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@mikenunya4491 the framing itself is misleading. It's not a guarantee. It's a guess based on the care you can get. It was over 20% at the start when people knew less about it. And you ignore that even 1% is considered high, and part of the problem with covid is how infectious it is.
Phrased another way, it's about 900% more deadly than the flu(10-20 times more likely to kill you).
There's also reinfection, intensive care and hospitalization, and long term side effects. And the fact that the outcome is a roll of the die.
The u.s case fatality rate is around 1.78 based on confirmed cases and deaths. And about 2.28 for my state.
“However, even when this uncertainty is taken into account, we still find that COVID-19 has a high fatality rate - on the order of 1% for a typical high-income country. This risk is concentrated in older ages, with the probability of dying from COVID-19 doubling approximately every eight years.
https://www.webmd.com/lung/news/20201030/covid-19-infection-fatality-ratio-is-about-one-point-15-percent
" The estimates of infection fatality rate tended to be more homogeneous within each location, while they differed markedly across locations "
This is guessed based on the possible total case number which is unknown vs deaths. And guessed to be around 1.15-1.65. But this is just looking at areas around the world, which may be have a different health level than the U.S.
So it's important not to treat these things as strict numbers with a guarantee. Or to act like it's nothing. It can be nothing. Or it can be severe. Or it can be life ending. And it can keep mutating.
It's not that you're wrong, but it's that your wrong. Not on the data, but on how you interpret it. We're upto 500,000+ deaths. And that's using the same data as your figures. In fact, it's using harder data that is confirmed.
https://www.who.int/bulletin/volumes/99/1/20-265892/en/
https://ourworldindata.org/mortality-risk-covid#what-we-want-to-know-isn-t-the-case-fatality-rate-it-s-the-infection-fatality-rate
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@alancook9780 That's what you guys don't get. It wasn't any group. That wasn't like the trump riot. It wasn't bound by an ideology. The riots that happened were like the 90s one. Spontaneous due to the anger of the people. We saw this before with the killing of Latasha Harlins and the 1992 Los angeles riot. The difference is just that many more killings happened near each other, across the country, that has much faster news and social networks. It was done by police, and it is part of the greater issue of police reform(the officers got off, or light punishment too), and racism since the issue hadn't been resolved from the 90s one. The right wing attempt to conflate that kind of riot is ridiculous.
It's like you're saying that since black people were involved, that it was BLM. When it just wasn't. BLM ALSO organized protests due to that being the nature of how they were formed. And people protested it in general, or joined them. But that is separate from the riots. I have no connection to BLM. But we've seen this kind of riot before. And it happened where I live. We were all aware. And you could even find protests organized that either stopped the riots or didn't let it start. BLM and other protestors were against it.
Who knows, maybe the protestors, and blm actually helped calm that down by giving people an avenue. Or it was the curfews, whichever, maybe both.
So unless you think BLM time travelled to be responsible for every angry riot that happens, it just doesn't make sense.
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"traditional diets"
You need to look at their real diet
"There are several reasons driving Africa’s increased appetite for wheat including urbanization, rising incomes, food aid, globalization in cuisine, and fluctuations in the relative price of other staple crops such as corn. Demand for wheat-based foods have reached all-time highs in many countries both on the household level—as sales of items like pasta increase in grocery stores—and on the restaurant level, as international restaurant chains continue to find big business in Africa."
It's not that they rely on Ukraine wheat specifically, so let's put that aside.
But in a global world, and why people use it, is because it's cheap. It's cheap for people in cities. To the point that the poorer you are, the more you'll be dependent on cheaper foods(though I don't know for sure, this is generally true).
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I'll say this, a degree is an accomplishment and does show positive traits(hard work, some intelligence, and teaches some skills).
But some people have life circumstances that make it difficult to go( bad parents, bad childhood, fears, anxiety, depression ect). And some smart people want other training, some prefer to get started right away. Some think college is too expensive, whose families are lower working class, not from a college background(they value being debt free).
So they're not looking at college as much in the first place.
And then some people just want enough money to live and then live a simple life in some rural area.
Of course there's a small group where they have this idea of college as this highly politicized place where their politics makes them not even want to go.
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@LordErnie No because it wasn't proven that the kid attacked her children and she didn't say he did. She's just saying whatever.
He's her child. Aside from kids hurting each other. Even if he should be some place else. That journey begins in his home. How is she going to complain about him running away, which is also her responsibility, and then deny him access.
She should want him there. Imagine any other scenario where a child ran away and instead of wanting him home, the parent wants him to be denied entry into the house. That is so outside the norm, of how people think.
I understand he's difficult but how long as she been like this, and is there a reason he doesn't always want to be there. And is that attitude helpful.
What she say was that he hit things and she had kids there. I'm going off memory.
