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46 votes
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The movement to skip the electoral college is about to pass a major milestone
34 votes -
US-German clash over international order and security. The consequences for NATO’s Eastern flank
4 votes -
Heavily armed soldiers aborted a plan to enter Venezuela by force
5 votes -
The making of the Fox News White House
19 votes -
To build a better ballot — An interactive guide to alternative voting systems
24 votes -
Bernie Sanders gets personal - the 2020 US hopeful is opening up about his upbringing, recognizing that his singular focus on issues wasn't enough last time
15 votes -
Socialists win big in Chicago
14 votes -
Donald Trump and Kim Jong-un summit ends in disarray but there are lessons to be learnt, experts say
11 votes -
Pakistan shoots down two Indian fighter jets: Military
21 votes -
US President Donald Trump ordered officials to give Jared Kushner a security clearance
11 votes -
Donald Trump says summit with Kim Jong Un ended with no agreement over North Korea's demand to lift sanctions
14 votes -
Chagossians urge caution over UN legal win
6 votes -
US Supreme Court orders new hearing for death row inmate with dementia
8 votes -
China blocks 17.5 million plane tickets for people without enough 'social credit'
46 votes -
PSA: Disinformation and the over-representation of false flag events on social media.
I've noticed lately that on certain social media websites, particularly Reddit and Facebook, there has been an uptick in articles about fake hate crimes and false rape reports. The comments on...
I've noticed lately that on certain social media websites, particularly Reddit and Facebook, there has been an uptick in articles about fake hate crimes and false rape reports. The comments on these articles especially fan the flames on the subjects of homophobia, racism, and sexism. While the articles themselves are still noteworthy and deserving of attention, the amount of attention that they've been receiving has been disproportionately high (especially when considering how fairly unknown the individuals involved are) and the discourse on those articles particularly divisive.
On top of that, there are clear disinformation campaigns going on to attack current Democratic presidential candidates in the U.S. It seems pretty clear that we're having a repeat of the last presidential election, with outside parties stoking the flames of discrimination and disinformation on social media in order to further ideological divisions, and the consumers of that media readily falling for it.
I would caution readers to be mindful of the shifting representation of historically controversial or contentious topics moving forward. Even if the articles themselves are solidly factual, take note of how frequently you're seeing these articles, whether or not they're known to be contentious topics, and how they're affecting online discourse.
In short: make sure that you can still smell bullshit even when it's dressed up in pretty little facts.
30 votes -
Colorado governor will sign bill aimed at bypassing electoral college
12 votes -
Balakot: Pakistan vows to respond after Indian 'air strikes'
7 votes -
San Diego-based group wins US suit: Male-only draft unconstitutional
22 votes -
Okinawa: Tokyo to overrule referendum on US base
5 votes -
Cubans vote on a constitutional referendum which may reveal growing discontent
13 votes -
Profiles of a divided country - hostility to the prime minister’s Brexit deal is one thing that unites Britain
10 votes -
Message for Nicolás Maduro? Marco Rubio tweets image of bloody Muammar Gaddafi, killed after US intervened.
7 votes -
Venezuela aid: Genuine help or Trojan horse?
7 votes -
Roger Stone posted a picture of the US federal judge on his case with crosshairs
10 votes -
Venezuelan soldiers set fire to aid convoys at Colombia border as two protesters killed in clashes
6 votes -
'Somebody is going to be shot': Top bureaucrat says partisan mudslinging has gone too far
15 votes -
What is the Equal Rights Amendment, and why are we talking about it now?
8 votes -
Venezuela crisis: Nicolás Maduro to close border with Brazil
7 votes -
Even conservatives support Sweden’s welfare state. Here’s why.
10 votes -
Francis Fukuyama - Against Identity Politics
5 votes -
Multiple whistleblowers raise grave concerns with White House efforts to transfer sensitive US nuclear technology to Saudi Arabia
20 votes -
Texas attorney general Ken Paxton’s strange quest to execute an intellectually disabled man
6 votes -
W.Va. teachers go on strike over state education bill
8 votes -
In Central Asia’s forbidding highlands, a quiet newcomer: Chinese troops
8 votes -
What happens when techno-utopians actually run a country
11 votes -
Inside the resistance movement opposing Daniel Ortega's Trans-Nicaragua Canal
6 votes -
Australia accuses foreign government of cyber attack on lawmakers
3 votes -
US President Donald Trump declares national emergency to help fund southern border wall
43 votes -
Nigeria presidential election postponed by a week
5 votes -
Kashmir suicide attack kills dozens of Indian security forces
12 votes -
US Supreme Court to decide legality of census citizenship query
6 votes -
The case for capping all prison sentences at twenty years
12 votes -
The marketplace of ideas — or how to fortify democracy
8 votes -
Mitch McConnell says Donald Trump plans to declare national emergency to build US border wall
25 votes -
How fake news was weaponized in Nigeria's elections
5 votes -
Spain: Will a snap election spell the end for Pedro Sanchez?
6 votes -
Andrew McCabe says he ordered the obstruction of justice probe of US President Donald Trump
6 votes -
How a Slovakian neo-Nazi got elected. In 2013, Marian Kotleba won a shock victory in regional elections. Four years later, he was voted out in a landslide. But now he’s running for president.
6 votes -
US Senators propose legislation to end Congressional pensions
7 votes