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6 votes
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Independent Zali Steggall eyes end of ‘climate wars’ with zero carbon bill
News article: Independent Zali Steggall eyes end of ‘climate wars’ with zero carbon bill Zali Steggall's website: Climate Change (National Framework for Adaptation and Mitigation) Bill 2020
7 votes -
Switzerland votes to ban homophobic discrimination
10 votes -
Vaping: What people are getting wrong
8 votes -
The Donald Trump administration and the US mandate for neo-classicism
6 votes -
Illiberal democracies explained
10 votes -
Finland to become EU's only uranium producer – Finnish government gave the green light on Thursday for state-owned Terrafame to extract and refine
6 votes -
Iowa Democratic caucus results delayed until Tuesday due to reporting inconsistencies and technical issues with app
35 votes -
US oil executives moved from house arrest to prison after Juan Guaido meets with Donald Trump
5 votes -
What's good about nationalism?
This is a question I've been thinking about a great deal in the context of changing global power dynamics. Rising authoritarianism, militarism, fundamentalism, and other ailments of our times are...
This is a question I've been thinking about a great deal in the context of changing global power dynamics. Rising authoritarianism, militarism, fundamentalism, and other ailments of our times are getting in the way of dealing with universal threats to humanity, like climate change, pandemics, and even asteroid impacts.
But nationalism has such a grip on people's psyches... Parts are nostalgic, and parts are about tribal sense of belonging and purpose. Tonight, I watched a Chef's Table episode about a young Russian chef on a mission to make Russian cuisine great again (not his words). The interesting thing is that Mukhin essentially acknowledges that he's helping Russian cuisine become great not by denigrating other nation's products, or clinging to an idealized version of his home food, but through intentionally discovering what is worthwhile elsewhere and at home. It got me thinking about what's been lost in a globalized world, what could be found in isolated places, and what it would take to let people bridge local interests and universal values.
I'd also watched Raise Hell: The Life and Times of Molly Ivins over the weekend. Ivins' writing on Texas state politics as a microcosm and foreshadowing of current U.S. concerns is essential. Then I read Citylab's old story on the paralysis of New York subway system development.
It occurred to me that the U.S. has become fractally parochial, with increasingly local or corporate interests thwarting any exercise favoring broader national or regional goods. The original framing of the nation in the U.S. Constitution has significant flaws because of the original tension between sovereign state interests, and the federal system. We're not learning from the rest of the world very well, either.
I'm curious about whether Tilders think there's such a thing as positive nationalism, capable of both unifying localities and maintaining or growing what's good about a culture in the face of potentially hostile competing nations.
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Do you think there are positive aspects to nationalism, and if so, what?
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Do you think nationalism has been, on balance, a positive or negative force in your country in the past?
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Do you think nationalism is, on balance, a positive or negative force in your country right now?
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Do you think your country could have a positive version of nationalism in the future?
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Is it necessary to exclude or mitigate influences from elsewhere in order to maintain the original nature of your national culture?
If I may ask, please include your nationality when responding.
11 votes -
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Australian government lawyers warned the tax commissioner the controversial "robodebt" program could be illegal on the same day the Federal Government suspended the scheme
5 votes -
US President Donald Trump acquitted of two impeachment charges in near party-line vote
28 votes -
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov requests a meeting with Norwegian authorities to remove limitations on Russian activity on Svalbard
4 votes -
‘Edge of Democracy’ looks at Brazil with outrage and heartbreak
5 votes -
When it comes to climate hypocrisy, Canada's leaders have reached a new low
7 votes -
Finland's woman-led center-left government plans to nearly double the length of paternity leave to give new fathers the same amount of paid time off work as new mothers
16 votes -
Jair Bolsonaro government attacks Oscar nominee Petra Costa as 'anti-Brazil activist'
10 votes -
The app that broke the Iowa Caucuses was sent out through a beta testing platform
10 votes -
How Brexit could reignite tensions at the Irish border
12 votes -
Donald Trump’s US border wall, vulnerable to flash floods, needs large storm gates left open for months
7 votes -
Donald Trump impeachment: Failed witnesses vote paves way for acquittal
35 votes -
Joe Biden says he will endorse any US Democrat who wins nomination
14 votes -
Why Republicans are suddenly in a rush to regulate every trans kid’s puberty
14 votes -
A Guardian investigation of 218,100 Facebook ads reveals how the Trump campaign’s sophisticated social media machine targets conservative voters
12 votes -
NPR is asking the State Department to explain its decision to deny an NPR reporter press credentials to travel with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on an upcoming trip to Europe
9 votes -
Why was Singapore kicked out of Malaysia?
3 votes -
Cod war tensions with Iceland – British trawlers, bunched together as they are, make easy prey for Icelandic gunboats in 1976
3 votes -
An open letter on Australian bushfires and climate: urgent need for deep cuts in carbon emissions [signed by Laureates of the Australian Research Council]
4 votes -
Donald Trump administration's Middle East peace plan calls for creation of a State of Palestine, freeze on new Israeli settlements
7 votes -
Andrew Yang qualifies for New Hampshire primary debate
19 votes -
How Iran's Qassem Soleimani became a US target
4 votes -
Mastodon, my saviour: Why the left should ditch ad-verse social media
13 votes -
Fitch downgrades Finland's outlook, raising doubts about return to AAA rating
4 votes -
Marianne Williamson asks Iowans to help keep Andrew Yang in the 2020 presidential race
8 votes -
China coronavirus spread is accelerating, Xi Jinping warns
29 votes -
Finland's Sanna Marin hopes women leaders will be the 'new normal'
5 votes -
Town meeting
9 votes -
The Yang Gang and its bots
14 votes -
People Make Games travels to Hong Kong to interview Blitzchung, the Hearthstone pro banned by Blizzard last year
13 votes -
Carbon-neutral in fifteen years? Finland – the country with an ambitious plan
7 votes -
Do hierarchies lead to a stronger society?
7 votes -
NASA administrator Jim Bridenstine on the year ahead: ‘A lot of things have to go right’
10 votes -
The Hamilton Hustle
5 votes -
Ronald Reagan’s “October Surprise” plot was real after all
16 votes -
Wuhan virus: China confirms human-to-human transmission, says medical workers infected
11 votes -
Biden wants to get rid of law that shields companies like Facebook from liability for what their users post
17 votes -
Norway made an outspoken right-wing lawmaker who once called wind turbines 'white monsters' its oil and energy minister
9 votes -
Denmark's government wants a planned bridge over the Kattegat sea between Aarhus and Copenhagen to carry trains as well as cars, more than doubling the cost
6 votes -
Evelyn Yang speaks at Women's March about her sexual assault
8 votes -
Southern Schleswig – Far-right Danish politician calls for return of German region
5 votes