Her attitude could bet well cause the behavior she's complaining about. But I don't know the chicken and the egg scenario, which came first. But that kid needs help, not a mom kicking him out.
She also did go to push the cop. But she might have had the right too, I don't know. And I don't know if catching it was wrong of him.
But this is a situation where the cop actually showed sympathy for the most vulnerable person there, which is the kid that got essentially kicked out of his house. And we don't know if he knew her stipulations because it doesn't sound like they talked. At the very least, denied entry.
This seems like a case more for CPC.
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I knew someone that married someone 14 years older. She was probably college age, and they lasted till death(his). I think it's tough. Your partner will age ahead of you, and you'll live with their decline more. I think how old the people are matters.
You mentioned maturity. Personally I think intention matters. Someone who's just going to sleep with young people is a menace, who is using them, and might hurt theme emotionally, and affect their development. But I know my opinion isn't the most common one, right now people don't want to say mean things about sleeping around. And I think it's fine if the people who want to sleep around, do so with each other.
But using young people as a source for easy lays just doesn't sit right with me. Especially if the person is uncaring about it.
A 19 year old dating a 29 year old, and she wants marriage next year, and she wants a kid within 5 years, and that's what he wants too, that's different to me. She'll be fulfilling her desire that she probably wouldn't with someone her own age.
Now we could question why she wants those things at that age but that's a hypothetical, and I just created a scenario where it would make sense for someone to seek someone older. And we can't assume that this hypothetical girl doesn't find an older guy attractive or that they don't get along, and have chemistry.
That aside, I reiterate that it is hard. My friends saw their dad die of old age basically. He retired, and I can't say if his wife resented it, but I can say maybe he felt underappreciated. I also can't say that he felt that way because of his age, and that's not uncommon to dads(I think my dad feels the same way), and his kids loved him. And there's no indication his wife didn't love him either. But I don't recommend big age differences.
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@roey218 Israel continued to impose institutionalized discrimination against Palestinians living under its rule in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT). It displaced hundreds of Palestinians in Israel and the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, as a result of home demolitions and imposition of other coercive measures.
Torture and other ill-treatment of detainees, including children, were committed with impunity. The authorities used a range of measures to target human rights defenders, journalists and others who criticized Israel’s continuing occupation of the West Bank, Gaza Strip and Syrian Golan Heights. Violence against women persisted, especially against Palestinian citizens of Israel. The authorities denied asylum-seekers access to a fair or prompt refugee status determination process. Conscientious objectors to military service were imprisoned.
https://www.amnesty.org/en/countries/middle-east-and-north-africa/israel-and-occupied-palestinian-territories/report-israel-and-occupied-palestinian-territories/
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"Across these areas and in most aspects of life, Israeli authorities methodically privilege Jewish Israelis and discriminate against Palestinians. Laws, policies, and statements by leading Israeli officials make plain that the objective of maintaining Jewish Israeli control over demographics, political power, and land has long guided government policy.
In certain areas, as described in this report, these deprivations are so severe that they amount to the crimes against humanity of apartheid and persecution.*1
https://www.hrw.org/report/2021/04/27/threshold-crossed/israeli-authorities-and-crimes-apartheid-and-persecution
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*1These are crimes against Humanity.
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Destroying civilian property
Killing civilians
Not allowing materials in
Discrimination
Lying
False arrests
Killing a medical worker
Shooting into crowds
Harassment
Illegal occupation
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"Israeli forces have displayed a shocking disregard for the lives of Palestinian civilians by carrying out a number of airstrikes targeting residential buildings in some cases killing entire families - including children - and causing wanton destruction to civilian property, in attacks that may amount to war crimes or crimes against humanity,"
https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/more-than-52000-palestinians-displaced-gaza-un-aid-agency-2021-05-18/
More crimes against humanity. How much does Israel hate humanity. Or denies it to the Palestinian.
"the Israeli settlements are a “flagrant violation under international law” and have “no legal validity”,
https://news.un.org/en/story/2020/10/1076572
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/mar/27/israeli-soldiers-kill-teenage-palestinian-medic-near-bethlehem
Also a war crime since snipers could see the medics. It was a protest. And then they covered it up.
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@jellyfishbrained Some Republican states are in dire straits. The people's lives don't improve. And they keep voting for them. The Same could be lobbied at Dems, except it wouldn't be true.
Fact is both sides do have people that don't vote, and that don't vote for their interests.
In Dem regions, that might be more the rich or maybe even middle class, willing to vote or compromise, or get someone who won't totally throw everyone else under the bus... Too much.
In republican areas, the poor don't vote, or are willing to throw themselves under due to cultural issues. While the rich vote more openly for their interests or just don't care how their candidate treats the poor.
Florida has lately been considered almost 3rd world. The gap between rich and poor has grown. And it's become an area where the rich have homes, or stash some cash. A tax haven for the rich.
