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7 votes
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Mike Johnson melts down after US House proxy vote failure exposes MAGA's "pro-family" lie
12 votes -
China, Japan, South Korea will jointly respond to US tariffs, Chinese state media says
38 votes -
US Federal prosecutors to seek death penalty for Luigi Mangione in UnitedHealthcare CEO’s killing
55 votes -
Amazon said to make a bid to buy TikTok in the US
14 votes -
Liberal projected to win Wisconsin Supreme Court race in blow to Donald Trump
44 votes -
75% of US scientists who answered Nature poll consider leaving the country
43 votes -
US FBI raids home of prominent computer scientist who has gone incommunicado
36 votes -
America’s future is Hungary
21 votes -
Finland plans to quit global convention banning anti-personnel landmines and boost defense spending to at least 3% of GDP by 2029
18 votes -
Russian President Vladimir Putin launches largest military draft in years despite ceasefire talks
22 votes -
US Senator Cory Booker's (NJ) marathon Senate speech has exceeded 24 hours and is on track to beat Strom Thurmond's Civil Rights Act filibuster. (gifted link)
60 votes -
Weekly US politics news and updates thread - week of March 31
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.
15 votes -
Target suffers eighth week of foot-traffic losses since caving on its Diversity, Equity and Inclusion policy
46 votes -
An ‘administrative error’ sends a Maryland father to a Salvadoran prison
42 votes -
Miami-Dade County commissioners vote in favor of removing fluoride from water systems
12 votes -
France: Marine Le Pen found guilty in embezzlement trial
42 votes -
Chinese exercises around Taiwan
13 votes -
US President Donald Trump revokes legal status of 530,000 Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans
43 votes -
Megathread for Elon Musk and the US Department of Government Efficiency - second thread
The other one got long and unwieldy.
30 votes -
Syrian president Ahmed al-Sharaa unveils transitional government
12 votes -
US judges limit Donald Trump’s retailiatory attacks on big law firms and push back
14 votes -
Virginia lawmaker says he called Social Security Administration and it hung up on him: 'It's very concerning'
33 votes -
Weekly US politics news and updates thread - week of March 24
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.
13 votes -
The partnership: the secret history of the war in Ukraine (gifted link)
6 votes -
UK blind people set to lose thousands in benefits still cannot read details of Labour’s welfare reform plans
14 votes -
Immigration lawyers claim gay Venezuelan makeup artist who sought US asylum is part of group deported to notorious El Salvador prison as gang members
13 votes -
Could you rearm Europe without US weapons? - Equipping a unified European military (April 1 special)
9 votes -
US Defense secretary Pete Hegseth’s younger brother is serving in a key role as liaison and senior adviser inside the Pentagon
16 votes -
US President Donald Trump blocked from deporting migrants to countries where they’re not citizens
41 votes -
Quakers in United Kingdom condemn police raid on Westminster Meeting House
15 votes -
Disney faces US investigation over Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion practices
14 votes -
US President Donald Trump executive order on Smithsonian targets funding for programs with ‘improper ideology’
25 votes -
US Immigration and Customs Enforcement detains University of Alabama doctoral student as government's college crackdown continues
12 votes -
What we know about the Tufts University PhD student detained by US federal agents
31 votes -
Does he get tossed? Do I have any wagers?
Despite the awful prospect of four years with this man and his goons, I look at how totally chaotic the previous two months have been on all fronts and wonder if he's able to keep this level of...
Despite the awful prospect of four years with this man and his goons, I look at how totally chaotic the previous two months have been on all fronts and wonder if he's able to keep this level of nonsense for much longer.
My question is, what are your odds that he leaves office early and what are some of the ways it could happen?
I'm not great with odds, but I think there's a strong chance that Republicans throw him out after their constituencies begin to feel the pain and everybody's out for blood.
I'm going to put 20 dollars into the pile and say he's out in a year and a half if this keeps up at the pace it's been going.
Any wagers out there?
11 votes -
US tax revenue could drop by ten percent amid turmoil at Internal Revenue Service
23 votes -
Beyond Orwell: The Donald Trump administration’s assault on US political language
17 votes -
Things progressives get wrong
Two things to get out of the way in advance... First: Some of this post is US-centric but the issues apply to much of the western world. Second: I'm a progressive. What that means to me is that we...
