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25 votes
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The intertwined history of single-room occupancy and homelessness in the US
10 votes -
After Xi Jinping: The succession question obscuring China's future - and unsettling its present
17 votes -
Actually, slavery was very bad
46 votes -
The Left is always right too early
23 votes -
DW spoke to former Finnish President Sauli Niinistö about diplomacy to end the Russian war against Ukraine, NATO and the 50th anniversary of the Helsinki Final Act
5 votes -
The day I realized I would never find weapons of mass destruction in Iraq (2020)
11 votes -
Complete ban on international adoptions to Sweden has been proposed by a government-appointed commission which found widespread abuses and fraud
10 votes -
Interview with Marc Andreessen on Silicon Valley and US politics
10 votes -
Redo of Oblivion? Nah, give me the Great Depression!
15 votes -
"Is democracy a fad?" Ben Garfinkel’s sobering forecast for democracy in the automation age.
18 votes -
Finland's underground facilities, which can double as bomb shelters, have emerged as an inspiring approach as Europe ramps up preparedness after Russia's invasion of Ukraine
10 votes -
Norway's proximity to the USSR during the Cold War led to it building many military bunkers – tensions with Russia have brought them back into focus
7 votes -
The partnership: the secret history of the war in Ukraine
6 votes -
Conspiracy
20 votes -
Denmark's state-run postal service is to end all letter deliveries at the end of 2025 – cites a 90% decline in letter volumes since the start of the century
37 votes -
Critics ask if US President Donald Trump and Elon Musk are 'intentionally crashing the economy', as described in the book Disaster Capitalism and seen in the transition from the USSR to Russia
34 votes -
Bread and circuses - to generate public approval, not by excellence in public service or public policy, but through superficial appeasement
16 votes -
The world Donald Trump wants: American power in the new age of nationalism
18 votes -
What felt impossible became possible
25 votes -
Aleksandr Solzhenytsyn essay Live Not By Lies
6 votes -
America's coming Weimar moment (2022)
5 votes -
The crisis of ethics in the United States
I'm increasingly bothered in the last few years in the crisis of ethics in the United States government. It isn't very important to the leaders, and it isn't very important to the voters. I don't...
I'm increasingly bothered in the last few years in the crisis of ethics in the United States government. It isn't very important to the leaders, and it isn't very important to the voters. I don't think it is a "conservative vs liberal" issue. It isn't about religion. It is about basic morality and doing what is best for a functioning society.
I think about ethics more about once a year when my job has everyone take a small course on ethics. There is a lot of basic and obvious stuff in the course, but a big part of it is that even the appearance of conflicts of interest should be avoided. And I'm sure if this is important for the general workforce, it should be even more important for public figures.
I'm well aware that the government has done unethical things in the past, and some of them were horrific. But I don't remember a time when unethical behavior has been flaunted so openly. The president is fundamentally unethical. He constantly lies and takes open bribes and enriches himself at the expense of the proper functioning of the government. The supreme court is fundamentally unethical and barely tries to conceal taking bribes. The president's political party openly ignores their duty to hold the president accountable for crimes, and participates in them, including sedition. The top leaders of businesses and the press have been obviously captured by money and corruption.
For years we were concerned about "dark money" and who was funding the propaganda and disinformation. Well now we have the richest person in the world openly buying an election and taking over fundamental functions of the government.
This crisis of political ethics is a direct result of a crisis of ethics in all parts of society. I think it flows back and forth like a disease. The voters do not hold the leaders accountable because the voters themselves are not ethical. I don't think supporters of Trump are completely the victims of propaganda. I think they made an unethical choice for selfish reasons. Part of ethics is taking responsibility for making sure you have the correct information when you make a choice. I'm not sure that most are capable of learning that the price of eggs is worth the collapse of being able to trust each other and make progress as a society.
By the way, I think a lot of us are hoping that this open feeding frenzy of greed and dishonesty is part of a pendulum that swings back and forth. But I'm reminded that in 1977 Jimmy Carter was elected to help restore ethics to the presidency. He only served one term as president and was replaced by a highly unethical person who was supported by highly unethical people who created a right-wing propaganda network of talk radio and Fox News.
31 votes -
Let’s just say it: The Republicans are the problem (2012)
19 votes -
Successful policy in small or medium sized cities frequently goes unnoticed - a case for taking inventory of what works
10 votes -
Is the United States in its Soviet Union era?
