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48 votes
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An Israeli and a Palestinian discuss 7 October, Gaza – and the future
8 votes -
Weekly US politics news and updates thread - week of September 9
This thread is posted weekly - please try to post all relevant US political content in here, such as news, updates, opinion articles, etc. Extremely significant events may warrant a separate...
This thread is posted weekly - please try to post all relevant US political content in here, such as news, updates, opinion articles, etc. Extremely significant events may warrant a separate topic, but almost all should be posted in here.
This is an inherently political thread; please try to avoid antagonistic arguments and bickering matches. Comment threads that devolve into unproductive arguments may be removed so that the overall topic is able to continue.
27 votes -
US and British citizens among thirty-seven sentenced to death in DR Congo coup trial
23 votes -
Donald Trump trials - Georgia election interference state court case - Megathread
Texts, documents hint at convicted witness bail bond business owner Scott Hall's wide ties to Coffee County breach, Trump allies ahead of trial Hall played a part in various post-election events,...
Texts, documents hint at convicted witness bail bond business owner Scott Hall's wide ties to Coffee County breach, Trump allies ahead of trial
Hall played a part in various post-election events, and he's taken a plea deal. He will testify in the Georgia 2020 election trials.
Hall's alleged involvement following the 2020 election reaches beyond the small south Georgia county. This includes personal relationships with those close to the former president.
Several media outlets, including CNN, have reported that Hall is related to David Bossie, chairman of the conservative group Citizens United who briefly led the former president's post-election legal challenges. Bossie's name appears in the Fulton indictment.
In late November 2020, David Shafer introduced Hall to a group of individuals including Robert Sinners, a current spokesperson for the Georgia Secretary of State's office who then worked for Trump's campaign. In the email, Shafer said Hall was "looking into the election" on behalf of the former president at Bossie's request.
This is described in Act 4 in the indictment, though Sinners is referred to as "unindicted co-conspirator Individual 4" by Fulton prosecutors. Sinners has since disavowed the post-2020 election activities that took place in Georgia.
Hall may also know about the letter former Justice Department official Jeffery Clark wanted to send that alleged the agency "identified significant concerns that may have impacted the outcome of the election in multiple States, including the State of Georgia."
34 votes -
Germany’s expansion of border controls is testing European unity
12 votes -
Thinking out loud: A US service to help you move to where your vote will count the most
Maybe this topic is silly, but I am up from insomnia, so here it goes. I watched a piece on the news about how the election may come down to teeny tiny little town in Nebraska. I remember a...
Maybe this topic is silly, but I am up from insomnia, so here it goes.
I watched a piece on the news about how the election may come down to teeny tiny little town in Nebraska. I remember a similar situation coming to pass in the 2020 election.
There are many teleworkers now. Many of them are IT people who would be happy anywhere there is a good Internet connection.
I was thinking that a movement to get people to move to where their votes would count the most would be interesting. At least to talk about.
There could be a web site/app that would identify the potential most crucial areas, like that little Nebraska town.
Nomadic and patriotic teleworkers could then move to such places a year in advance of an election, vote, and move on if they aren't happy in those places.
16 votes -
Norway wants to ban unhealthy food ads that target teens – doesn't go as far as the UK's rule but pushes far beyond other European countries' efforts
10 votes -
Chat control is back on the agenda of EU governments. The Hungarian Presidency will collect “guidance for further work”. Take action to stop chat control now!
11 votes -
Congressional insider trading: Is it real? And can we use it to our advantage?
9 votes -
I never expected to run for office—here's what I learned
32 votes -
America is losing Southeast Asia: Why US allies in the region are turning toward China
19 votes -
Where do you fit in the US political typology?
29 votes -
China-linked ‘Spamouflage’ network mimics Americans online to sway US political debate
25 votes -
The New York Times is a fluffer for Donald Trump on Arlington Cemetery desecration
19 votes -
At the University of Michigan, pro Palestinian protestors have "Shut Down" student government, by being elected to it
35 votes -
EU ChatControl is back on the agenda
10 votes -
Trusted aide would likely play key role in Kamala Harris review of US-Israel policy
11 votes -
Last chance to escape: Ukrainians flee Pokrovsk as Russians advance
25 votes -
Kamala Harris plans to tax unrealized US stock gains — but only for people worth $100 million
51 votes -
California lawmakers pass bill allowing Amsterdam-style cannabis cafes
30 votes -
How bad maps win elections - gerrymandering explained | Map Men
18 votes -
Mexico ‘pauses’ diplomatic relations with US and Canadian embassies
17 votes -
Megathread - Updates on the Donald Trump trial regarding classified documents
Things are starting to happen in this case also.