That's what I've heard.
So why do they vote how they do, it's cultural. And the rich because it benefits them.
The rich have outsized power in the US. In a state that's culturally red, they'll have even more. Because the rich and businesses can afford campaigns. And if the people are poorer, then they can afford to support candidates less. And the campaign ads they'll see will have a framing towards supporting that cultural belief too.
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No. Because they're essentially the same. It's like a non profit we're all putting money into.
But costs would go down in general.
From the buying power of a Nation, we'll be able to get better deals on drugs.
As someone else mentions, for everyone, administration would be streamlined, so costs go down.
There wouldn't be a for profit incentive. Costs go down.
The CEOs, ECT aren't going to give themselves bonus. Ect.
That's why every study on it indicates it will save the nation money.
As well as control the ballooning prices of the healthcare industry. which will result in... Costs going down.
As well as... The fact that our system is mixed welfare. And people have used so many excuses to not do a for all..this lopsided Frankenstein system makes things worst.
This idea that it has to be earned, and only kids and old people deserve it, let's all the excesses, the bad of the system grow
While giving us/nation, more to pay for the people that can't pay it
But being all in, and it's no longer welfare. Something that is no longer justified but just a function. Removes the worst aspect but keeps the good
Basically the current system is the worst of both worlds. With very skewed benefits. You have to be very rich. Or extraordinarily poor. To benefit. And the have nots might be understanding or bitter.
And it creates friction. Either to the people on welfare or towards the rich.
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@wewillwin24 you're lying to yourself. What we did is what we've always done.
Unless you're talking about altering the type of voting we do ect. There was nothing anamolous. There was nothing direct. The U.S would explore that, regardless of Trump.
Improving voting has nothing to do with giving it to Trump.
It comes down to this. Do you think that the majority of voters, voted for Biden? Are you trying to overturn the election?
Whatever problems the media has, in this case, all they did was report the numbers, and when it seemed conclusive, "call it", and the states eventually proved that right(or wrong ect). The media had nothing to do with this. So why try to scapegoat it. There are problems but this isn't one.
Deal with the flaws, tell people what they are. But do you think people voted for Biden in the current system or not. Because the results, as verified by each state, say yes. That's objective reality.
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@ScienceNotFaith that's exactly what I said, food to eat out.
If someone has food or coffee at home they'd still need it because people keep food at the ready, or buy it afterwards to cook.
If they're the type to make coffee at home, how would that affect them. Maybe over time they'd use less. But they'd still have to buy that coffee to be ready at home. Which mean it'll only save money on food that lasts awhile.
Even in your scenario, if they have a partner or kids, they would still need food to be in the fridge.
And that's if they don't have any dietary needs, or don't mind eating what's there, depending on what's available.
Like I said, it wouldn't save much on groceries. Only on eating out.
If the person knows how to cook, it wouldn't save much since their meals wouldn't cost much, and the ingredients have to be used.
But it's a nice fall back I guess.
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@ericshurtz4901 So you are trying to defend them. And aren't trying to find more information.
Moving aside from racism
"will not be fixed if every issue requires the approval and blessing from the dysfunctional American democratic system. Democracy has failed in this once great nation."
This is anti-democracy, and pro fascism.
""An African, for example, may have lived, worked, and even been classed as a citizen in America for centuries, yet he is not American."
Blatant racism. How can you defend this as not racist.
Aside from american being the continent, even my own immigrant family already has two people that fought for this country. Black people have fought for this country since the first century it was founded.
What asian or african group is saying that white people aren't "americans". These people's logic is so corrupt that they would say that a black person from europe, isn't european probably. Or mixed people.
"revival of an allegedly authentic American identity based on “pan-European” colonizers. As Rousseau notes in his internal announcement of the organization’s split with VA, PF’s rebranding was aesthetic, not ideological. The group’s politics remain staunchly white nationalist,"
How is this not racist?
Like why even ask disingenous questions. You should have said you were actually lying and being rhetorical because you don't say things in good faith. But because it hurts your feelings when racists are called racists and people don't like them.
I don't think you even read it.
“The state has long since ceased to advocate for the interests of the descendants of its creators, and thus a State which will be, above all else, a reflection of the national interest must be implemented
Yeah this is racist. This is literally racism. And there's no black or asian group calling for this. None that are mainstream and people wouldn't also call racist(though I literally don't know of any at all but in case the possibility exists).
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They block themselves from seeing what they have in common. You can find people who like video games almost anywhere. People from other parts of the world might behave more like them, be religious like them, be personally conservative ect. They might be hard workers, or start business like them.
The person might have grown up in the U.S anyway.
