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5 votes
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Trump campaign is reportedly plotting an election coup to “bypass” a Biden win
28 votes -
The United States is not entitled to lead the world
15 votes -
DeJoy tells judge mail-sorting machines can’t be reassembled
11 votes -
Sensory overload and annals of lying
3 votes -
Is the UK moving towards government by decree?
6 votes -
President Trump is continuing his war on Section 230 and the right for the open internet to exist
8 votes -
Trump won’t commit to ‘peaceful’ post-election transfer of power
9 votes -
Can anyone help me narrow down the definition of "gaslighting" to better make sense of it as a concept?
I read the Wikipedia article about "gaslighting" and know it comes from a 1944 film of the same name in which an abusive husband gradually dims the gaslights at home – while denying doing so – to...
I read the Wikipedia article about "gaslighting" and know it comes from a 1944 film of the same name in which an abusive husband gradually dims the gaslights at home – while denying doing so – to drive his wife mad.
Yet whenever I see the term used (which happens a lot, lately) I can't make the connection. It seems people use it for the simple act of lying or denying something, which to me is mostly just... lying, not "gaslighting". Any kind of stupid, misguided act is getting the sinister "gaslighting" stamp as if it some 5d chess move when it simply looks like incompetence. The core principle of it seems to revolve around having a plan to psychologically manipulate someone but I mostly don't see the plan nor the actual goal. If anything untruthful you say about an important topic is "gaslighting", then the term doesn't seem to have a lot of value on its own. Wikipedia actually mentions "unconscious" gaslighting which seems to contradict its purpose of actually wanting to manipulate someone.
So, given its popularity, I'm curious if there might be a (succinct) definition of the term that helps me understand it properly? Do you think it's just a trendy term to throw at politicians doing shit you don't like? Am I missing an important detail?
17 votes -
Viral hate, election interference, and hacked accounts: Inside the tech industry’s decades-long failure to reckon with risk
8 votes -
The supply of disinformation will soon be infinite: Disinformation campaigns used to require a lot of human effort to be effective, but now artificial intelligence could take them to a whole new level
9 votes -
Thomas Frank on the podcast "Useful Idiots"
3 votes -
Donald Trump accused of sexual assault by former model Amy Dorris
17 votes -
Court blocks Trump’s WeChat ban from taking effect today
17 votes -
FiveThirtyEight Senate forecast
30 votes -
The FinCen Files: Thousands of secret suspicious activity reports offer a picture of corruption and complicity - and how the government lets it flourish
11 votes -
Monterey bans gas leaf blowers in residential areas
14 votes -
How the Beirut explosion was a government failure
6 votes -
The FBI, the second Red scare, and the folk singer who cooperated
6 votes -
Politics is an American industry
5 votes -
With violent crime on the rise, Minneapolis City Council asks: Where are the police?
5 votes -
On the rudeness of mobs
4 votes -
The country’s most important climate election is happening in Texas
8 votes -
How to think about the deficit by James Tobin
6 votes -
6,600-word internal memo from a fired Facebook data scientist details how the social network knew leaders of countries around the world were using the site to manipulate voters — and failed to act
21 votes -
Why don't we just ban the buying, selling, and merging of companies?
With the ever-growing stream of acquisitions and mergers, it got me thinking: Why do we permit companies to do this? What would the harm be in banning this practice? If a company is becomes...
With the ever-growing stream of acquisitions and mergers, it got me thinking: Why do we permit companies to do this?
What would the harm be in banning this practice? If a company is becomes insolvent, release all of it's IP to the public domain, dissolve all patents/trademarks, and sell off physical assets to pay debtors (first of which should be former employees IMO, but that's a separate discussion).
Edit: I think my original intention of the post to kick off some interesting discussion has worked. Thank you to all current and future posters!
16 votes -
"We have capitalism for the poor and socialism for the rich" - Mark Blyth
13 votes -
Woodward book: Trump says he knew coronavirus was ‘deadly’ and worse than the flu while intentionally misleading Americans
30 votes -
Effective political giving
11 votes -
LVMH backs out of $16.2 billion acquisition of Tiffany, citing US threats of tariffs on French goods. Tiffany has filed a lawsuit to enforce the agreement
6 votes -
Who gets to vote in Florida?
10 votes -
People who live near the most toxic sites in America say they saw a level of attention they hadn't seen in decades under Donald Trump
18 votes -
When fascism was American; Using religion, anticommunism and xenophobia, "Father" Charles Coughlin popularized fascism in 1930s America, not too unlike Donald Trump today
8 votes -
Trump eliminates federal anti-racism training, calling it “a sickness”
30 votes -
Denmark's left-leaning parties have agreed to change the country's sexual violence laws to allow sex without explicit consent to be prosecuted as rape
21 votes -
Academics are really, really worried about their freedom
27 votes -
Uber is hurting drivers like me in its legal fight in California
3 votes -
Brazil hands out so much Covid cash that poverty nears a low
9 votes -
The path to autocracy; A second Trump term will leave America’s political system and culture looking even more like Orbán’s Hungary
31 votes -
How Covid reveals the ghoulish reality behind anti homeless propaganda
11 votes -
India bans PUBG, Baidu, WeChat, Alipay, and 114 Chinese apps in the third ban wave
20 votes -
We don’t know how to warn you any harder. America is dying.
25 votes -
Donald Trump administration announces nationwide US eviction moratorium through end of the year
16 votes -
Joe Biden campaign launches official Animal Crossing: New Horizons yard signs
8 votes -
Ailing Abe quits as Japan PM as COVID-19 slams economy, key goals unmet
18 votes -
United States House subcommittee releases coronavirus task force reports kept secret by the White House
18 votes -
Steve Bannon arrested and charged with fraud related to "We Build the Wall" crowdfunding campaign
35 votes -
What's the most interesting/unique/strange aspect of your country's politics?
In my country (Brazil), it's probably the "Centrão". It's basically like, a dozen or so centrist/center-right/random parties who vote together as if they were a bloc for reasons which can only be...
In my country (Brazil), it's probably the "Centrão". It's basically like, a dozen or so centrist/center-right/random parties who vote together as if they were a bloc for reasons which can only be explained with corruption, which seems to be the case. (The Wikipedia article (PT-BR) straight up says that it's a group that tries to approach the executive for political favors so yeah.)
I'm not sure how we deal with the US, given how much the US has to cite as strange, but a lot of the stuff on this site is already dedicated to the US.
16 votes -
That US Air Force B-52 flying over the Black Sea was bait for the Russians
11 votes -
Europe's young not so woke? Generational divisions in European countries seem less pronounced and young people seem to be less consistently aligned with the left than expected
8 votes