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4 votes
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Louisiana is postponing its April 4 presidential primary for over two months due to the coronavirus outbreak
7 votes -
US President Donald Trump's mismanagement helped fuel coronavirus crisis
9 votes -
Why are we so slow today?
3 votes -
California hotels are being used for coronavirus quarantines, Gavin Newsom announces
5 votes -
Everyone’s a socialist in a pandemic: Republicans want Medicare for all, but just for this one disease
34 votes -
Rep. Katie Porter gets US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention chief to agree to pay for coronavirus testing
9 votes -
Bernie Sanders says he's staying in race, looks forward to debating Joe Biden
14 votes -
The White House has ordered federal health officials to treat top-level coronavirus meetings as classified
29 votes -
Andrew Yang endorses Joe Biden
16 votes -
Official: White House didn't want to tell seniors not to fly
12 votes -
"We Didn't Start The Fire" parody - Sherry Vine
I just saw this parody of "We Didn't Start The Fire" on Reddit. It might be a parody song, but it's also a potted history of LGBT activism in the USA for the past 60 years. We Didn't Start The...
I just saw this parody of "We Didn't Start The Fire" on Reddit. It might be a parody song, but it's also a potted history of LGBT activism in the USA for the past 60 years.
6 votes -
How Fox News gets other cable news channels to push their stories
8 votes -
Andrew Yang’s new US non-profit is giving away $500,000 in free cash as a UBI experiment
23 votes -
EARN IT act is a direct attack on end-to-end encryption
25 votes -
Other countries are testing patients for coronavirus by the tens of thousands. Why the U.S. is so far behind
20 votes -
Super Tuesday: who did you end up voting for and why?
I'm curious how other people think about this.
23 votes -
Elizabeth Warren is ending her US presidential campaign
47 votes -
Many young voters sat out Super Tuesday, contributing to Bernie Sanders' losses
29 votes -
Live election results: Super Tuesday 2020
26 votes -
If the US removed FPTP and the electoral college, what new parties would pop up?
(You could replace FPTP with STV to keep the districts that elect representatives in the house intact.) I'll start. The Democratic party breaks up into the neoliberal and progressive parties. The...
(You could replace FPTP with STV to keep the districts that elect representatives in the house intact.)
I'll start.
The Democratic party breaks up into the neoliberal and progressive parties.
The neoliberal party is where centrist candidates like Joe Biden and Michael Bloomberg go.
The progressive party is where progressive candidates like Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren go.
The Republican party might lose a large part of their electorate to the libertarians, since many Republicans are more concerned about letting business prevail and don't really want cultural conservatism.
Andrew yang maybe also leaves the Democrats and founds his own party, the party for online reform.
The greens also become significantly more popular but they may have too much in common with the progressives.
The Senate could be changed to include as many seats as the house for proper representation.
18 votes -
Bogus automated copyright claims by CBS blocked Super Tuesday speeches by Bernie Sanders, Mike Bloomberg, and Joe Biden
11 votes -
Here's how Biden and Sanders stack up when it comes to how they would govern the tech industry
6 votes -
The twenty-year argument between Joe Biden and Elizabeth Warren over bankruptcy, explained
10 votes -
Which US presidential candidate do you think has the best foreign policy?
The nice thing about electability being uncertain is that you can choose the candidate you think is best. Unfortunately I have lost faith in my ability to decide that. Studying candidates'...
The nice thing about electability being uncertain is that you can choose the candidate you think is best.
Unfortunately I have lost faith in my ability to decide that. Studying candidates' policies seems useless since, after all, Congress makes the laws. We are likely to see either stalemate or centrist legislation regardless.
Maybe I should decide based on foreign policy instead? Most people don't do that but I don't see why not. Any recommendations for interesting articles to read?
12 votes -
How Bernie Sanders answers a question
23 votes -
Twenty-two studies, across ideological differences, agree: Medicare for All saves money
37 votes -
Are social networks polarizing? A Q&A with Ezra Klein | The Interface with Casey Newton, Issue #464, Feb 27
5 votes -
Trump faces his 'Chernobyl moment' after slashing pandemic defences to the bone
12 votes -
Charleston Democratic debate Discussion thread
New debate, new thread. (Unfortunately somewhat late as the debate was streamed right at the time I wrote this post.) The debate was being live streamed in CBS's channel in YouTube. Twitter is one...
New debate, new thread. (Unfortunately somewhat late as the debate was streamed right at the time I wrote this post.)
The debate was being live streamed in CBS's channel in YouTube.
Twitter is one of the debate partners so expect a few questions from there.
The south Carolina primaries are due February 29th and there willl be no more debates until after super tuesday so this debate is pretty important.
16 votes -
Covid-19 could mark the end of affluence politics in the USA, as the possibility of a global pandemic reveals the inability to make and distribute the things people need
21 votes -
Donald Trump's budget gives Greenland another try – administration's proposal would give the State Department $587,000 to build a first permanent consular services outpost
4 votes -
‘Now is the time’: A Federal Reserve official urges Congress to plan for recessions
7 votes -
Twitter is suspending 70 pro-Bloomberg accounts, citing ‘platform manipulation’
19 votes -
Abraham Galloway, spy for the Union
2 votes -
Andrew Yang joins CNN as US political commentator
21 votes -
The 'this is fine' bias in cable news
10 votes -
Nevada culinary union lays into Sanders supporters after health care backlash
7 votes -
How could we regulate biased/lying media outlets and aggregators without encroaching on good ones?
I find this to be a pretty important question when news organizations like Fox News are literally aiming to help the Republican Party to stay on power, CNN and MSNBC promote centrist candidates...
I find this to be a pretty important question when news organizations like Fox News are literally aiming to help the Republican Party to stay on power, CNN and MSNBC promote centrist candidates and media aggregators ranging from r/the_donald to r/chapotraphouse banning anyone who opposes them. Thing is, these are the most well known examples. How could we tell faulty media sources and aggregators apart from good ones in mass? Do you think that's possible?
15 votes -
The Donald Trump administration and the US mandate for neo-classicism
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 -
US President Donald Trump acquitted of two impeachment charges in near party-line vote
28 votes -
The app that broke the Iowa Caucuses was sent out through a beta testing platform
10 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