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5 votes
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Poll: More voters trust Biden to contain coronavirus spread
6 votes -
America’s only public bank, the Bank of North Dakota, is number one in saving small businesses
10 votes -
Roe of “Roe v. Wade” says Christian right paid her to be anti-choice mouthpiece
17 votes -
Let's be comrades: In her book "Comrade: An Essay on Political Belonging", American political theorist Jodi Dean wants us to give the word "comrade" another try
3 votes -
Huey Long, the dictator of Louisiana
3 votes -
A series of articles on the state of American democracy from early 2015 by Vox
American democracy is doomed ('constitutional hardball' is a great way to describe the 'modus operandi' of the Trump-McConnell GOP.) This is how the American system of government will die I found...
American democracy is doomed ('constitutional hardball' is a great way to describe the 'modus operandi' of the Trump-McConnell GOP.)
This is how the American system of government will die
I found their predictions to be kinda interesting (and clearly minimal)
The best-case scenario is that we wind up with an elective dictator but retain peaceful transitions of power. This is where I'd place my bet. Pure parliamentary systems, especially unicameral ones, give high levels of power to the prime minister and his cabinet, and manage to have peaceful transitions nonetheless. The same is true in Brazil, where the presidency is considerably more powerful than it is in the US.
But parliamentary systems also feature parties that are stronger than their leaders, which serve to prevent single individuals from garnering too much power. America's parties are getting more polarized, but they still aren't as strong as those of most other developed nations.
The worst-case scenario is if the presidency attains these powers and someone elected to the office decides to use them to punish political enemies, interfere with elections, suppress dissent, and so forth. Retaining an independent enough judiciary is a guard against this, but only if norms around obeying its rulings are strong. And, unusually, America allows for true independents, undisciplined by their parties, to become heads of government.
The US political system is not gonna collapse. It's gonna muddle though (A pretty interesting take. There are problems but people won't try to fix them but instead become disengaged and kinda forget about it.)
I think one of the things the authors missed while writing these this is how news became partidarized in the same manner, thus allowing outlets like Fox News to just consume the Republican electorate. They also missed how voting has been targeted too, and underestimated how willing the public was to act and how would the public react to this, which was by electing someone who didn't care about said broken Congress (or any sort of constitutionality), which is what became of Trump.
3 votes -
Why anger against Trump might not be enough for Biden to win
6 votes -
US President Donald Trump says he is taking hydroxychloroquine to protect against coronavirus, dismissing safety concerns
21 votes -
We’ve updated our pollster ratings ahead of the 2020 General Election
8 votes -
As Putin ages, he seems to want to decentralize the Russian government
2 votes -
Explosive whistleblower complaint by ousted HHS official says he was pressured to give contract to Trump-friendly pharma firm
11 votes -
Did the coronavirus kill ideology in Australia? How a government both sectarian and divisive learned (briefly) to become inclusive
5 votes -
Imperialism is using up the resources that could fight Covid-19
4 votes -
Are older voters turning away from Trump?
10 votes -
Lesotho's prime minster wants to stay in power to avoid being charged for his wife’s murder
4 votes -
Grading the electoral college: C for chaos
4 votes -
The president’s job is to manage risk. But Donald Trump is the risk: Donald Trump was a gamble. It’s not paying off.
4 votes -
Does “The Case Against Socialism” hold up? It does not. A brief look at Rand Paul’s new book
9 votes -
The GOP is the problem. Is ‘human identity politics’ the solution? (Book review of Ezra Klein’s 'Why We’re Polarized')
9 votes -
The coronavirus crisis has highlighted exploitative global trade regimes
9 votes -
Would it be beneficial to ban certain topics of political discourse?
I've noticed that there are certain topics (specifically political ones) that reoccur frequently on this site, which almost never contribute anything of value. These can derail threads, incite...
I've noticed that there are certain topics (specifically political ones) that reoccur frequently on this site, which almost never contribute anything of value. These can derail threads, incite hostility between users, push away new users, etc. IMO it is rare that anything new is said, and even rarer that any opinions are changed. Examples include: socialism vs capitalism; should real leftists vote for Biden?; is Biden a rapist?; are Bernie supporters toxic?; etc. I'm not saying these aren't important things to discuss (I've done so myself), but is it really necessary for us to have the exact same arguments basically every day? I personally feel the site would be nicer to use and less toxic overall if these discussions didn't happen. Would there be any downside to simply banning them, at least temporarily? Perhaps until after the US presidential election?
22 votes -
The prophecies of Q: American conspiracy theories are entering a dangerous new phase
6 votes -
The paranoid style in American politics: It had been around a long time before the Radical Right discovered it (1964)
5 votes -
The coronavirus in capitalist Russia: The Russian government has not only failed to effectively battle the emergency but has attempted to actively ignore it and the plight of its citizens
5 votes -
In defense of hellfire: The rhetoric of damnation has been lost. But how else can we adequately condemn injustice?
8 votes -
Rep. Justin Amash ends his third-party White House bid: Amash said the timing wasn’t right, in large part because of the coronavirus pandemic
6 votes -
Never Trumpers will host their own ‘Republican convention’ during the RNC
12 votes -
Rep. Justin Amash “looking closely” at third-party run in US presidential election
14 votes -
US State Department Inspector General fired after investigating Secretary of State Mike Pompeo; Democrats decry ‘dangerous pattern of retaliation’
9 votes -
Stop trying to shame socialists into voting for Joe Biden: It’s really about performatively denouncing leftists as irresponsible, for the edification of the liberals who are watching
19 votes -
California police used military surveillance tech at grad student strike
11 votes -
I was a teenage conspiracy theorist: Want to know why wild conspiracism can be so irresistible? Ask a fourteen-year-old girl
11 votes -
Bolsonaro's health minister quits, deepening Brazil coronavirus crisis
9 votes -
In key US state of Florida, Trump stumbles among senior voters: Trump has virtually no path to victory without winning Florida, and older voters - which he is losing - are critical
5 votes -
Reflections on the Bernie Campaign: What it meant, why it inspired us, why we lost, and where we go now
5 votes -
Biden names Ocasio-Cortez, Kerry to lead his climate task force, bridging Democrats’ divide
13 votes -
The fight is on for progressives to push Biden to the left. They might just win.
9 votes -
How the Singaporean government solved its housing problem
6 votes -
The roots of the October Revolution in Iraq: From October 2019 until the lockdown in March, Iraqi revolutionaries from working-class backgrounds defied state repression to fill the squares of Iraq
3 votes -
US Senate approves bill to sanction China over Uighur rights
10 votes -
As COVID-19 gets worse, Trump is talking about things that the average American couldn't care less about
10 votes -
Raging at China over coronavirus won't help – scrutinising our own governments might
7 votes -
How to argue with your comrades: it’s easy for socialists to blame our own comrades for our defeats. But those losses are more rooted in the powerful structures we’re up against than our own failures
8 votes -
US Appeals court rules against Donald Trump on Emoluments Clause
9 votes -
It's no accident Britain and America are the world's biggest coronavirus losers
14 votes -
Wisconsin Supreme Court strikes down governor’s extension of stay-at-home order
13 votes -
Bernie Sanders says another US presidential run is 'very, very unlikely'
10 votes -
What to make of those new US Senate polls that have Democrats way ahead
12 votes -
How a leftist cartoonist’s college campus drawing nearly became a far-right meme
6 votes