1) Palestine's sovereignty. I guess Democrats are pro-Palestine, but I don't know if it is an important matter amongst the voters — javi2541997
I think Palestinian sovereignty is the right thing, but it is a fraught issue here in the US and it's not clear to me who it helps. Both Jewish and Arabic voters tend to vote Democratic. One or the other is going to be pissed off no matter what you do. — T Clark
And anyone who seems to JUST read Noam Chomsky will only have that perspective and regurgitating only his ideas.
I was waiting for you to name-drop him, as this inability to understand what I'm talking about is common among those who don't read much more than his writings. — Christoffer
Ignoring the largest contributor to our modern world, social media. The elite do not have that much control over those channels, [...] — Christoffer
I could stand on a street corner in Washington DC and pass out flyers [...] — Wayfarer
Wouldn't that require complete abandonment of culture and society, medicine and technology? — Wayfarer
If you actually read and understand me first you would understand that I argue that post-truth is a problem within the public itself and their relation to truth and how to evaluate who's honest and who's a liar. Communist regimes used and use state violence methods to craft narratives that the public follow by force or indoctrination, it's not the same thing as what post-truth is about. — Christoffer
Unfortunately, that ship has sailed. Any return to "fairness" ideals would be treated as an assault on free speech. The dark corollary of free speech is the right to lie. So the only thing we can hope to do is to help people learn to seek truth. — Relativist
What I'm about is some minimum degree responsibility and accountability, and in gentler times these things usually just flow. But not now. Where once folks were more-or-less responsible and accountable, now they're not. And either we have them or we don't. I say we should have them, and where folks deny them, to impose them. — tim wood
On the subject of how individualism fostered the post-truth society, [...] — Christoffer
Trump didn't cause the problem; he exploited it and exacerbated it. — Relativist
The problem is that things like this becomes a foundation for conclusions that doesn't correlate with the specifics of the criticism. — Christoffer
For example, let's stop the ongoing trend of nose jobs. The regret rate among patients is at an average 16.4%. Since this leads to mental health issues such as "Body Dysmorphic Disorder", depression, anxiety and "Post-Surgical Dissatisfaction" with many returning for correction that only deepens the problems, I suggest that we should ban nose jobs in society.
Why isn't this an equal issue in society seen as how many go through with it? — Christoffer
Why is it that transgender people gets this much critique? — Christoffer
So, basically you're just pushing the same unsubstantiated ideas — Christoffer
It's not accurate to consider regret a major factor. It's 1 to 2%. — Benkei
It's basically just transphobia. — Christoffer
The only criminal thing is the high suicide rates among LGBTQ+ due to the still existing stigma and behavior against them. — Christoffer
it’s much more nuanced than that. — Bob Ross
Know who loves Trump? The Vietnamese and Vietnamese Americans. Know why? They hate China, just like he does. That is, a nation that was devastated by the US has aligned itself with the US instead of China because it needs protection from China. Think that one through. — Hanover
4. This is exactly what Trump is trying to motivate. He's trying to save on defense costs by pushing it back on Europe. — Hanover
The solution is for the EU and its many nations is to figure out how to work closely with the US in order to function together harmoniously. — Hanover
Human social interaction, for all its surface appeal and fleeting “highs,” often pulls us into cycles of drama, pain, and struggle that leave lasting marks. Entangling ourselves in the lives and expectations of others can feel exhilarating initially, like a quick fix of validation or belonging, but it frequently devolves into complex webs of obligation, conflict, and disappointment. Much like a drug, social interaction can create a dependency- where we crave that next connection or approval, only to find it comes with an equal measure of stress, misunderstandings, and sometimes even betrayal. In the end, the temporary buzz fades, often leaving us more entangled and drained than before. — schopenhauer1
For those who are upset at my rhetoric (and perhaps the lens by which I am analyzing this), I challenge you to try to justify, in your response to this OP, e.g., why Western, democratic values should not be forcibly imposed on obviously degenerate, inferior societies at least in principle—like Talibanian Afghanistan, North Korea, Iran, China, India, etc. Some societies are so obviously structured in a way antithetical to the human good, that it is virtually impossible to justify leaving them be in the name of anti-imperialism. — Bob Ross
Cook something, let's eat. — Buddha
That “diplomatic solution” was giving into absurd Russian demands. — Michael
As if there would be a "diplomatic solution" for the artificial state that ought to be part of Russia (or at least parts that are Novorossiya) and is ruled by nazis. — ssu
Somehow you seem not to understand that it's an European objective to not let Russia defeat and conquer Ukraine (or take the parts it wants and put a "denazified" puppet regime in the carcass state that is left). — ssu