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9 votes
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Pete Buttigieg: 'Time for rethinking what campaigning looks like' amid coronavirus
9 votes -
It took five hours for Russian lawmakers to propose, consider, and adopt legislation that could keep Putin in office for another 16 years
12 votes -
UK Chief Medical Officer answers coronavirus questions from MPs
4 votes -
Rupert Murdoch actually tried to stop Trump, and he won't try to again
7 votes -
Fixing the debates: A better way to interrupt?
5 votes -
The atlas of redistricting/gerrymandering by 538
10 votes -
How will the Nevada caucuses turn out?
Fears grow over Nevada caucus malfunction (Probably as bad as Iowa. Not paywalled) Another caucus is coming. But Nevada will look completely different (It will be far more representative than...
Fears grow over Nevada caucus malfunction (Probably as bad as Iowa. Not paywalled)
Another caucus is coming. But Nevada will look completely different (It will be far more representative than Iowa. Also they will use a Google Form so technical issues will be limited. Paywalled)
What we know (and don't) about the Nevada caucus 'tool' (Covers on the 'tool' that will be used to count the votes, potential backups in case of failure and a few other caucus related technicalities. Not paywalled)
8 votes -
After launching its feminist foreign policy, Sweden is now pushing for a feminist trade policy and wants the initiative to be on the agenda at the upcoming WTO summit
4 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 -
What is the US Senate filibuster and what would it take to remove it?
7 votes -
How Fox News gets other cable news channels to push their stories
8 votes -
The Democrats do terribly in state elections and it really matters
6 votes -
Andrew Yang’s new US non-profit is giving away $500,000 in free cash as a UBI experiment
23 votes -
What if the court saw other rights as generously as gun rights?
12 votes -
EARN IT act is a direct attack on end-to-end encryption
25 votes -
Other countries are testing patients for coronavirus by the tens of thousands. Why the U.S. is so far behind
20 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 -
Joe Biden outperformed because he won US voters who decide late
17 votes -
Amy Klobuchar looked great on paper. What went wrong?
5 votes -
Many young voters sat out Super Tuesday, contributing to Bernie Sanders' losses
29 votes -
Book recommendation: Anti-Social by Andrew Marantz
I just finished Andrew Marantz's Anti-Social: Online Extremists, Techno-Utopians, and the Hijacking of the American Conversation, and I think it's a book that would interest a lot of the people on...
I just finished Andrew Marantz's Anti-Social: Online Extremists, Techno-Utopians, and the Hijacking of the American Conversation, and I think it's a book that would interest a lot of the people on this site. Marantz is a journalist for the New Yorker who embedded himself with alt-right influencers and social media companies. This book is a compilation of all of those stories; part memoir, part retelling, part observation, part commentary.
Despite its title, the book is not a one-dimensional hit piece. I actually strongly dislike the title as I feel it's a bit too barbed for a book that's rooted in extensive, thoughtful contemplation. The author is honest, open-minded, and critical. I hate the word "balanced" for all of the baggage it brings to the table, but it really feels like the best word to use, especially as an antonym for "unbalanced". He deftly handles a lot of different subjects here. He doesn't shy away from giving criticism where its due, but he's also not quick to judge, trying to understand the broader picture first before casting any judgments about it.
I mention it here because I think it has a lot of relevance to Tildes as a site, as well as the type of people that have congregated here. It covers a lot of ground of direct interest to Tildes: the role of social media platforms to police speech and ideology; how the structure of social media creates influence; how bad faith actors can manipulate systems; how noxious ideologies continue to appeal and propagate. I also know that Tildes trends toward the left, and as someone far on that side myself, I appreciated this book for giving me what I feel was a fair and thoughtful window into the lives of certain high-profile people on the right. It's easy to think of them as a monolith, but I was surprised by the differences between all of his various character portraits. Marantz never loses the individual humanity of his subjects, even when some of them are abjectly abhorrent people.
I should mention that the book is very US-centric, as that was where he focused his journalistic efforts. As such, readers outside the US might not appreciate it as much, but I still think a lot of what he shares is relevant no matter where you are located since we all share space together online.
6 votes -
Swedish teenage activist Greta Thunberg says EU legislation to tackle climate change is a surrender
9 votes -
Michael Bloomberg drops out of US Presidential race, endorses Joe Biden
30 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 -
The normalization of far-right populism in Europe
8 votes -
Bogus automated copyright claims by CBS blocked Super Tuesday speeches by Bernie Sanders, Mike Bloomberg, and Joe Biden
11 votes -
Here's how Biden and Sanders stack up when it comes to how they would govern the tech industry
6 votes -
The 2020 endorsement primary
15 votes -
QAnon now has its own super PAC, established by the owner of 8chan
21 votes -
The awakening of Norman Rockwell
7 votes -
The twenty-year argument between Joe Biden and Elizabeth Warren over bankruptcy, explained
10 votes -
If you were to run for president in your country, what would your platform be?
I'm Brazilian, and personally (in the most radical, electability-indifferent and honestly meme-y campaign) would go for Bernie with the campaign finance and tax reform but with a platform for...
I'm Brazilian, and personally (in the most radical, electability-indifferent and honestly meme-y campaign) would go for Bernie with the campaign finance and tax reform but with a platform for civical reform like putting STV as the nomination method for our chamber of deputies and supporting automating or funding new technologies to replace menial labor, like funding lab grown meat to replace all farming companies and labor now or robotics to automate large parts of the industrial and service sectors and use that money saved from not paying wages to people doing bad jobs to fund free universities and better schools/wages/welfare/infrastructure to the people once doing that work, along with adding civics and economics as subjects in school and always including notes as to where do you use the content you're learning, along with requiring subsidiaries to go independent or drop their branding. Clearly this isn't very realistic so feel free to expouse absurd policy.
14 votes -
Tech was supposed to improve caucuses. Instead, it may have doomed them
14 votes -
Putin introduces constitutional amendments banning same-sex marriage and mentioning God
18 votes -
Public Enemy fires Flavor Flav after Bernie Sanders rally spat
8 votes -
Three cheers for socialism - Christian love and political practice
7 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 -
Progressives' foreign policy dillemma
3 votes -
Thousands march on the fifth anniversary of Boris Nemtsov's death, to protest Putin's "constitutional coup"
9 votes -
How Bernie Sanders answers a question
23 votes -
How to respond to COVID-19
10 votes -
Vox just made four videos on the strengths of the 2020 frontrunners
The case for Bernie Sanders The case for Joe biden The case for Elizabeth Warren The case for Pete Buttigieg
9 votes -
Brazil senator Cid Gomes shot in stand-off with police
6 votes -
Twenty-two studies, across ideological differences, agree: Medicare for All saves money
37 votes -
Are social networks polarizing? A Q&A with Ezra Klein | The Interface with Casey Newton, Issue #464, Feb 27
5 votes -
Trump faces his 'Chernobyl moment' after slashing pandemic defences to the bone
12 votes