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9 votes
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The NRA says it’s in deep financial trouble, may be ‘unable to exist’
8 votes -
Ontario PC voter worried about family's future without basic income pilot
13 votes -
An updated overview of the public facts of the Trump-Russia scandal, and five theories (from seven last year) mostly consistent with those facts
12 votes -
Is there appetite for a broader conversation on British news in particular, or UK Politics?
I can see ~news becoming global or US specific and I think geolocational tildes would be useful. I do want to know if there is an appetite for this though - I recognise that there would be work...
I can see ~news becoming global or US specific and I think geolocational tildes would be useful. I do want to know if there is an appetite for this though - I recognise that there would be work involved in moderating such a news tilde, so there has to be the interest.
Cheers,
Manley
18 votes -
The impossible de-escalation of culture wars
I've been feeling SO HAPPY this Monday, so I'm hoping y'all will be able to ease my light existential dread. That dread is based on cultural conflicts in the US and elsewhere, where people seem to...
I've been feeling SO HAPPY this Monday, so I'm hoping y'all will be able to ease my light existential dread. That dread is based on cultural conflicts in the US and elsewhere, where people seem to want to have things their way or the highway and no resolution is in sight.
"Culture war" is a term that assumes at least two sides fighting out their differences in an effectively zero-sum atmosphere; one side wins, one side loses. It would apply tons of different questions, a couple which we've discussed here in ~talk already. I see a "Culture War" as any conflict of opinion focused on cultural values, rights, mores, etc., in which the participants feel there must be a clear winner and a clear loser to the conflict. Abortion, discrimination/affirmative action (of any kind to any group), and gun control/rights are the three big culture-war issues that I think currently divide Americans.
Escalating an issue to culture war status means that issue will likely not be resolved for decades. While other issues ebb and flow, the culture war issues persist largely unchanged. I think the main reason for the doggedness of these issues is there is no possible way to deescalate them. The participants want too badly to be right to hear many reasons for seeing things differently, and almost any act to persuade has "complete capitulation" in mind as the primary goal of the rhetorician. The result is that no one hears or respects the people who disagree with them.
I have very little reason to be optimistic about any of these issues being resolved in my lifetime. Too many people use these cultural issues to identify themselves. Too many people use these issues to identify "others," or people who don't belong in their group. The room for open discussion on any of these issues is nil unless the discussion is held at the horns by a determined and skilled moderator.
My challenge to you, if you choose to accept it: find me a realistic path toward deescalating a culture war once it has begun. Historical examples would be much appreciated, if possible.
Edit: Someone told me privately that I went too academic, so I've adjusted the wording to be easier on the mind. Mondays all around, y'all.
26 votes -
Anyone interested in learning a bit more about the Catalan situation? AMA.
Hey all, I'm Catalan (expat) and many of my friends in the USA or other countries in Europe tend to ask me a lot about the Catalan situation: independence, Puigdemont's extradition, political...
Hey all,
I'm Catalan (expat) and many of my friends in the USA or other countries in Europe tend to ask me a lot about the Catalan situation: independence, Puigdemont's extradition, political prisoners, police brutality, etc. I figured maybe some users here will be interested too?
I consider myself equidistant to both the independentist nationalist, and the centralist nationalist movements (I'm more anti-borders than pro-borders, and I don't recognize the authority of any state), so I figure many of my responses will annoy everybody in Spain equally :-) . That said I would appreciate it if we all keep the discussion civil and as soon as I see flame wars I will stop answering questions.
To my fellow Spaniards/Catalans. Feel free to chime in, contradict me with facts and opinions (I will probably not argue with you, I'm actually eager to learn more about other points of view in this matter), answer questions that I haven't answered for lack of knowledge, etc. Hell even if you are not from Spain but you know about it feel free to give me your two cents.
Hope we get interesting discussions and we all learn from this!
16 votes -
Britain accused of failing to grasp scale, cost of modern slavery
7 votes -
The Trump-Russia investigation won't end well
11 votes -
538 shares largest dataset of Russian troll tweets, compiled by two professors at Clemson University
17 votes -
11,000 Wikileaks Twitter DMs have just been published for anyone to read
10 votes -
Donald Trump urges Attorney General Jeff Sessions to stop Robert Mueller probe 'right now'
17 votes -
To which extent do you think it is useful to call bullshit on Facebook posts?
So I have a few high school friends in Facebook who recently have become more radical (islamophobia, racism, sexism, identitarianism, etc.). As I said in a recent thread I have almost everyone but...
So I have a few high school friends in Facebook who recently have become more radical (islamophobia, racism, sexism, identitarianism, etc.). As I said in a recent thread I have almost everyone but family blocked on my feed, but sometimes I make it a point to go to their profiles and see what they have posted. It usually is a lot of disinformation, misdirection, and dog whistling. I try to call them out because younger kids in my town look up to people like them and I'm worried they will become a bad influence. I also hope that, even though they will probably not become anarchists (or even run-of-the-mill conservatives) tomorrow, at least they will be a bit more empathetic to other people's pain.
