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7 votes
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Premier Daniel Andrews has just announced that the Victorian government will ban gay conversion therapy in that state
9 votes -
UAE’s tolerance embraces faiths, runs up against politics
4 votes -
New Jersey approved LGBTQ-inclusive school curriculum — And it's only the second in the nation
7 votes -
Georgia push for Equal Rights Amendment draws GOP support
7 votes -
To save the planet, the Green New Deal needs to improve urban land use
6 votes -
Legislative Round-Up: Criminal Justice Reform in the States
3 votes -
Let’s Talk: The hypocrisy of Bell Canada and mental health under capitalism
4 votes -
The US President's $2,614 per minute transport system
4 votes -
Betsy DeVos Is Fabricating History to Sell a Bad Education Policy
14 votes -
Socrates versus Roger Stone
9 votes -
Australia recognises Juan Guaidó as Venezuela president
6 votes -
Jean Wyllys: Gay Brazil politician will not return over death threats
12 votes -
Angola is the latest African country to decriminalise homosexuality
9 votes -
Ex-Jakarta Governor Ahok, jailed for blasphemy, freed
3 votes -
Stop trusting viral videos
16 votes -
With Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Americans finally have a politician who agrees with them about taxes
24 votes -
President Donald Trump directed his attorney Michael Cohen to lie to US Congress about the Moscow Tower project
24 votes -
Kim Stanley Robinson’s lunar revolution
4 votes -
GOP Rep. Tom Marino resigns from Congress
9 votes -
Privacy and Politics
I was thinking about the intersection of internet privacy and politics. You could even say I was having a bit of a mini-crisis. I like to think of myself as being pretty liberal, but I wondering...
I was thinking about the intersection of internet privacy and politics. You could even say I was having a bit of a mini-crisis. I like to think of myself as being pretty liberal, but I wondering how that fits into privacy. I was a little upset when I learned that Obama called Edward Snowden unpatriotic. I was kind of thinking that what he did was patriotic. Wasn't the NSA monitoring US citizens without warrants. That's morally wrong right? I think I would be pretty fine with the government monitoring someone if they had a warrant given to them by a non-secret court. I'm wondering if anyone here can give me some insight on this or if anyone else feels/has felt this way.
4 votes -
When leaders are bullies
5 votes -
The 2019 geopolitical reading list
8 votes -
These are all the federal HTTPS websites that’ll expire soon because of the US government shutdown
8 votes -
Jailed model who claimed she has dirt on Russian oligarch speaks out
3 votes -
Transparency-seeking OPEN Government Data Act signed into law
7 votes -
Who owns the internet? (What Big Tech’s monopoly powers mean for our culture.)
11 votes -
Fact: Calling out political furphies works, in Australia at least
An article from the Sydney Morning Herald: Fact: Calling out political furphies works, in Australia at least (with some local flavour) An article from New Scientist: Australians care if...
An article from the Sydney Morning Herald: Fact: Calling out political furphies works, in Australia at least (with some local flavour)
An article from New Scientist: Australians care if politicians tell lies, but people in the US don’t (from a non-Australian point of view)
The study itself in Royal Society Open Science: Does truth matter to voters? The effects of correcting political misinformation in an Australian sample.
4 votes -
Donald Trump Was Never Vetted
20 votes -
Noam Chomsky - The Right Turn (1986)
9 votes -
Danish government to improve conditions for prostitutes
9 votes -
Build the US wall? It could take at least ten years, even with 10,000 workers.
11 votes -
How an emerging African megacity cut commutes by two hours a day
11 votes -
Ocasio-Cortez’s seventy percent top tax rate is a moderate, evidence-based policy
23 votes -
Is capitalism worth saving?
9 votes -
Donald Trump administration officially bans bump stocks
22 votes -
I was a cable guy. I saw the worst of America
42 votes -
Is "identity politics" standing in the way of a concerted attack on capitalism?
19 votes -
A new book describes Hunter S. Thompson’s prescience. “Trump is present on every page, even though he’s never mentioned once,” the author says.
8 votes -
How Mark Burnett resurrected Donald Trump as an icon of American success
5 votes -
Inside Facebook’s secret rulebook for global political speech
10 votes -
Russia contemplates constitution changes as Putin faces term limits
8 votes -
'It's going to be chaos': Thais to vote in February for first time in eight years
6 votes -
Thailand approves medical marijuana in New Year's 'gift'
8 votes -
Ex-NATO commander: Allies wondering if US President Donald Trump was blackmailed to pull troops out of Syria
16 votes -
The rise of Ksenia Sobchak - from TV presenter to politician | Unreported World
4 votes -
Susan Moylan-Coombs to run as an independent against Tony Abbott in Warringah
2 votes -
Australian Prime Minister urges voters to 'get shopping' as retailers sweat on last-minute sales
2 votes -
Mattis to step down as defense secretary over differences with Trump
27 votes -
Slack is banning users who have visited US-sanctioned countries (including Iran and Cuba) while using its app
20 votes