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7 votes
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Coronavirus update: Gov. Newsom warns of more California school closings, leaders call for calm
8 votes -
SpaceX raising over $500 million, double what Elon Musk's company planned to bring in
6 votes -
Rum rations in the navy during the 18th century: Grog
7 votes -
Momentus to offer last-miles service from SpaceX rideshare flights
3 votes -
State Department warns Americans against cruise ship travel during coronavirus outbreak
11 votes -
Traders are flying blind in S&P Futures after CME limits are hit
7 votes -
Gates-funded program will soon offer home-testing kits for new coronavirus
7 votes -
Google tracked his bike ride past a burglarized home. That made him a suspect.
18 votes -
NASA still doesn’t know if it wants Boeing to perform another test flight of its passenger spacecraft
7 votes -
Publisher drops Woody Allen's book after Ronan Farrow objects and employees walk out
7 votes -
Official: White House didn't want to tell seniors not to fly
12 votes -
"We Didn't Start The Fire" parody - Sherry Vine
I just saw this parody of "We Didn't Start The Fire" on Reddit. It might be a parody song, but it's also a potted history of LGBT activism in the USA for the past 60 years. We Didn't Start The...
I just saw this parody of "We Didn't Start The Fire" on Reddit. It might be a parody song, but it's also a potted history of LGBT activism in the USA for the past 60 years.
6 votes -
It’s not ‘One Million’ — it’s One Meddling Mom
11 votes -
How Fox News gets other cable news channels to push their stories
8 votes -
The markets expect another 50-75 basis cut to the fed funds rate, two weeks after a 50 basis cut
9 votes -
Andrew Yang’s new US non-profit is giving away $500,000 in free cash as a UBI experiment
23 votes -
The Boeing 737 MAX aircraft: Preliminary investigative findings from the US House Committee on Transportation & Infrastructure
5 votes -
How the working-class life is killing Americans, in charts
26 votes -
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s rocky effort to get Americans tested for coronavirus, explained
9 votes -
EARN IT act is a direct attack on end-to-end encryption
25 votes -
California directs some health insurers to waive co-pays, deductibles for coronavirus tests
11 votes -
Other countries are testing patients for coronavirus by the tens of thousands. Why the U.S. is so far behind
20 votes -
SXSW cancelled due to COVID-19 coronavirus
14 votes -
Super Tuesday: who did you end up voting for and why?
I'm curious how other people think about this.
23 votes -
Elizabeth Warren is ending her US presidential campaign
47 votes -
The American restaurant is on life support
10 votes -
Suckers list: How Allstate’s secret auto insurance algorithm squeezes big spenders in the US
7 votes -
Facebook files lawsuit against Namecheap
9 votes -
Many young voters sat out Super Tuesday, contributing to Bernie Sanders' losses
29 votes -
Live election results: Super Tuesday 2020
26 votes -
If the US removed FPTP and the electoral college, what new parties would pop up?
(You could replace FPTP with STV to keep the districts that elect representatives in the house intact.) I'll start. The Democratic party breaks up into the neoliberal and progressive parties. The...
(You could replace FPTP with STV to keep the districts that elect representatives in the house intact.)
I'll start.
The Democratic party breaks up into the neoliberal and progressive parties.
The neoliberal party is where centrist candidates like Joe Biden and Michael Bloomberg go.
The progressive party is where progressive candidates like Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren go.
The Republican party might lose a large part of their electorate to the libertarians, since many Republicans are more concerned about letting business prevail and don't really want cultural conservatism.
Andrew yang maybe also leaves the Democrats and founds his own party, the party for online reform.
The greens also become significantly more popular but they may have too much in common with the progressives.
The Senate could be changed to include as many seats as the house for proper representation.
18 votes -
Bogus automated copyright claims by CBS blocked Super Tuesday speeches by Bernie Sanders, Mike Bloomberg, and Joe Biden
11 votes -
Anthony Levandowski, former head of Uber's self-driving unit, files for bankruptcy after a court confirms he would have to pay Google $179 million
7 votes -
Companies are contracting out more jobs—that’s not great for workers
10 votes -
NASA won't be able to send commands to Voyager 2 for the next eleven months, while upgrades are made to the Deep Space Network
8 votes -
Cost matters: Why Lambda School should have a lower success rate than college
3 votes -
WFIRST, proposed for cancellation, is approved for development
3 votes -
Falcon Heavy to launch NASA Psyche asteroid mission
6 votes -
The high-tech iBackpack received almost $800,000 from crowdfunding, but backers never received their bags. Now the creator is being sued by the FTC and state of Texas.
13 votes -
Here's how Biden and Sanders stack up when it comes to how they would govern the tech industry
6 votes -
The problem with telling sick US workers to stay home
7 votes -
Pro Chef, Molly Baz, makes a meal with $10K+ Caviar
3 votes -
What happens if (and when) Apple cancels WWDC 2020?
3 votes -
The twenty-year argument between Joe Biden and Elizabeth Warren over bankruptcy, explained
10 votes -
How to build your own starter house in just five steps — for $25,000
6 votes -
Japanese toilets are marvels of technological innovation. American toilets not so much
7 votes -
The forgotten story of America's first EMT services
5 votes -
Which US presidential candidate do you think has the best foreign policy?
The nice thing about electability being uncertain is that you can choose the candidate you think is best. Unfortunately I have lost faith in my ability to decide that. Studying candidates'...
The nice thing about electability being uncertain is that you can choose the candidate you think is best.
Unfortunately I have lost faith in my ability to decide that. Studying candidates' policies seems useless since, after all, Congress makes the laws. We are likely to see either stalemate or centrist legislation regardless.
Maybe I should decide based on foreign policy instead? Most people don't do that but I don't see why not. Any recommendations for interesting articles to read?
12 votes -
Healthcare rant thread
So I don't know about all of you, but I'm pretty sick of terrible healthcare in the USA. So I'm starting this thread for all of us to rant about our personal issues with healthcare. I'll be...
So I don't know about all of you, but I'm pretty sick of terrible healthcare in the USA.
So I'm starting this thread for all of us to rant about our personal issues with healthcare. I'll be writing my rant into it's own reply later (it's a bit of a long one), but I wanted to start the thread now to give others a chance to start venting.
Rules of Rant Thread:
- Don't argue a rant
- Thread is likely going to be incredibly USA-centric. USA healthcare is assumed unless stated otherwise.
- Rants should involve people no more than 2 degrees of separation from yourself. This thread is to vent about your personal experiences, not hearsay from total strangers.
In order to foster further discussion, and include those without a rant: Here are some things I personally would appreciate and expect for replies, but others might not.
- Explanation of how things would work out for you if you were in a similar situation
- Advice for dealing with any ongoing or future problems
33 votes