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8 votes
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After Democrats surged in 2018, Republican-run states eye new curbs on voting
12 votes -
A gallery of 80s political cartoons condeming video games
28 votes -
Conspiracy theories can't be stopped
10 votes -
Why we confronted Chelsea Clinton - the activists who confronted Chelsea Clinton at the vigil for victims of the Christchurch massacre explain their actions
8 votes -
Obscure no-deal Brexit group is UK's biggest political spender on Facebook
17 votes -
Google to ban political ads in Canada ahead of federal election, citing difficulty of complying with new transparency rules
7 votes -
After stinging Presidential loss, Popular Vote Movement gains momentum in states
21 votes -
The US founders created the Electoral College to prevent a foreign-influenced candidate from winning—it didn't stop Donald Trump, so let's scrap it
6 votes -
Paul Manafort in Ukraine
4 votes -
Warning to Democrats: Most Americans against US getting more politically correct
13 votes -
At Yale, we conducted an experiment to turn conservatives into liberals. The results say a lot about our political divisions.
34 votes -
Shareblue astroturf analysis
8 votes -
'A cancer on democracy': The battle to end gerrymandering in America
6 votes -
Facebook's "paid for by" disclosure for political ads is easily manipulated and rarely verified
12 votes -
Editorial cartoon: Sept. 29, 2018 - The newest piece from award-winning artist Bruce MacKinnon
45 votes -
Forget Republicans v Democrats: Meet America’s new tribes
6 votes -
How game design transformed Hillary for America's supporter engagement
2 votes -
Bigfoot tries to get footage of an elusive congressman
10 votes -
Bob Dylan - Only a Pawn in Their Game (1964)
6 votes -
Kalahari Surfers - Beachbomb (1988)
6 votes -
What does it take to impeach a president?
3 votes -
Democrats should get real with White working-class voters
13 votes -
The Victorian parliament has passed new legislation tightening rules for donations to Australian political parties
6 votes -
Ocasio-Cortez floats a “sub-caucus” of progressives willing to vote together as a bloc
7 votes -
Speaking on behalf of … In the tapestry of diverse social groups, the loudest and most extreme get heard. To whom should we actually listen?
5 votes -
Data suggest that gentrifying neighborhoods powered Ocasio-Cortez's victory
6 votes -
A political scientist argues that the Democratic Party must play "procedural hardball" too: The Republicans aren’t engaged in a policy fight. instead, they’re waging a “procedural war.”
13 votes -
The identifying terms we use (and the political history behind them)
Today's political climate has all sorts of terms being thrown around with varying meanings and history behind them. There are Liberals (political ideology for FREEDUM), and Liberals (foreign...
Today's political climate has all sorts of terms being thrown around with varying meanings and history behind them. There are Liberals (political ideology for FREEDUM), and Liberals (foreign policy), and Liberals (economic policy), and Liberals ("conservatives"), and Liberals ("centrist, anti-absolute monarchists"), and Liberals ("democrats"), and Liberals (some other field that annoys the shit out of me). There are Progressives, and Conservatives, Nationalists, Socialists, Social Democrats, unreconstructed Monarchists, Reconstructed Monarchists, Anarchists, and I'm sure some other political identity that I've missed.
So, given the rather long list of ways to identify politically, and the just about as long history for those ways to identify politically, I thought we should have a discussion focused exclusively on the political history of the terms we used.
So, the questions:
1. What terms do you commonly use to describe yourself and others in your political environment? 2. What is the relevant history that informs the way you use common political terms to describe yourself and others? 3. Got any links, movies, books, etc., that delve into that history?
This has the potential to get hairy because of how broad it is, so I'm going to try to remind people of some best practices that I use when engaging in meaningful discussion:
- Understand before criticizing. - Be able to frame someone's view in a way that they can agree with themselves before critiquing their view. Questions are your friend, but make sure the questions are focused on better understanding someone's view, not on biasing reactions to a view.
- Assume good faith. - Calling people "trolls" makes me very angry. Don't do it. For any reason. To anyone. If your case is so bulletproof that you'd be willing to call someone out for it here, take it to @Deimos instead. I don't want to read it here.
- I Could Be Wrong - There is nothing wrong with having confidence in your view, but there should be some part of you that recognizes you can be wrong about whatever claim you make. Nothing is 100%. Absolutely Only Sith Deal In Absolutes, etc.
11 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 -
Think American elections are bad? Indian voters get 1,000 texts a day
4 votes -
Sports are political! Athletes and politics are inextricably linked - just like everything else
6 votes