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37 votes
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Joe Biden is certified as the 46th President of the United States
43 votes -
Number of people killed in deadly attacks in the post-9/11 era, by ideology
9 votes -
Pennsylvania Republicans block seating of Democratic state senator, take control from lieutenant governor
20 votes -
Making policy for a low-trust world
6 votes -
AskHistorians write-up on January 2021 sedition at the US Capitol
23 votes -
Joint session of US Congress for counting of Electoral College ballots (objections to certify election)
10 votes -
Open-source developer and manager David Recordon named White House Director of Technology
14 votes -
Stop worrying about upper-class suburbanites
14 votes -
Jack Ma disappears from his own talent show
13 votes -
Who named the United States and what alternatives gained the most traction?
5 votes -
Trump took a wrecking ball to media credibility—can Biden repair it?
7 votes -
Why didn't the Virginias reunite?
4 votes -
Historic change to Advance Australia Fair, Australia's national anthem, in the 'spirit of unity'
7 votes -
Officials increasingly alarmed about US President Donald Trump’s power grab
21 votes -
Jair Bolsonaro: 2020 person of the year in organized crime and corruption
8 votes -
Experts lay out the criteria for choosing Biden's CTO, who will be faced with using tech to tackle everything from climate change to vaccine distribution
6 votes -
The daisy ad and an appeal to fear
4 votes -
On Marx, Lincoln, slavery and socialism in the years following the Civil War
13 votes -
The political depravity of unjust pardons
6 votes -
Hiding COVID-19: How Trump Administration guidance suppresses photography of the pandemic
6 votes -
Los Angeles Department of Public Health urges film industry vigilance to help contain COVID-19
7 votes -
Washington’s secret to the perfect Zoom bookshelf? Buy it wholesale.
18 votes -
Email accounts belonging to Finnish MPs were compromised during a cyberattack on the country's parliament in the autumn
6 votes -
Andrew Yang files paperwork to run for New York City mayor
26 votes -
Trump promises to veto crucial defense-spending bill unless it includes a full repeal of CDA 230, the law that protects online platforms from liability
27 votes -
Fantasy politics
4 votes -
Giving up on the economy-wide carbon pricing dream
7 votes -
Denmark will dig up millions of dead mink after a hasty cull and burial intended to stamp out a coronavirus mutation ended with a new contamination risk
20 votes -
"If it hadn't been for the prompt work of the medics": FSB officer inadvertently confesses murder plot to Alexei Navalny
30 votes -
The full(est possible) story of the Four Seasons Total Landscaping press conference
11 votes -
The Sino-Soviet split: How did Soviet Russia and China become enemies?
3 votes -
Covid-19: St Pancras crowds 'totally irresponsible'
9 votes -
How did the Soviet government work?
4 votes -
Dutch researcher claims that he accessed US President Donald Trump's Twitter account by guessing password
21 votes -
‘This is the reality’: Far-right Newsmax and One America channels grapple uneasily with Joe Biden’s electoral college victory
20 votes -
Warnock and Ossoff are testing a new strategy for Democrats in the US south
8 votes -
US Electoral College affirms Joe Biden’s victory
25 votes -
FSB team of chemical weapon experts implicated in Alexey Navalny Novichok poisoning
13 votes -
What issues or aspects of life are largely one's personal responsibility to deal with?
Asked mainly because Conservatives say that's one of the things they believe in It often seems to be wrong or misused ("if everyone just used masks and stayed home the pandemic would have ended...
Asked mainly because
Conservatives say that's one of the things they believe in
It often seems to be wrong or misused ("if everyone just used masks and stayed home the pandemic would have ended long ago") ("not using masks during a pandemic has consequences for other people and thus doesn't belong in personal freedom")
A definition for stuff that fits the question could be this:
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The credit or blame for consistently failing or succeding at it is largely on you
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While you can ask for advice to get better, you have to do it yourself
So the main examples that come to my mind are largely (well) personal:
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Being motivated and committed to work towards what you want
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Being hygienic
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Being good at socializing and figuring out what's your relationship with other people gonna be
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(although obviously, given socializing depends on other people, this is very dependent on them doing the same and accepting/recognizing you or your choices and so is more accurate on progressive or apolitical social environments)
Which is good but doesn't explain it being used as a political belief.
17 votes -
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Norway may stop British and EU vessels fishing in its waters from January 1st – talks held up by London's protracted Brexit standoff with Brussels
8 votes -
Supreme Court rejects Texas lawsuit seeking to subvert election
21 votes -
US Supreme Court rejects Donald Trump ally’s push to overturn Joe Biden win in Pennsylvania
23 votes -
Dianne Feinstein’s missteps raise a painful age question among US Senate Democrats
15 votes -
Fed up with Capitalism, Marxism gains popularity among youth in China
12 votes -
Amid a crackdown on ‘separatism’, how do French Muslims feel?
6 votes -
'Armed protesters' target Michigan official's home
14 votes -
With growing tensions in the Arctic region, the Faroe Islands are now receiving more attention from superpowers
3 votes -
A conversation with the police - Uncomfortable conversations with a Black man Ep. 9
5 votes -
The Danish climate minister closing down the oil industry – Dan Jørgensen has agreed the world's most ambitious climate goal with a promise to cut 70% of emissions by 2030
8 votes