My question is, do you think it is useful to do this? Will their posts or my rebuttals make any difference at all? How do you react in these situations?
More broadly speaking, is it important to have people calling bullshit when other people say blatant lies? Or is it useless and that energy would be better spent somewhere else?
On the one hand even if it is just for signaling to other people (in my particular example, muslims, the LGBTQ community, etc.) that they are not alone it seems like a good thing to do. On the other hand, I'm finding it less and less likely every day that anyone will change their opinion on anything without a massive investment in bots/shills/astroturfers. Or a good psychedelic trip :-D.I am curious to hear your experiences regarding this and it is something I have discussed in person with other people and I always hear good arguments from both (and more) sides. Hopefully this is the right group/kind of thread and I'm doing the tag thing correctly, it is my first thread here !
15 votes -
Facebook says it identifies campaign to meddle in 2018 U.S. elections
9 votes -
The Federal Government will change the law to reassure Australians their privacy will be protected in the My Health Record system
4 votes -
Live coverage of the Paul Manafort trial
10 votes -
Facebook has released information about accounts/pages they banned today due to involvement in a coordinated inauthentic political influence campaign
15 votes -
With no cause or end in sight: Administrative detention a routine matter
3 votes -
"the preferences of the average American appear to have only a minuscule, near-zero, statistically non-significant impact upon public policy"
10 votes -
A withering verdict: MPs report on Zuckerberg, Russia and Cambridge Analytica
14 votes -
How Facebook is undermining democracy - Prof. Siva Vaidhyanathan
5 votes -
"Where were you radicalized?"
In all the discussions about whether "alt-right" should be tolerated, I tripped over the curiosity rock about what causes people to form or change political beliefs, what constitutes extremism,...
In all the discussions about whether "alt-right" should be tolerated, I tripped over the curiosity rock about what causes people to form or change political beliefs, what constitutes extremism, whether or not people come to realize they hold an extreme position, and how we can restore balance.
I got caught having a bad knee-jerk reaction here, and while I don't think my conclusion was wrong, it's taking a bit of work to unpack all of the knowledge, experience, and ideological biases that underlie it.
So, Tilders, was there a formative moment in your life (or close family/friend's experience) that set you on a course to uphold and defend a particular ideology, or did your position evolve over time?
Do you feel your adherence is "radical" or "extreme", and/or have others told you that you're an extremist/radical/ideologue?
What (or who) does your position make you unable to tolerate, if anything (or kind of person)?
Has your belief changed over time, or what do you think would change it?27 votes -
US Congress demands Jeff Bezos explain Amazon’s face recognition software
15 votes -
Colombian journalists say death threats reflect 'ugly' climate under new leader. They say ‘dangerous new atmosphere’ has emerged since Iván Duque, a fierce opponent of the peace process, took power
5 votes -
Why Pollies Want You To Fear African Gangs [video 7m 53s]
3 votes -
Polish government might prosecute people who fly LGBT white eagle flag for desecrating a national symbol
10 votes -
The Victorian parliament has passed new legislation tightening rules for donations to Australian political parties
6 votes -
House Republicans move to impeach deputy attorney general
30 votes -
'A huge win': New Zealand brings in paid domestic violence leave in world first
7 votes -
Audio expert examines Trump-Cohen tape
4 votes -
An unlikely group of billionaires and politicians has created the most unbelievable tax break ever
13 votes -
How football coaches became the vanguard of American conservatism
3 votes -
Donald Trump administration plans to help US farmers hurt by global trade tensions
4 votes -
Steve Bannon plans foundation to fuel far right in Europe
17 votes -
Lawsuit says migrants were subjected to dirty detention facilities, bad food and water
15 votes -
(The Danger of) Obama Nostalgia - "The Enemy Within"
13 votes -
Here are the 285,000 Manafort text messages that WikiLeaks wouldn't publish
32 votes -
Looking inside a used voting machine from the 2016 election
12 votes -
New Vermont legalization law sparks 'gift' delivery service
4 votes -
Anti Trump protests outside the White House continue into fifth day
8 votes -
Labor leader must stand up to militant union demands
0 votes -
David Davis brands use of child spies ‘morally repugnant’ – Theresa May’s spokeswoman defends practice revealed by House of Lords committee
8 votes -
Australian governments concede Great Barrier Reef headed for 'collapse'
13 votes -
When is a nation not a nation? Somaliland’s dream of independence.
8 votes -
Trump invites Putin to visit US
3 votes -
Internal documents show Facebook's own marketing strategy was influenced by what it learned from its valued customer, the Trump campaign
8 votes -
Israel passes controversial 'Jewish nation-state law', stripping Arabs of self-determination right
16 votes -
What the reality of breastfeeding looks like in the US
12 votes -
To win back power, Democrats must do things that make them uncomfortable
13 votes -
Putin tells diplomats he made Trump a new offer on Ukraine at their summit
4 votes