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50501 Georgia @50501.chat

Hundreds gather in downtown Athens for the nationwide 'No Kings' protest

50501 Georgia @50501.chat

'A nationwide day of defiance': Savannah crowd joins No Kings rallies across U.S.

50501 Georgia @50501.chat

Thousands of anti-Trump protestors pack 'No Kings' protest outside Georgia’s Capitol

50501 Ohio @50501.chat

'We don't want a dictator.' Thousands march across Cincinnati area for 'No Kings' protest

50501 Ohio @50501.chat

'No Kings' protests across Ohio denounce President Donald Trump on his birthday

50501 Ohio @50501.chat

Photos from No Kings Day protests in Greater Akron on June 14

50501 Massachusetts @50501.chat

Thousands March in ‘No Kings’ rallies across New England

50501 Massachusetts @50501.chat

Thousands turn out for ‘No Kings’ protests in WMass, say US is no place for an authoritarian

50501 Massachusetts @50501.chat

No Kings, No War, on Pride Day

50501 Indiana @50501.chat

Photos: Thousands of protesters gather in downtown South Bend for No Kings rally

50501 Indiana @50501.chat

'America has? No Kings!' Hoosiers protest at Statehouse on Trump’s birthday

50501 Indiana @50501.chat

'Time to wake up': more than 4,000 Hoosiers protest Trump administration at Statehouse

50501 Alaska @50501.chat

Thousands show for anti-Trump protest in downtown Anchorage; crowds rally in other Alaska communities

50501 Alaska @50501.chat

Alaska protesters call for ‘No Kings,’ unless it’s seafood

50501 Alaska @50501.chat

Alaskans rally across the state for democracy and 'No Kings' protest against Trump

50501 Alaska @50501.chat

'No Kings' in America: Alaskans join nationwide protests against Trump

50501 Hawaii @50501.chat

Hundreds line highway in Kona to protest Trump administration during ‘No Kings’ event

50501 Hawaii @50501.chat

‘No Kings Day’ protesters rally against Trump at Hawaii Capitol

50501 Virginia @50501.chat

Hundreds gather in Roanoke for ‘No Kings’ protests

50501 Virginia @50501.chat

As Trump’s military parade takes to the street, so do thousands of ‘No Kings’ protesters in Hampton Roads

  • Voice of America (VOA) is a state media network funded by the United States of America, whose purpose is to project soft power through journalism. In 1948, Voice of America was forbidden to broadcast directly to American citizens to protect the public from propaganda by its own government. The restriction was removed in 2013 to to adapt to the Internet age.

    In 2005, the Washington Post reported that suspected Al-qaeda operatives were flown into Thailand to be detained and tortured. VOA's remote relay radio station in Udon Thani province has been widely suspected to be the torture site. VOA has been conspicuously silent on the charges. Their reporters have unparalleled access to the details of the case, but none of them appear to have done any investigation.

    According to David Van Zandt in MBFC's methodology:

    It’s crucial to note that our bias scale is calibrated to the political spectrum of the United States

    To better understand this statement, it should be noted that MBFC regards VOA as "least biased" despite its uncontroversial status as the United States' official propaganda outlet.

  • Clean energy infrastructure is desperately needed, but capitalists don't want to pay labor a fair wage.

    The stories I hear from tradespeople in clean energy work is that entry level positions are paying less, and the bonuses they were seeing when they started are drying up. Many are looking to move away from clean-energy specific labor and into electrical or construction where unions are better established.

    Improperly installed solar panels short out and fail early, carelessly sealed roof mountings leak and damage the dwelling, and most importantly, pressured novice workers make often fatal mistakes while working with electricity or at significant heights. To those with the experience of prison labor as a baseline, the risks and rewards of this kind of labor may be attractive. But most tradespeople know these jobs exist, and choose not to take them.

    Instead of support for labor, you see state, provincial, and national incentives to recruit new workers into these fields, as well as articles like this one touting the potential of employment in the clean energy economy. But noticeably absent from the article is any mention of labor organization or workers protections for the people doing this work. If the state was serious about building this infrastructure, they would make these fields union jobs. That's the only way to get quality renewable energy infrastructure built at scale.

  • Because come November- we ALL know you’re going to disappear along with the rest of them and the only evidence that you were ever here will reside in a comment history where you were shown the door

    'Til chilly November then, snowflake!

  • There is NO blueprint for a working system of socialism in America. NONE. Pretty o much anyone that knows anything about it on an academic level knows it won’t work and has said as much. And as far as leftists go, none of you have a clue about it enough to do any more than copypasta one another’s pseudo-intellectual nonsense on it.

    Ask a socialist why they hate capitalism, and they'll give you a myriad of reasons. Ask a capitalist why they hate socialism and they'll describe capitalism.

  • Leftists warned you that someone like Trump was the inevitable result of the capitalist system before he was elected. And here you are, eight years later STILL scapegoating the left for another fascist turn.

