springer
6 votes -
Victorian Parliament to vote on negotiating Australia's first Aboriginal treaty
11 votes -
One party is dreading marijuana legalization: the Marijuana party. They won the very battle it was established to fight. But its leaders insist the resistance continues against ‘prohibition 2.0’
3 votes -
Afghan president announces temporary ceasefire with Taliban. Ashraf Ghani tells security forces to cease operations against the armed group until June 20.
3 votes -
G7 allies likely to ‘gang up’ on US President Donald Trump as aluminium tariffs threaten all-out trade war
6 votes -
Peru congress suspends Fujimori but leaves him alive politically
3 votes -
Ethiopia's peace offer comes with strings attached
3 votes -
Emmanuel Macron, Justin Trudeau back 'strong multilateralism' ahead of contentious G7 summit
5 votes -
Stormy Daniels Sues, Saying Michael Cohen Colluded With Her Former Lawyer
7 votes -
Special Investigation and Russian Electioneering
One of the more looming stories over the American political climate these days that takes over pretty much everything else is the special investigation into the Trump campaign and potential...
One of the more looming stories over the American political climate these days that takes over pretty much everything else is the special investigation into the Trump campaign and potential collusion with Russian attempts to influence the US presidential election of 2016. There is a lot of information in the public domain about this story, including most recently Mueller seeking a revision of Paul Manafort's home confinement release after alleging that Manafort attempted to contact potential witnesses to conceal evidence relating to the various charges he faces.
You can find a decent overview of most of the publicly available information on the related wikipedia page.
So let's try to wrangle with all that public information. Please list, vet, and weigh the evidence you think is most important when it comes to the Special Investigation of the Trump campaign. Does it look like collusion with Russian electioneering happened or is this story mostly about finding incidental crimes of sloppy political first timers? What role do you think Russia played or tried to play in the 2016 election based on this publicly available evidence? What evidence would you like to see before making a judgment?
25 votes -
will we see a ~politics?
the reason why reddit feels so fractured is because all sides of the political compass are so split. id like to see one single ~politics channel and see how it works out, if everyone can keep it...
the reason why reddit feels so fractured is because all sides of the political compass are so split. id like to see one single ~politics channel and see how it works out, if everyone can keep it civil.
32 votes -
The case for quarantining extremist ideas
22 votes -
Jazz In The Age Of Trump: A Roundtable Discussion
8 votes -
Opposition in shambles weeks before Zimbabwe’s polls. Main opposition is in a race against time to put its house in order ahead of watershed elections set for the end of July.
4 votes -
Jordan's King Abdullah appoints new reformist PM in bid to quell unrest
3 votes -
US primary election results thread
7 votes -
Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz retiring, possible 2020 presidential contender
Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz is stepping down, and there are rumors he intends to run for office and possibly the presidency. A frequent Trump critic, he would presumably be running as a Democrat...
Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz is stepping down, and there are rumors he intends to run for office and possibly the presidency. A frequent Trump critic, he would presumably be running as a Democrat if he entered the 2020 race. He seems to be staking out a position in the center of the party, criticizing the idea of a government jobs program or single-payer healthcare.
Would you vote for him in a primary or general election? Does America need another businessman (albeit a successful one) president? How economically progressive should the Democrat's candidate be? Discuss.
7 votes