-
27 votes
-
Portland anti-Immigration and Customs Enforcement occupiers evicted in pre-dawn raid by Department of Homeland Security officers in riot gear
16 votes -
Young, progressive, DSA-backed Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez ousted ten-term incumbent in New York primary
31 votes -
US Supreme Court delivers a sharp blow to labor unions
13 votes -
US Supreme Court upholds Donald Trump travel ban
26 votes -
In Louisiana, Donald Trump's trade war spooks America's biggest port
5 votes -
How James Comey intervened to kill WikiLeaks' US immunity deal
4 votes -
Australia to spend nearly $7 billion buying unmanned military planes from America
5 votes -
A world for all of us, not just the US billionaires
12 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 -
UN report: With 40MM in poverty, US is most unequal developed nation
19 votes -
Who here is eligible to vote but not registered to vote?
The USA in particular has one of the lowest voter turnouts and the lowest registration levels of most developed countries....
The USA in particular has one of the lowest voter turnouts and the lowest registration levels of most developed countries.
http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2018/05/21/u-s-voter-turnout-trails-most-developed-countries/
In 2016 only 61% of eligible citizens voted and only 70% were registered.
https://www.census.gov/data/tables/time-series/demo/voting-and-registration/p20-580.html
And that was a good year.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voter_turnout#Trends_of_decreasing_turnout_since_the_1980s
10 votes -
How identity, not issues, explains the partisan divide
4 votes -
Jeff Sessions: "We don't want to separate parents from kids"
6 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 -
Young immigrants detained in Virginia center allege abuse
3 votes -
Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin plan to meet in mid-July
5 votes -
Thomas Homan: US Immigration and Customs Enforcement can't be compared to Nazis since we're just following orders
11 votes -
EU to impose tariffs on $3.2 billion of US goods starting Friday
5 votes -
The US withdrawal from the UN Human Rights Council leaves ally Australia in an awkward, lonely position
3 votes -
US President Donald Trump says 'getting there' in NAFTA talks with Canada, Mexico
3 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 -
US judge orders former Donald Trump Campaign Chairman Paul Manafort to be jailed on witness tampering charges
27 votes -
California? Or Cali-Three-Nia? Proposal to split state will be on ballot in November.
13 votes -
Inside Casa Padre, the converted Walmart where the US is holding nearly 1,500 immigrant children
14 votes -
Here is the actual petition filed by the New York Attorney General against US President Donald Trump, his children, and his organization
12 votes -
US Inspector General report: James Comey 'deviated' from procedure in Hillary Clinton probe, but was not politically biased
6 votes -
US asylum: Domestic and gang violence cases 'no longer generally qualify'
5 votes -
When the punishment feels like the crime: Brock Turner's twisted legacy—and a Stanford professor's relentless pursuit of justice.
3 votes -
G7 allies likely to ‘gang up’ on US President Donald Trump as aluminium tariffs threaten all-out trade war
6 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 -
Rudy Giuliani says US President probably can pardon himself
43 votes -
Edward Snowden: Five years after historic US National Security Agency leaks, whistleblower looks back in interview
3 votes -
The Californization of America
5 votes -
US tariffs a dangerous game, says EU
15 votes -
Trade tariffs: Chorus of condemnation intensifies. Massive US tariffs have come into force as condemnation of the Donald Trump administration's move intensifies.
8 votes -
The 9.9 percent is the new American aristocracy
8 votes -
EU, Mexico, and Canada impose retaliatory tariffs in response to the US
8 votes -
US President Donald Trump hits Canada, Mexico, EU with steel and aluminum tariffs
19 votes -
China slams US President Donald Trump's ‘flip-flop’ on tariffs as trade spat worsens
12 votes -
China steps up pace in new nuclear arms race with US and Russia as experts warn of rising risk of conflict
7 votes -
Tiger Mother talks tribalism: Amy Chua on why US society is slipping into perilous territory
5 votes -
Is the United States on its way to losing its hegemonic status?
On the heels of President Trump pulling out of talks with North Korea over nuclear disarmament in the Korean peninsula, the United States' pending withdrawal from the Paris agreement (coming soon!...
On the heels of President Trump pulling out of talks with North Korea over nuclear disarmament in the Korean peninsula, the United States' pending withdrawal from the Paris agreement (coming soon! ... the day after the next presidential election), and the United States' unilateral withdrawal from the Iran nuclear agreement, combined with ongoing Russian and Iranian leadership in resolving the Syrian civil war and Chinese leadership in talks with North Korea, we seem to be heading toward an ambiguous point in international geopolitics.
So this question is simple and nasty: Is the United States on its way to losing its status as the unquestioned dominant world power in the international order?
If it is on its way off the top of the food chain, who will challenge it? Are we returning to a cold war-style era or are the lines shifting and different? If the United States is not on its way to losing its dominant status, how might it maintain its footing in a world that seems increasingly disillusioned with it?
13 votes -
'World no longer accepts US deciding for them', Iran's Hassan Rouhani says
5 votes -
The princes, the president and the fortune seekers
3 votes -
The Onion published the threatening email they received from Michael Cohen
10 votes -
Houston police chief says he has ‘hit rock bottom’ on gun rights arguments
5 votes -
El Paso woman living in Montana detained by Border Patrol for speaking Spanish
5 votes -
Immigration and Customs Enforcement claimed a Dreamer was “gang-affiliated” and tried to deport him. A US federal judge ruled that ICE was lying.
6 votes