For the last 10-years or so, I've been much more interested in US history, it started because I wanted to be a more informed citizen, but continued because of how much recorded history differed...
For the last 10-years or so, I've been much more interested in US history, it started because I wanted to be a more informed citizen, but continued because of how much recorded history differed from how I was taught. Then I started seeing how the lofty offerings of America, as an idea, had really never existed.
Like, when the rest of the world was watching the Soviet Union from the outside as it proudly proclaimed how amazing they were and everyone was kind of glancing at each other and whispering "They know we can see how it's going, right?" I wonder if the same is happening now, as countries watch US politics unfold. How close are we from a failure here or there to cascading failure?
I'm at a point of accumulated facts, doing my best to remove my personal bias, that I can't help but think we were arrogant to think we could keep a continent this large in one piece. The weight of national systems that can support a population this spread out is immense. The upkeep of infrastructure at this scale is a logistics nightmare. Passing any national laws has become the chore that just never gets done, we'll always get to it tomorrow. The people, Americans, can be amazing, but that's a truth of humanity, not nationality.
I'm sad to think I could be witnessing the end of something really impressive and inspiring, even if a lot of it was some makeup and nice lighting. Thoughts?
40 votes -
“The Power of the Powerless” by Vaclav Havel
6 votes -
What made Jimmy Carter such a strange US president
15 votes -
Public housing in the US was set up to fail but public funds still provide housing for a couple million people
14 votes -
Populism, media revolutions, and our terrible moment by Hank Green
21 votes -
Norway's parliament has apologised to minority groups and Indigenous people for historical injustices committed against them as part of its “Norwegianisation” policy
14 votes -
Saul Williams • KILL THE MACHINE ("Over my dead body")
5 votes -
They ran for US President. What did they learn? (original from 2004)
7 votes -
How bad maps win elections - gerrymandering explained | Map Men
18 votes -
The fall of the mainstream media: New elites
5 votes -
The cynic and the two nations: Twenty years since Barack Obama assured us we're the *United* States of America, a new country has been building with fearful momentum. Can anything be done to stop it?
11 votes -
US history shows swapping candidates is a losing game for Democrats
32 votes -
Swedish human rights activist Anna Ardin accused Julian Assange of sexual assault, but is glad he's now free
18 votes -
The antiquity to alt-right pipeline (on Twitter)
10 votes -
Fellow Canadians, what's on your mind this week?
I'm preoccupied with a couple of things. The first being that the federal budget was just released and I'm feeling like a national school lunch program and an injection of money into housing with...
I'm preoccupied with a couple of things.
The first being that the federal budget was just released and I'm feeling like a national school lunch program and an injection of money into housing with the expectation that cities build higher density dwellings is... Something they should have done mid mandate?
Is there even time to implement this stuff? Are we getting close to the point where we've spent too much?
Second is a quote from a compilation of personal accounts from travellers into this country's north in the 1800s. Farley Mowat assembled the stories and wrote the forward for "Tundra" in the 1960s and says the following
"Until 50 or 60 years ago, the Arctic was a living reality to North Americans of every walk of life. It had become real because men of their own kind were daring it's remote fastness in search of pure adventure", unprotected by the vast mechanical shields that we now demand whenever we step out of our air conditioned sanctuaries".
He goes on to talk about how -- most of all -- easily heated dwellings and running water had a softening effect on people, and that (basically) we fear and avoid Canada's climate far more than our forebearers did.
Wondering what people's thoughts on this are.
From what you learned from grandparents or earlier generations about spending time outside, would you agree that the comforts of home are just too damned seductive?
13 votes -
The Houthis are very, very, pleased
24 votes -
They're always guilty ... or are they?
22 votes -
Why joining a club is good for democracy
11 votes -
Fifty years since Sweden first introduced state-funded parental leave for couples to share – pioneering policy offers some surprising lessons for other countries
19 votes -
Sandra Day O’Connor, first woman US Supreme Court justice, dies at 93
34 votes -
Sweden halts adoptions from South Korea after claims of falsified papers on origins of children
10 votes -
Political warfare comes home to the US - the founder of the Nixon presidential library comments on the history of US disputes over presidential succession and the Trump indictments
14 votes -
Finland's long road to NATO – Russia's attack on Ukraine in 2022 revived memories of 1939 and was the catalyst that led the Nordic country into the Alliance
2 votes -
The invasion of Iraq was a turning point on to a path that led towards Ukraine
9 votes -
Italy has a fascism problem. Why?
4 votes