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12 votes
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The alt-right playbook: Always a bigger fish
14 votes -
Elizabeth Warren calls for eliminating the US electoral college
20 votes -
US President Donald Trump's EPA head said climate change is not a top threat because it's 'fifty to seventy-five years out'
18 votes -
Jair Bolsonaro's approval rating plunges as Brazilians lose confidence
7 votes -
EU leaders have agreed on a plan to delay the Article 50 process, postponing Brexit beyond 29 March
17 votes -
The Neoreactionary movement - The alternative alt-right
Someone posted an article on a subreddit I frequent. It was an extremely long and rambling hit piece against antifacism, littered with long academic words, written for a completely fake Sociology...
Someone posted an article on a subreddit I frequent. It was an extremely long and rambling hit piece against antifacism, littered with long academic words, written for a completely fake Sociology college in London. While checking the source's reputability, I found out that it's part of what is known as the Neoreactionary movement.
Here's an article about it: https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2017/02/behind-the-internets-dark-anti-democracy-movement/516243/
Here's a more "fun" write-up from RationalWiki: https://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Neoreactionary_movement
It's the most bizarre thing. They are basically a pseudointellectual alt-right who quite literally advocate for a monarchy. They are very secretive of their identities and write contrived "theses" under pen names (which, strangely enough, seem to be stolen from actual published academics both living and dead). They think they are a secret society attempting to overthrow existing governments, but in reality they are little more than a collection of fanfic authors.
Has anyone else come into contact with any of them? I am particularly interested if any of our Reddit moderators have anything to say.
19 votes -
New Zealand Opposition MP Judith Collins tells US lobby group NRA to 'bugger off' over bipartisan New Zealand gun reform
10 votes -
Anti-immigration populists surge in fragmented Dutch elections
8 votes -
Michel Temer: Brazil ex-president arrested in corruption probe
4 votes -
What's your opinion on Accelerationism?
Accelerationism: most of us have heard of it, few of us have read into it, and a fair amount of us have shared memes around it (gotta go fast), but have any of us formed substantial opinions on it...
Accelerationism: most of us have heard of it, few of us have read into it, and a fair amount of us have shared memes around it (gotta go fast), but have any of us formed substantial opinions on it yet?
With a variety of authors of various views each weighing in on it, like Mark Fisher and the notorious Nick Land (alongside his genderswapped, trans, slightly less-racist partner-in-crime, Nyx Land); it really does seem to be (slowly but surely) gaining considerable mindspace. Have any of you ever read any works in the genre you adored? If so, feel free to share!
13 votes -
Both sides of the abortion debate want to defend and protect
I have stood on both sides of the abortion debate. I was raised conservative. Most of my family is conservative. But I became more liberal as an adult. In listening to both conservatives and...
I have stood on both sides of the abortion debate. I was raised conservative. Most of my family is conservative. But I became more liberal as an adult. In listening to both conservatives and liberals argue their side of the debate they have something fundamental in common: both are motivated by a desire to care and protect. Liberals want to protect the rights, autonomy and health of women. Conservatives want to protect the life of the unborn.
Both sides see the other as monsters out to attack. They think that because the other side works to thwart their efforts to protect, that the other side intends harm. But that's not true. Neither side wants to inflict harm. They may be willing to inflict harm to protect another, but that is not the same as wanting to inflict harm. Those who are pro-choice don't want to kill babies; they want to protect women and sometimes killing the unborn is the unfortunate cost. Similarly those who are pro-life aren't necessarily motivated by a desire to control women*; they want to protect the unborn and limiting some rights of women is the cost.
* This of course comes with some sticky caveats. There is plenty of sexism among many who are pro-life, and plenty of hardliners who think women should be subservient. And those people's sexism does color there views of women's reproductive autonomy. But there are also moderate pro-lifers who otherwise value the rights of women. You don't have to be sexist to be pro-life. Anecdotally the pro-lifers I know personally are in the latter group.
