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13 votes
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Jon Stewart - It's Class Warfare - The Poor (and the rest of us) Have Lost (2010)
18 votes -
China set to report first population decline in five decades
10 votes -
A new commission is investigating Jair Bolsonaro’s response to the pandemic — and political foes are gathering strength
12 votes -
UK and Norway have failed to reach a fishing deal for this year, with the industry warning that hundreds of crew members will be left out of work
8 votes -
James Carville on the state of Democratic politics
12 votes -
What are some examples of times when sanctions "worked"?
The US, EU and assorted allies have gradually gotten into the habit, in recent decades, of using targeted sanctions (a lot) against both individuals and govts when the targets do something the...
The US, EU and assorted allies have gradually gotten into the habit, in recent decades, of using targeted sanctions (a lot) against both individuals and govts when the targets do something the West does not approve of.
Do they work? Do they help?
I think Obama-era sanctions on Iran played a part in getting Iran to at least consider the nuclear accord that Trump promptly renigged on ... but I also think Rouhani also wanted to develop a better relationship w/the US (and I'm sure he had at least grudging support from the Ayatollah), and gladly used the sanctions as the justification for speaking to the Great Satan.
Details aside, I think sanctions helped in that case. I can't think of any other examples where they were effective in helping achieve their intended effects.
OTOH, I think aggressive sanctions against North Korea have, at best, done no good at all, and have probably made the situation worse.
Any other successes come to mind?
11 votes -
Maryland enacts landmark police overhaul, first state to repeal police bill of rights
14 votes -
Newark cops didn't fire a single shot in 2020
15 votes -
Our miserable 21st century
8 votes -
Walter Mondale, US Vice President of the Jimmy Carter administration and 1984 Democratic candidate for president dies at 93
8 votes -
Kenan Malik: ‘By demonising asylum seekers, Denmark reflects a panic in social democracy’
8 votes -
Keir Starmer struggles to counter Boris Johnson’s ‘vaccine bounce’ as UK polls loom
5 votes -
The US military will fully leave Afghanistan on September 11, twenty years after the 9/11 attacks
16 votes -
Why was Donald Trump’s US corporate tax cut such a flop?
5 votes -
Alexei Navalny reaches fourteenth day of hunger strike as officials threaten force-feeding
15 votes -
In Denmark, fears grow among Syrian asylum-seekers as residence permits are revoked
9 votes -
Peace in Northern Ireland is fragile
Striking image: "There was never a good war or a bad peace": https://twitter.com/OrlaithClinton/status/1379900804878974979?s=20 A useful thread:...
Striking image: "There was never a good war or a bad peace": https://twitter.com/OrlaithClinton/status/1379900804878974979?s=20
A useful thread: https://twitter.com/OrlaithClinton/status/1379869873787002887?s=20
This is 1) heart-breaking and 2) very, very, worrying.
14 votes -
Andrew Yang’s Asian American superpower
11 votes -
Greenland heads to the polls on Tuesday in snap elections which could have major consequences for international interests in the Arctic
8 votes -
Denmark's socialist left needs to reverse the decline in working-class mobilization – mass-membership parties have been replaced by a professionalized media-political sphere
12 votes -
We selected 10,000 American neighborhoods at random. If we dropped you into one of them, could you guess how most people there voted?
29 votes -
Iran and China sign economic and security agreement, challenging US pressure on the state
8 votes -
‘Stories are chosen due to editorial merit’ and ‘newsworthy updates’ - BBC
6 votes -
Race report: 'UK not deliberately rigged against ethnic minorities'
12 votes -
China approves Hong Kong electoral system reform bill, further reducing the power of the Hong Kong electorate
10 votes -
Georgia House passes sweeping bill that would restrict voting access, setting up final vote next week
8 votes -
Norway prevents sale of Rolls-Royce subsidiary Bergen Engines to Russia – government has blocked the sale on the grounds of national security
8 votes -
If the US Federal Government was to stop issuing student financial aid to private colleges and universities, what would be the impact to those institutions?
Posted this over on r/highereducation, thought it might be interesting here. I've been thinking a lot about this lately, especially in the context of "free college" proposals. Subsidizing private...
Posted this over on r/highereducation, thought it might be interesting here.
I've been thinking a lot about this lately, especially in the context of "free college" proposals. Subsidizing private colleges and universities would be a political non-starter. I'm assuming the government would have a "teach-out" style plan to transition schools off federal dollars. Regardless, the impact would be massive. I've briefly glanced at financial aid and revenue data for one R1 school, and it seems federal money makes up a significant (20-30%) portion of annual operating revenue. While that doesn't seem like much at first, I suspect enrollment would drop significantly at many schools if there was the alternative of going to a public university for free. Several thoughts come to mind:
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What percent of schools would close or merge?
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What would be some of the most surprising schools to close?
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How quickly would schools close? Would they immediately shutter, close at the end of the transition period, or struggle on for a few years?
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What is the breakdown of institution types (R1/2 vs SLAC vs engineering schools)?
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What would be the impact on religiously-affiliated colleges, especially Catholic schools (there's already many little-known ones in the middle of nowhere)?
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Of the schools that survive, what sort of strategies would they employ to remain solvent (lean heavier on foreign students, reduce admissions standards, have mandatory work-study programs to reduce administrative costs, create alumni contracts akin to tithing, invest more in the financial sector/Wall Street)?
Edit: Whoops, I thought I posted this in ~misc. Oh well.
12 votes -
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Finland's women-led government targeted by online harassment – the online attacks have left some female politicians afraid to speak out
14 votes -
Hurricane China: How to prepare
15 votes -
Denmark has gone far-right on refugees – Copenhagen claims Damascus is safe enough to send nearly 100 Syrians back
7 votes -
Brazil judge annuls Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva's convictions, opens door to 2022 run
8 votes -
Against child hostages
9 votes -
Europeans get ‘right to repair’ for some electrical goods
15 votes -
Denmark's “zero asylum” plan means psychological torture for refugees – over the years Danish immigration politics has become increasingly extreme
11 votes -
The US Republican Party is now in its end stages
13 votes -
Why Vladimir Putin wants Alexei Navalny dead
8 votes -
UK voters might regret Brexit, but most of them don't feel like reversing it anymore
9 votes -
The race to dismantle forrmer US President Donald Trump’s immigration policies
8 votes -
US and allies to build 'China-free' tech supply chain
9 votes -
Greenland's government called a national election after parliament threatened it with a no-confidence vote – coalition torn apart by dispute over mining project
5 votes -
Will American ideas tear France apart? Some of its leaders think so.
17 votes -
Denmark has committed to spending 1.5 billion Danish crowns on defence in the Arctic, utilising long-range drones to survey the area
8 votes -
Coup d'etat aerobics
2 votes -
Inger Støjberg quits the Venstre party ahead of her impeachment trial – she is accused of unlawfully ordering the separation of asylum-seeking couples arriving from Syria
5 votes -
Hong Kong unveils national security guidelines for children aged six and above
7 votes -
Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny setenced to prison for 3½ years for violating the terms of his probation while he was recuperating in Germany from nerve-agent poisoning
21 votes -
Myanmar coup: Aung San Suu Kyi detained as military seizes control
15 votes -
The QAnon timeline: Four years, five thousand drops and countless failed prophecies
16 votes