Two things to get out of the way in advance... First: Some of this post is US-centric but the issues apply to much of the western world. Second: I'm a progressive. What that means to me is that we should strive for tolerance, compassion and equality in culture and in our systems. We should use more of the excess production afforded by technology to take care of people than we currently do. Capitalism should be kept in check by strong state regulation. I'm not a communist, until we come up with a better economic solution which hasn't failed repeatedly in the past I believe capitalism is our best option. It just needs guardrails, some of which are socialist.
I don't mean for that to be an exhaustive description of progressivism, I just want to make it clear where I stand before I say things that, in my experience, often evoke big feelings
Big enough feelings that, somewhat often here at Tildes, I've seen posts interpreted in remarkably uncharitable ways. That's part of the motivation for my disclaimer, but not this whole post. My goal is to talk about things I believe are genuinely important if our aim is to make a better world.
As a whole, Tildes is one of the kindest and most emotionally intelligent forums I've experienced, which is why the areas where that slips are notable and speak to some of the failings of progressives at large.
One of the ideas I've seen repeated here and elsewhere which I believe is a problem:
- In reference to the far right: "Fuck them they need to meet us halfway. Or at least make some sort of good faith effort".
It turns out they don't need to do that. They just needed to vote for Trump and MAGA representatives.
They don't need to check their privilege. That's what we want. They don't really understand what we're even talking about. They don't feel lucky, they feel like their life is hard and no one is going out of their way to give them anything. They've just lived through a couple of decades of progressive social wins culminating in a widespread, ad hoc, campaign to loudly and self righteously shout down any viewpoint that doesn't conform to the new progressive gospel. That left them feeling like there wasn't a place for them in this new culture. It left them feeling marginalized.
At this point some reading this are likely having big feelings. Straight white men can't be marginalized! I don't disagree. But I didn't say they were marginalized, I said they felt marginalized. Their feelings matter. Or they should matter.
And it's not just straight white men, convenient as that would be. We know this from the last election. It's women and brown people too. Immigrants even. There were a lot of surprising demographic shifts to the right. The backlash to progressivism is real and widespread. I believe it's a big part of how we got here, with MAGA in full control of the government.
I know this isn't new information, we've been talking about it since 2016, but I'm not sure it's really sunk in yet.
Because here's the thing: In a way the people that have recently been voting for far right representation actually are marginalized. Many of them are financially insecure. A lot of them are socially insecure. That's a type of marginalization that spans demographics. And yes, groups like LGBTQ+ people, members of disfavored racial and ethnic groups and so on have it much worse. But they don't understand that because, like everyone, they're just trying to survive their own lives.
And we've been telling them, as they go bankrupt trying to keep their sick child alive in a broken medical system, that they need to recognize their privilege. We haven't tried, in any meaningful way, to have compassion and help them understand where we're coming from. We're just throwing these ideas at them, completely failing to understand they they have no context for making sense of them. Historically speaking these are pretty new ideas, they require completely reframing concepts that the western world has taken for granted for decades. That takes time.
They're struggling to pay bills and feed their families while we tell them that it's really important for people who feel like they were born into the wrong body to have support and medical care and use women's bathrooms. Step back and think about how much of a shock that is in a world that has recognized exactly two genders, determined by birth, for all of its history. It takes time for new ideas that big to digest. But, riding the aforementioned wave of progressive cultural wins, not realizing it had already peaked and was about to start receding, despite copious evidence, we just tried to ram it home. And now we lament the results and are reluctant to learn from our mistakes.
We want to create national change. Global change. But we choose niche issues and put them front and center in our messaging. And we do it without even a nod toward empathy for the majority of the population which hasn't had time to consider or digest this new information. We skipped the education step entirely. We're idiots.
I firmly include myself in that we. In 2016 I drew a line. I said, I may not have all the answers but if you can't see Trump for the bigoted, emotionally stunted, narcissist that he is then there is something wrong with your basic understanding of humanity and I have no use for you. I was an idiot.
