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3 votes
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Sam Harris Waking Up #133 - Globalism on the brink
2 votes -
United by interest: Alliances between Democrats and Republicans on the sides push for legislation opposed by the center
4 votes -
When a US citizen heard he was on his own country's drone target list, he wasn’t sure he believed it. After five near-misses, he does – and is suing the United States to contest his own execution
34 votes -
Maria Butina's many roles: Grad student. Gun rights activist. Alleged Russian agent
2 votes -
Alt-right troll to father killer: The unraveling of Lane Davis
21 votes -
Forget the two-state solution. Let’s try six.
8 votes -
From the start, US President Donald Trump has muddied a clear message: Vladimir Putin interfered
12 votes -
Donald Trump is taking America back — to 1798, when John Adams colluded with an enemy power
7 votes -
Enforcing the law is inherently violent
4 votes -
Is the Helsinki meeting the tipping point for US politicians?
From what I've seen, it has had a universally bad reaction. From D. From R. From every news network out there. Is this the tipping point?
31 votes -
US President Donald Trump's trade offensive is producing brutal local headlines
9 votes -
At last, a law that could have stopped Tony Blair and George W Bush invading. The Hague’s new crime of aggression might give belligerent heads of states a reason to pause.
10 votes -
Israel in turmoil over bill allowing Jews and Arabs to be segregated
7 votes -
Ocasio-Cortez floats a “sub-caucus” of progressives willing to vote together as a bloc
7 votes -
What are the limits of viewpoint diversity?
4 votes -
Eritrea and Ethiopia have made peace. How it happened and what next
11 votes -
The Russian "firehose of falsehood" propaganda model - Why it might work and options to counter It
11 votes -
‘Evil has won’ - Pro-American Germans feel betrayed
8 votes -
Democrats value communal personality traits while Republicans value agentic traits
4 votes -
Oppression obsession
2 votes -
Data suggest that gentrifying neighborhoods powered Ocasio-Cortez's victory
6 votes -
Democrat. Dictator. Which path will Thailand's Prayuth Chan-ocha choose?
6 votes -
A political scientist argues that the Democratic Party must play "procedural hardball" too: The Republicans aren’t engaged in a policy fight. instead, they’re waging a “procedural war.”
13 votes -
Tips for staying civil while debating child prisons
23 votes -
Democrats are wrong about Republicans. Republicans are wrong about Democrats.
27 votes -
In Louisiana, Trump's trade war spooks America's biggest port
5 votes -
How James Comey intervened to kill WikiLeaks' US immunity deal
4 votes -
In Turkish election, jailed candidate seeks presidency and to keep Recep Tayyip Erdoğan's party below majority in parliament
14 votes -
US President Donald Trump proposes ending the crisis he created by creating another crisis -- The proposed executive order ending family separation is just here to create more hostages
11 votes -
US President Donald Trump's new executive order on immigration is not a "reversal": The mass detention and deportation of asylum-seekers has been his plan all along
5 votes -
This is not America? Oh, yes, it is: Neil Macdonald
6 votes -
EU to members: Prepare for no deal Brexit
3 votes -
The US withdrawal from the UN Human Rights Council leaves ally Australia in an awkward, lonely position
3 votes -
Abuse of power: The truth about sexual harassment in Westminster
7 votes -
What the stock market's most crucial week of the year tells us about the road ahead
5 votes -
Kim Jong Un more popular among Republicans than Nancy Pelosi
10 votes -
When the punishment feels like the crime: Brock Turner's twisted legacy—and a Stanford professor's relentless pursuit of justice.
3 votes -
One party is dreading marijuana legalization: the Marijuana party. They won the very battle it was established to fight. But its leaders insist the resistance continues against ‘prohibition 2.0’
3 votes -
Ethiopia's peace offer comes with strings attached
3 votes -
The case for quarantining extremist ideas
22 votes -
Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz retiring, possible 2020 presidential contender
Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz is stepping down, and there are rumors he intends to run for office and possibly the presidency. A frequent Trump critic, he would presumably be running as a Democrat...
Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz is stepping down, and there are rumors he intends to run for office and possibly the presidency. A frequent Trump critic, he would presumably be running as a Democrat if he entered the 2020 race. He seems to be staking out a position in the center of the party, criticizing the idea of a government jobs program or single-payer healthcare.
Would you vote for him in a primary or general election? Does America need another businessman (albeit a successful one) president? How economically progressive should the Democrat's candidate be? Discuss.
7 votes -
The Californization of America
5 votes -
John Cleese vs extremism
10 votes -
Trade tariffs: Chorus of condemnation intensifies. Massive US tariffs have come into force as condemnation of the Trump administration's move intensifies.
8 votes -
Tiger Mother talks tribalism: Amy Chua on why US society is slipping into perilous territory
5 votes -
'Miracle' cures and europhobia – the strange origins of Italy's new rulers
6 votes -
The princes, the president and the fortune seekers
3 votes -
The Onion published the threatening email they received from Michael Cohen
@theonion: In the spirit of transparency, here is Mr. Cohen's letter, printed in full: https://t.co/uPnzZYUtyZ
10 votes -
Venezuelans who hope for government change face dilemma — to vote or not to vote?
4 votes