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5 votes
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Donald Trump says he's the 'law and order' President, but his response to George Floyd protests could cost him
3 votes -
A conversation with President Obama: Reimagining policing in the wake of continued police violence
12 votes -
Mike Mullen: I cannot remain silent
14 votes -
Australia had its own George Floyd moment, only it passed without international outrage
13 votes -
Andrew Yang has endorsed Mike Broihier, an asparagus-farming progressive, in his Democratic Senate primary contest
7 votes -
Trump's "law and order" rhetoric won't help him like Nixon in 1968
10 votes -
How accurate have Senate polls been, and what could that mean for November?
6 votes -
The US is tearing itself apart because its political system has failed
14 votes -
Riots are the American way: The US was founded on revolutionary blood; the Civil War took 400,000 lives and the civil rights movement was a reaction to white violence
18 votes -
The injustice of this moment is not an 'aberration'
8 votes -
1968 and 2020: How they resemble each other and how they don't
9 votes -
How Western media would cover Minneapolis if it happened in another country
15 votes -
Donald Trump is the Howard Stern of the 2016 US election
5 votes -
The Karen in Chief
9 votes -
The decline and fall of the spectacle-commodity economy
5 votes -
What it means to be liberal
8 votes -
How accurate are state polls? And what could that mean for the US Presidential election in November?
6 votes -
The crisis within conservatism: Since the 80s, the right has increasingly relied on media bubbles, wedge issues, resistance to social change and making electoral participation harder to hold power
7 votes -
We need to speak honestly about the GOP’s evolution into a conspiracy cult
33 votes -
Bernie Sanders' changing position on immigration explained
6 votes -
The failure of meritocracy (Sam Harris & Daniel Markovits)
6 votes -
Yet another political map simulator
8 votes -
Will the millennial left make peace with the "lesser evil" of Joe Biden? It's complicated
10 votes -
Strategic hot spot Greenland sparks global tug-of-war – US has always seen Greenland under its sphere of influence, but the island's increasing independence is threatening that
9 votes -
The corruption of the Republican Party: The modern GOP is best understood as an insurgency that carried the seeds of its own corruption from the start
10 votes -
How the pandemic has silenced the USA's biggest gubernatorial election
7 votes -
Joe Biden answers the web's most searched questions | WIRED Autocomplete Interview
11 votes -
EU ambassador says Australia played 'bad cop' to Europe's 'good cop' to get coronavirus motion up
5 votes -
Why conservative intellectuals like Viktor Orbán
6 votes -
The system failed the test of Trump: The story of the recent years is of institutions that were unable to constrain the presidency
8 votes -
During Michigan's COVID-19 response, anti-social distancing protests were promoted by a small set of activists linked to the 2012-era, anti-union so-called "right-to-work" movement
8 votes -
The pandemic has pushed Biden to the left. How far will he go?
10 votes -
GOP builds massive voter suppression machine for 2020 US election
4 votes -
Federal judge rules that all Texas voters can apply to vote by mail amid coronavirus pandemic: "the Grim Reaper's scepter of death" is "far more serious than an unsupported fear of voter fraud"
7 votes -
What recent special elections can tell us about November's US election: They may throw cold water on the idea that 2020 will be another “blue wave”
10 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 -
Do we really want a new Cold War with China? Corporate media is laying the ideological groundwork for a new cold war with China, presenting the nation as a hostile power that needs to be kept in check
20 votes -
Why anger against Trump might not be enough for Biden to win
6 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 -
Did the coronavirus kill ideology in Australia? How a government both sectarian and divisive learned (briefly) to become inclusive
5 votes -
Are older US voters turning away from Donald 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 US 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 -
The coronavirus crisis has highlighted exploitative global trade regimes
9 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 -
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