22 votes -
Robert Mueller’s “collusion” case so far, explained
7 votes -
Do you think a collapse is coming?
Can be any kind, social, political, environmental, economic etc etc. I'm thinking more on a worldwide scale rather than just one local area, the topic's been on my mind recently.
29 votes -
One way to spot a partisan gerrymander
8 votes -
New Zealand prime minister on mosque shooter: “You will never hear me mention his name”
12 votes -
After thirty years in power, Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev is resigning
7 votes -
Something has changed, and, thankfully, those trying to manipulate us haven't recognized it yet.
The one thing people didn't learn regarding Trump and is repeating itself with AOC. When you consider a politician stupid, it actually empowers them to be crafty. I think Trump would love for you...
The one thing people didn't learn regarding Trump and is repeating itself with AOC.
When you consider a politician stupid, it actually empowers them to be crafty. I think Trump would love for you to think he is stupid.
When you constantly attack a politician, you actually give them more followers. It's strange, but the Streisand Effect is real, especially in this Internet era.
The biggest weapon in someone's arsenal is to actually just talk about what they are for. Not attack their opponent and give them press. The rules have changed.
5 votes -
Bill raising Federal minimum wage to $15 heads to US House floor
31 votes -
For some Colorado lawmakers, the death penalty debate is personal
3 votes -
Bernie Sanders' staff unionizes in US presidential campaign first
17 votes -
Why we confronted Chelsea Clinton - the activists who confronted Chelsea Clinton at the vigil for victims of the Christchurch massacre explain their actions
8 votes -
Climate politics after the Yellow Vests
8 votes -
Colorado signs on to popular vote bill that could one day change presidential elections
8 votes -
US Republican congressman: Ideas behind Green New Deal 'tantamount to genocide'
16 votes -
The strongmen strike back
6 votes -
A shadowy group trying to overthrow Kim Jong Un allegedly raided a North Korean embassy in broad daylight
11 votes -
US Senate rejects Donald Trump’s border emergency declaration, setting up first veto
18 votes -
Beto O'Rourke's secret membership in America's oldest hacking group
6 votes -
Poland’s president wants a referendum on the EU
7 votes -
Germany’s troubled relations with the Visegrad states show the limits to its power
6 votes -
Advertisers ditch Carlson and Pirro’s Fox News shows; protesters urge other companies to join them
7 votes -
MPs vote to reject no-deal Brexit
6 votes -
Paul Manafort sentenced to forty-seven months in US prison for tax and bank fraud
17 votes -
Targeting online privacy, US Congress sets a new tone with big tech
4 votes -
Brexit: MPs reject Theresa May's deal by 149 votes
15 votes -
Elizabeth Warren proposes breaking up Amazon, Google, and Facebook
48 votes -
'Israel is the nation-state of Jews alone': Benjamin Netanyahu responds to TV star who said Arabs are equal citizens (Haaretz)
17 votes -
Pakistan's long support for militants puts the country in a bind
6 votes -
Obscure no-deal Brexit group is UK's biggest political spender on Facebook
17 votes -
'I'm ready,' says first transgender candidate for Thai PM
9 votes -
As possible rivals pass on 2020 race, Biden may see a path clearing
8 votes -
Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador's first 100 days in office have showcased one thing above all: a new political style. The people love him for it, but experts are alarmed.
6 votes -
The provocations of chef Tunde Wey
3 votes -
Did a former minister in Cameroon really burn embezzled money?
5 votes -
Australian government backs down on banning Milo Yiannopoulos in face of backlash
7 votes -
A risk Starbucks won’t mention: Howard Schultz could help Trump
8 votes -
'Fake news' on India-Pakistan crisis raises fears before election
6 votes -
India’s and Pakistan’s lies thwarted a war—for now
5 votes -
Israeli electoral committee bans Arab candidates, allows extreme right to run
12 votes