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21 votes
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Forget the two-state solution. Let’s try six.
8 votes -
Russiagate is far wider than Trump and his inner circle
6 votes -
From the start, US President Donald Trump has muddied a clear message: Vladimir Putin interfered
12 votes -
The town at the heart of Nicaragua’s opposition movement
2 votes -
The rise of digital dictatorships - Prof. Yuval Noah Harari
5 votes -
Amazon is in a battle with the far left for the soul of Seattle
8 votes -
California GOP Congressman Rohrabacher met with accused Russian agent Maria Butina in St. Petersburg
8 votes -
Trump openly admits he believes Putin instead of US Intelligence over 2016 election interference
@joshtpm: Asked whether he believes US intel or Putin, Trump goes on tirade against FBI over "DNC Server", says it's not clear who to believe. https://t.co/d7Viw1Vn4B
34 votes -
Donald Trump is taking America back — to 1798, when John Adams colluded with an enemy power
7 votes -
Enforcing the law is inherently violent
4 votes -
A Chinese woman who poured ink over a Xi Jinping poster has been missing for two weeks, and her father was reportedly detained
7 votes -
US judge denies motion by Donald Trump ex-campaign chief to move Virginia trial
8 votes -
Is the Helsinki meeting the tipping point for US politicians?
From what I've seen, it has had a universally bad reaction. From D. From R. From every news network out there. Is this the tipping point?
31 votes -
US President Donald Trump's trade offensive is producing brutal local headlines
9 votes -
What are some Blind Spots of your political compatriots?
There's lot of academia out there that suggests that everyone has blindspots, topics and issues that we take with so much certainty that we would not even think to question them, people who so...
There's lot of academia out there that suggests that everyone has blindspots, topics and issues that we take with so much certainty that we would not even think to question them, people who so rarely enter into our concerns that we do not think to consider their needs or concerns, etc.
It's hard to know exactly what our own blindspots are because by their very nature as soon as they are identified they lose some of their power. This sort of self-awareness is difficult even on the best day, but it allows us to more reasonably address people who don't hold our views, so I think the exercise is justified.
This topic is intended to be introspective. Wherever you identify politically (left, right, moderate, anarchist, libertarian, the works), what are some topics and groups that your political people tend to struggle to focus on?
13 votes -
At last, a law that could have stopped Tony Blair and George W Bush invading. The Hague’s new crime of aggression might give belligerent heads of states a reason to pause.
10 votes -
Israel in turmoil over bill allowing Jews and Arabs to be segregated
7 votes -
Woman Who Sought Secret Meeting for Trump and Putin is Charged as Russian Agent
17 votes -
Ocasio-Cortez floats a “sub-caucus” of progressives willing to vote together as a bloc
7 votes -
Science under siege: Behind the scenes at Trump’s troubled environment agency
8 votes -
Donald Trump hints at the Queen's private views on UK Brexit
3 votes -
What are the limits of viewpoint diversity?
4 votes -
European anti-immigrant parties are embracing pro-lgbt stances to vilify Islam
6 votes -
Trump calls European Union a 'foe' – ahead of Russia and China
10 votes -
What, if anything, makes a morally good war?
I've been consuming the darkness that is wartime histories from the past three or four centuries and I feel like I've encountered a lot of people who had what they believed to be justifiable...
I've been consuming the darkness that is wartime histories from the past three or four centuries and I feel like I've encountered a lot of people who had what they believed to be justifiable reasons to launch wars against other powers. There are people who thought they had divine right to a particular position of power and so would launch a war to assert that god-given right. There are people who believed in a citizen's right to have some (any) say in how their tax money gets used in government and so would fight wars over that. People would fight wars to, as John Cleese once said, "Keep China British." Many wars are started to save the honor of a country/nation. Some are started in what is claimed to be self-defense and later turns out to have been a political play instigated to end what has been a political thorn in their sides.
In all this time, I've struggled to really justify many of these wars, but some of that comes with the knowledge of what other wars have cost in terms of human carnage and suffering. For some societies in some periods, the military is one of the few vehicles to social mobility (and I think tend to think social mobility is grease that keeps a society functioning). Often these conflicts come down to one man's penis and the inability to swallow their pride to find a workable solution unless at the end of a bayonet. These conflicts also come with the winning powers taking the opportunity to rid themselves of political threats and exacting new harms on the defeated powers (which comes back around again the next time people see each other in a conflict).
So help keep me from embracing a totally pacifistic approach to war. When is a war justifiable? When it is not only morally acceptable but a moral imperative to go to war? Please point to examples throughout history where these situations have happened, if you can (though if you're prepared to admit that there has been no justifiable war that you're aware of, I suppose that's fine if bitter).
20 votes -
Russia Investigations: Six key insights from the Cyberspy indictment
9 votes -
Elected officials, please stop drinking Silicon Valley's kool-aid
4 votes -
Eritrea and Ethiopia have made peace. How it happened and what next
11 votes -
‘My son is not the same’: New testimony paints bleak picture of family separation
23 votes -
The Russian "firehose of falsehood" propaganda model - Why it might work and options to counter It
11 votes -
Industry brands Australia's 10% migration intake drop 'disappointing'
0 votes -
‘Evil has won’ - Pro-American Germans feel betrayed
8 votes -
Guccifer 2.0 slipped up and revealed he was a Russian intelligence officer
6 votes -
The futility of trade war explained by economist Michael Pettis
6 votes -
Little upside for Malcolm Turnbull in debate over religious freedom
2 votes -
Sabotage laws give Australian PM Peter Dutton new powers over energy, port facilities
0 votes -
Cynthia Nixon announces she will run openly as a socialist
29 votes -
Obama Tops Public’s List of Best President in Their Lifetime, Followed by Clinton, Reagan
13 votes -
Miami grandma targeted as US takes aim at naturalized immigrants with prior offenses
23 votes -
Boris Johnson resigns in major Brexit blow to UK PM Theresa May
24 votes -
China vows firm and forcefull retaliation for $200 Billion US tariff threat
11 votes -
Why killing Dodd-Frank could lead to the next crash - Eliminating the bill was a top priority for Trump. So why did any Dems vote for it?
11 votes -
Defending democracy a generational struggle, Australian MPs warn
3 votes -
3 Arguments Against Socialism And Why They Fail
20 votes -
‘I can’t afford that’: A viral tweet shows why we need Medicare for all
34 votes -
Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan names son-in-law as treasury and finance minister
10 votes -
Democrats value communal personality traits while Republicans value agentic traits
4 votes -
Scott Pruitt resigns as US Environmental Protection Agency Administrator
32 votes -
Marc Elrich edges out David Blair in Democratic primary for Montgomery County executive
5 votes