-
11 votes
-
Nancy Pelosi says US House of Representatives will draft impeachment charges against Donald Trump
18 votes -
Iceland's prime minister Katrín Jakobsdóttir has urged governments to adopt green and family-friendly priorities, instead of just focusing on economic growth figures
11 votes -
The Bell Curve
10 votes -
US Trade Representative investigation concludes that France's Digital Services Tax discriminates against US companies, proposes retaliatory tariffs of up to 100% on French products
7 votes -
The Real Class War
18 votes -
Denmark has for the first time put mineral-rich Greenland top of its national security agenda, ahead of terrorism and cybercrime
10 votes -
Are bankers scared of Corbyn? We asked them
10 votes -
Mikhail Gorbachev's Pizza Hut ad is his most bizarre legacy, and tells the story of his attempt to find—and to fund—a place in a country that wanted nothing more to do with him
10 votes -
Why is childcare so expensive?
13 votes -
China tried to plant its candidate in Australian Federal Parliament, authorities believe
17 votes -
Michael Bloomberg joins 2020 Democratic field for US President
13 votes -
From January, jet fuel suppliers in Norway must blend 0.5% of biofuel in all their aviation fuel – a policy Oslo hopes will lead to lower CO2 emissions
7 votes -
Free-wheeling hypothetical: President Pelosi ... how would that work?
Admittedly highly unlikely ... but also becoming less inconceivable by the day. She is 2nd in line after Pence. So, let's just say, 3-5 months from now, They swear in Pelosi as the next POTUS....
Admittedly highly unlikely ... but also becoming less inconceivable by the day. She is 2nd in line after Pence.
So, let's just say, 3-5 months from now, They swear in Pelosi as the next POTUS. What does that do to both Repub and Dem Primaries? What does it mean for the next election? Does the US keep itself together long enough to have an election?
Heck, while I'm asking, what about a President Pence in 3-5 months. That's at least an order of magnitude less unlikely. How would that play out?
PS: Somebody recently started a 'what do you daydream about' thread ... so, you-know ... this.
8 votes -
Iran's internet blackout reaches four-day mark
15 votes -
Google updates their political advertising policies, limits targeting capabilities, and expands which ads are covered by their transparency report
14 votes -
The Impeachable Mr. Trump
11 votes -
Why do Trump’s supporters stand by him, no matter what?
27 votes -
Australia's labour market is sick
4 votes -
How activists are getting around Iran’s internet blackout
6 votes -
Congressional Impeachment Hearings Day 3 Live Feed
11 votes -
The schedule for this week's public impeachment hearings
11 votes -
Trump administration hosting new Greenland talks with Denmark, focused on presence and investments
4 votes -
Donald Trump ally Roger Stone found guilty of lying to US Congress, witness tampering
24 votes -
Iceland's biggest fisheries company Samherji stands accused of bribing Namibian politicians
4 votes -
Italian council is flooded immediately after rejecting measures on climate change
8 votes -
There's another new faction in the Canadian Senate: the Progressive Senate Group
4 votes -
Global condemnation of 'appalling' coup in Bolivia as military forces socialist president Evo Morales to resign
13 votes -
Impeachment inquiry live on YouTube
16 votes -
The Trump administration is preparing to significantly limit the scientific and medical research that the government can use to determine public health regulations
10 votes -
Smart TVs collect data for political-advertising use
16 votes -
Former NSW Fire chief frustrated at Govt for 'sweeping climate change under the rug'
10 votes -
Bay Area students and teachers rally for school funding and Prop 13 reform
6 votes -
The math for Elizabeth Warren’s US health-care plan adds up if you accept its ludicrous premise
10 votes -
'OK boomer': New Zealand MP shuts down climate change heckler with viral quip
21 votes -
Facebook's former Head of Global Elections Integrity Ops on how Facebook's policies towards political advertising are harming democracy
6 votes -
"Children and Politics" - a 3 minute interview with British children before the 1964 general election
This is short, but it demonstrates something that's been missing from tv for a while, which is the simple interview with children that recognises they are children but still takes them seriously...
This is short, but it demonstrates something that's been missing from tv for a while, which is the simple interview with children that recognises they are children but still takes them seriously as humans.
EDIT: Somehow I missed the main link, which goes to a BFI page here: https://player.bfi.org.uk/free/film/watch-children-and-politics-1964-online
There are some amazing old (1960s, 1970s) British tv interviews with children carried out by Harold Williamson. He asks children a question and then just lets them answer. There's no attempt to laugh at the children, and there's no attempt to say "zomg look at what this cute kid is saying".
A few clips here, https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b06tq93b and there are probably more on Youtube: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b06tq93b
It's showing its age - "what would you do if your husbands went on strike? How would you run a household?" (asked of two girls) isn't acceptable.
7 votes -
Discussion: Top 10 Stupidest Things US Fed Govt has done
Okay, so this notion is still a bit undefined in my head, kind of figuring it out now, as I type. I want to come up with a list (doesn't actually have to be 10) of the worst things the US...
Okay, so this notion is still a bit undefined in my head, kind of figuring it out now, as I type.
I want to come up with a list (doesn't actually have to be 10) of the worst things the US government has done, to undermine the ideals and principles that the United States was (at least nominally) founded on ... truth, justice, baseball and mom's apple pie - kinda stuff.
You can go back as far in history as you like (so Civil War, Dred Scott, things like that are absolutely open for consideration) ... but it has to be something that continues to significantly impact US govt, US society and/or the world, to this day ... something they have not remedied.
Off the top of my head, the main thing that comes to mind is the Citizens United case, which I believe has fundamentally broken the US political system (which was, previously, already seriously frayed). I'd also consider the non-consideration (by the Senate) of Merrick Garland's Supreme Court nomination (by Obama), and the US (both the govt and the public) collective "whatever" to the news that Russia interfered in the 2016 US elections (and continues to do so, now joined by China and assorted others).
I may edit this to refine the idea. But the basic goal is to create a really high-level list of "First Things" the US needs to fix, to have any hope of returning to a state of democracy (okay, democratic republic), and/or normalcy.
5 votes -
The African-Italians who want to send migrants home
3 votes -
The Trump campaign has held at least 15 contests since 2018 offering the chance to win breakfast, lunch, or dinner with the President. There is no evidence anyone has ever won.
16 votes -
California contemplates a dark and fiery future
9 votes -
Pete Buttigieg’s climate vision: Local fixes for a planet in crisis
5 votes -
Why Americans hate taxes, and why some people want them to
12 votes -
NH lawmaker blocks device repair bill, tells constituents to just buy new $1k phones
7 votes -
NSO exploited WhatsApp to hack at least 1400 phones and spy on top government officials at US allies
16 votes -
Twitter announces that they are stopping all political advertising globally
42 votes -
‘OK boomer’ marks the end of friendly generational relations
38 votes -
Atlantic Council has published an update to their 2016 Global Risks 2035 report, analyzing geopolitical and technological trends and their potential impacts on the future
7 votes -
Yang vs. Warren: Who has the better tax plan?
14 votes -
House Will Vote To Formalize Impeachment Procedures In Ongoing Inquiry
9 votes