It's not enough to be morally right, and there putting aside that morality will always be subjective. Politics is about strategy. Population level change is about strategy. Winning hearts and minds across large and varied populations requires easy to digest messaging. The right understands this. It may not be the world that we want to live in, but it's the world that exists. I saw this quote in a blog post, and then again recently on Tildes, no idea where it originally came from:
If your solution to some problem relies on “If everyone would just…” then you do not have a solution. Everyone is not going to just. At no time in the history of the universe has everyone just, and they’re not going to start now.
Change takes time and work and we tried to skip ahead because we were so sure that we were right. And here I want to circle back to my disclaimer: I believe we were right. That we live in a world where we have to fight for the rights of people to live however they choose to live, when they're hurting no one, is maddening. It's just fucking nuts. I wholeheartedly support the rights of marginalized people. I wish the human race wasn't inherently bigoted, that we didn't have this built in tribal impulse to draw us versus them lines, that we didn't recoil from things we don't understand.
But we can't ignore history. The human race has always been like this and it has always taken time to change things. Social change is a slow process. Just like women's rights were a slow process. Just like ending slavery was a slow process. And neither of those fights are over.
We pushed too hard, too fast, and this is the result. Brexit, Trump, Austria’s (Nazi) Freedom Party, far right gains all over Europe.
I don't mean to imply that social justice is the only reason for the rise of the far right. In fact I don't even think it's the core issue. I believe the core issue is unchecked capitalism. The ever-growing wealth gap, the capture of government by wealthy industries, the rise of multibillionaires. We focus on social justice while everyone is worried about taking care of their families and we wonder why our message doesn't resonate.
We tell people that the way they see the world, the way they were raised, is wrong but we don't first help them understand why. We don't like the political reality we're living in and we blame it on half the population rather than the systems. It's easier to be mad at people than systems.
But it's the systems we need to change. Yes we need to change people too, but first we need to take care of them. People that are just trying to survive are not attuned to nuance. They're not going to take it well when you tell them about other people's problems. If you tell them that if you're not on our side, you're against us then they're going to say "fine, I'm against you". Indeed that's exactly what they've been saying lately.
We need to own that. We did that.
In a little under two years (in the US) we're going to have the opportunity to come together and swing the pendulum back the other way. Leading up to that the focus should be on things that unite us, not things that divide us. And the biggest thing that unites us is that we're tired of our capital controlled political systems. We're tired of politicians that are in it for their donors rather than their constituents. We're tired of the top .01% siphoning off more and more of the resources. That's straightforward and easy to understand and it will absolutely resonate.
And, disclaimer once more, I'm not saying we should stop fighting for people's rights, that's a fight that should never end. But the modern far right in power is a monolithic threat to people's rights and, as such, our main focus should be on solving that problem above all others. We can do that by centering our messaging on issues that resonate with everyone and by having some grace when dealing with the people that voted the right into power rather than demonizing them. We need those people as allies. We can't afford to be stubborn or small minded no matter how stubborn and small minded we think the "others" are.
39 votes -
US law firms mount collective pushback against Donald Trump’s executive orders with series of First Amendment lawsuits
16 votes -
US Department of Government Efficiency plans to rebuild Social Security administration codebase in months, risking benefits and system collapse
25 votes -
Instead of Adolf Hitler, consider comparing US President Donald Trump to Chairman Mao Zedong
16 votes -
Donald Trump team revokes $11 billion in US funding for addiction, mental health care
17 votes -
She challenges one school book a week. She says she’ll never stop. (2023)
14 votes -
Russian medical researcher at Harvard, who protested the Ukraine war, detained by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, supposedly over frog embryos
11 votes -
For US citizens, formal request for public comment in the context of proposal to abolish the Federal Emergency Management Agency
10 votes -
Denmark will start drafting women into its military from next year, accelerating planned reforms to boost the size of its armed forces
20 votes -
Top US Senate Republican protests Donald Trump bid to withhold spending (gifted link)
9 votes -
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio boasts of canceling more than 300 visas over pro-Palestine protests
27 votes -
The presidential toddler theory of US government
22 votes