  • I think David Van Zandt has a vendetta against Philip Weiss. Racists tend to be unfeeling or feel contempt for 'lesser' racial groups, and are merely indifferent to their suffering. The most intense 'hate' in hate groups comes from the intensity of feeling racists have toward other people of their own race they perceive as 'race traitors' - who demonstrate that people who share their culture and heritage can afford empathy for the 'other' whom racists believe are unworthy of concern.

    Truthout is a reputable website, with good journalism and reporting. There's a number of other websites that report favorably on Palestinians, and don't toe Van Zandt's line that criticism of Israel and antisemitism are the same thing. They have higher 'Credibility' and 'Factual Reporting' scores than Truthout. But Truthout occasionally rehosts reporting from Mondoweiss, a site that Van Zandt has labelled as 'antisemitic,' and therefore Truthout must be punished for giving support to the most notorious enemy of Israel -- 'self-hating' Jews.

  • Thanks for the catch.

  • Since Zionists struggle to make a persuasive argument against freedom, justice, and equality for all people throughout the land, they seek instead to attack the message and messenger. When Palestinians proclaim “from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free,” many Zionists argue that this is a Palestinian call for genocide. But as historian Maha Nassar has noted, there has never been an “official Palestinian position calling for the forced removal of Jews from Palestine.” The links between this phrase and eliminationism might be the product of “an Israeli media campaign following the 1967 war that claimed Palestinians wished to ‘throw Jews into the sea.’ ” Jewish groups such as the American Jewish Committee also claim that the slogan is antisemitic because it has been taken up by militant groups such as the Palestine Liberation Organization, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, and Hamas. But as Nassar writes, the phrase predates these uses, and has its origins as “part of a larger call to see a secular democratic state established in all of historic Palestine.”

    What Does “From the River to the Sea” Really Mean? --jewishcurrents.org

  • HuffPost was founded by four people, including Arianna Huffington, CEO of Thrive Global, and Andrew Breitbart, who also built the alt-right outlet Breitbart News. Breitbart was also instrumental in founding The Drudge Report, an early popular news site that promoted news and opinion favorable to the Republican Party, and was The Huffington Post's direct inspiration, with the focus instead on the Democratic party and 'progressive' values.

  • Tom Nicholas is really great in this piece. SLRPNK link

  • People who get angry at Just Stop Oil tactics are just showing their ignorance of civil rights and protest history.

  • Yes, unsubstantiated means "no evidence."

    As the saying goes, absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.

  • Unsubstantiated by Snopes is not the same as false.

  • Alex de Vries predicted that current AI technology could be on track to annually consume as much electricity as the entire country of Ireland (29.3 terawatt-hours per year). For comparison, the Cambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index suggests Bitcoin uses 141-160 terawatt-hours (TWhs) of electricity annually. That’s ~0.7% of the world's consumed electricity in 2022. The process of minting cryptocurrency is a very public activity, so the numbers are difficult to fudge. The cost of bringing extremely expensive nuclear reactors back online and driving demand for environmentally destructive Uranium mining and processing suggests de Vries' guess was conservative.

    I'm reminded of Jevon's Paradox as applied to energy generation. I hope the AI bubble pops before much more investment goes into nuclear energy.

  • The petro-billionaire people who brought you "The Line" are joining up with the badly conceived Octopus Crane Tower idea people to bring you something that definitely will never be built and probably has deep conceptual flaws.

    The important take away from this performance art is that the people causing global warming and who stand to benefit from pumping even more carbon into the air to are working on clever solutions to reverse it, and you can continue living your life as if things will eventually return to the pre-climate crisis status quo.

  • ABC News is a brand of Disney Advertising.

    Manufacturing Consent has this to say about Disney news media:

    Ben Bagdikian notes that when the first edition of his Media Monopoly was published in 1983, fifty giant firms dominated almost every mass medium; but just seven years later, in 1990, only twenty-three firms occupied the same commanding position.

    Since 1990, a wave of massive deals and rapid globalization have left the media industries further centralized in nine transnational conglomerates-Disney, AOL Time Warner, Viacom (owner of CBS), News Corporation, Bertelsmann, General Electric (owner of NBC), Sony, AT&T-Liberty Media, and Vivendi Universal. These giants own all the world's major film studios, TV networks, and music companies, and a sizable fraction of the most important cable channels, cable systems, magazines, major-market TV stations, and book publishers. The largest, the recently merged AOL Time Warner, has integrated the leading Internet portal into the traditional media system. Another fifteen firms round out the system, meaning that two dozen firms control nearly the entirety of media experienced by most U.S. citizens. Bagdikian concludes that "it is the overwhelming collective power of these firms, with their corporate interlocks and unified cultural and political values, that raises troubling questions about the individual's role in the American democracy."