23 votes -
Norway's government wants to relax restrictions on abortion to make it legal for women to terminate pregnancies up to the eighteenth week of gestation
27 votes -
Former US President Donald Trump’s post of fake Taylor Swift endorsement is his latest embrace of AI-generated images
36 votes -
California is giving schools more homework: Build housing for teachers
19 votes -
What is the motivation to keep sending Benajmin Netanyahu military aide while the Gaza crisis continues?
I hope it is kosher to post this under ~talk. I know people are sick of this topic, so I put plenty of tags in to help those not interested avoid seeing this thread. FWIW, you can go into your...
I hope it is kosher to post this under ~talk. I know people are sick of this topic, so I put plenty of tags in to help those not interested avoid seeing this thread. FWIW, you can go into your Settings and enter keywords to filter threads on ( via tags ).
To my question.
Netanyahu has been killing people with no means of defense.
What is President Biden's motivation to keep sending military aide to Israel while Netanyahu continues to do this?
I have a few guesses, but none of them on their own or together seems to justify the political or humanitarian costs:
- Somehow it is in the geopolitical interest of the U.S. to do so
- Israel would be destroyed without military aide ( but defensive weapons can still be sent )
- The U.S. benefits from Israeli intelligence
- Congressional republicans aligned with Christian Nationlists want to see Israel live out a Biblical prophesy and it would cost President Biden politically if he were to push a decrease in military aide - assuming he could.
- President Biden might have lost Jewish American votes, BUT Jews are a minority in America and many American Jews are against what Netanyahu is doing.
Those are the possibilities I could come up with. Am I missing anything? All of these possibilities together do not seem to be worth the political cost President Biden incurred. Is there something I missed?
23 votes -
Digital apartheid in Gaza: Unjust content moderation at the request of Israel’s cyber unit
14 votes -
Undercover in America's Project 2025
44 votes -
Disrupting a covert Iranian influence operation
22 votes -
According to demographic projections, people leaving Sweden are set to outnumber immigrants this year – government says this is thanks to its restrictive migration policies
9 votes -
First guilty plea in Arizona fake elector case comes from Republican activist Lorraine Pellegrino
22 votes -
I spent a week with Black Republicans
24 votes -
Sweden's snitch law immigration plan prompts alarm across society – forcing public sector workers to report undocumented people decried as utterly inhumane
23 votes -
Paetongtarn Shinawatra becomes Thailand’s next PM, youngest ever
8 votes -
Police in Denmark to implement facial recognition technology to combat violent crimes – recent increases in crime in Copenhagen involving gangs from neighbouring Sweden
9 votes -
Compensation arrives seven years after siege that left Marawi a ‘dead city’
7 votes -
Japan's Prime Minister Fumio Kishida to resign, paving way for new leader
20 votes -
Local Canadian news loses 58% of online engagement, thanks to the Online News Act
33 votes -
The fall of the mainstream media: New elites
5 votes -
Joe Biden administration sued over US sanctions against Israeli settlers
21 votes -
Recreational marijuana sales in Ohio can start Tuesday at nearly 100 locations
37 votes -
Bangladesh’s leader resigns and flees country after protests
37 votes -
JD Vance’s wife: My husband only meant to insult people who actively choose not to have kids, not people who are trying but are unsuccessful
60 votes -
The far right has moved online, where its voice is more dangerous than ever
40 votes -
A tax break for Washington State data centers promised jobs. Now there are questions about whether the costs are worth it.
7 votes -
Former US President Donald Trump backs out of ABC debate, says he will only debate Kamala Harris on Fox
65 votes -
Should I be filling out every political poll I’m sent?
This is something I’ve been wondering for a year or so now… If political polls (US specific ones in my case) and surveys are a significant way our politicians are deciding what they should support...
This is something I’ve been wondering for a year or so now… If political polls (US specific ones in my case) and surveys are a significant way our politicians are deciding what they should support or what the media decides to talk about should I be filling out surveys I’m spam texted during election season?
If so, should I fill out every single one? Half of them? Only the ones that I don’t feel are politically biased? Or maybe, especially the ones that are biased to try and somehow counteract the bias?
What do you all do?
Is there a list of “official polls” that I should seek out if they don’t decide to text me about it?
Is spending time filling out every single one justified, or am I just inviting more text spam by not blocking and moving on?18 votes -
Revisiting the work of Donald Harris, father of Kamala
13 votes