I grew up and went to esol, and for the first couple of years in the U.S, I didn't hang out with other hispanic kids. At the time there weren't that many from other countries in esol(3 or 2). So I just made friends with other foreign kids. And once that wasn't an issue, I still did for awhile, koreans, chinese, cambodians, black, white. Eventually it wasn't an issue but especially among young kids grewing up in the U.S, there isn't some huge cultural gaps at all.
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@outdoorloser4340 I'm sorry but I'm the sane one here. I've said this before, there can be some nobility in knowing what's true when no one else admits it. But that is not this situation. This situation is you closing yourself off to the truth and denying it.
I don't think you realize why you sound like the picture perfect caricature of crazy.
You sound like something out of a cult or fringe conspiracy.
.listen to yourself and apply to.something else..imagine I'm the one saying it.
That all of the world, all media, including independent media, factcheckers, newspapers are wrong.
But that this small group has the truth. And to turn away from the rest of the world to believe what they believe.
Of this trans country, trans national conspiracy against a president that previously won... And everyone is in on it.
And to what end goal? Trump was pro corporation. They have the money, they buy the politicians. They are the transnational power.
There's no benefit on their end for trump losing.
Guys, Trump set this situation up. He told you guys not to do mail in. And republicans did it less anyway. He knew there was a chance he'd lose. He set up the idea of fraud way before the election even happened..because he knew the mail in votes would go for Biden(because everyone knew).
And you guys are being played so easily. How can you guys not see this.
When you hear a claim, just do some quick research. And if the source you got it from keeps getting it wrong or misleading, then don't rely on them.
It doesn't negates bias because bias often still used and misinterprets facts. But at least you aren't relying on liars.
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@markbrowning4334
Nov. 13, 2020: U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham calls Raffensperger. The secretary of state said the South Carolina Republican asked him whether he had the power to reject certain absentee ballots, which he interpreted as a suggestion to toss legally cast ballots.
Dec. 8, 2020: Texas attorney general files lawsuit asking U.S. Supreme Court to invalidate Electoral College votes in battleground states that Trump lost.
Trump calls Carr and warns him not to encourage other Republican officials to reject the Texas lawsuit.
Dec. 14, 2020: a group of 16 Republicans meet at Georgia Capitol to sign a certificate falsely stating that Trump won and that they were the state’s “duly elected and qualified” electors
Dec. 22, 2020: White House chief of staff Mark Meadows visits Cobb County, where an audit of signatures on absentee ballot envelopes was being conducted. While there, he meets Frances Watson, lead investigator in Georgia secretary of state’s office, and gets her phone number.
Dec. 23, 2020: Trump calls Watson and urges her to look at Fulton County, saying she would “find things that are gonna be unbelievable.” He also tells her, “When the right answer comes out, you’ll be praised.”
Jan. 2, 2021: Trump calls Raffensperger and suggests the secretary of state can help him “find” the votes needed to overturn Trump’s loss in the state
Jan. 4, 2021: Pak, the U.S. attorney in Atlanta, abruptly resigns after learning that Trump felt he wasn’t doing enough to investigate allegations of election fraud and wanted to fire him
The A.P
Here’s a timeline of events leading up to Donald Trump’s indictment in Georgia
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@markbrowning4334
Timeline of Trump’s efforts to abuse the DOJ
November 9
Breaking from long-standing Justice Department policy, Barr issues a directive giving federal prosecutors more leeway to ramp up voter fraud investigations. The move is controversial because – for decades – the Justice Department would wait until elections were certified before taking overt investigative steps, to avoid the appearance of trying to influence the results. The top election crimes prosecutor resigns in protest, and other prosecutors denounce Barr’s order.
November 19
Trump attorneys Rudy Giuliani and Sidney Powell hold a bizarre news conference filled with lies about fraud and unhinged talk of a worldwide conspiracy to rig the election. Powell says, “A full-scale criminal investigation needs to be undertaken immediately by the Department of Justice.”
Rudy Giuliani, attorney for President Donald Trump, conducts a news conference at the Republican National Committee on lawsuits regarding the outcome of the 2020 presidential election on Thursday, November 19, 2020.
Rudy Giuliani, attorney for President Donald Trump, conducts a news conference at the Republican National Committee on lawsuits regarding the outcome of the 2020 presidential election on Thursday, November 19, 2020. Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call/Getty Images
November 29
In an interview with Fox News, Trump says it’s “inconceivable” that the Justice Department and FBI aren’t doing more to investigate his voter fraud allegations. “Where are they?” he asks.
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@markbrowning4334
December 1
Barr tells The Associated Press in a bombshell interview that the Justice Department didn’t find widespread fraud. After the story is published, Trump confronts Barr in the White House. According to a book by Washington Post reporters Carol Leonnig and Philip Rucker, an “explosive and crazed” Trump berates Barr for publicly admitting that there wasn’t widespread fraud. Barr tells Trump his campaign lawyers are a “clown show” and that his fraud claims are “complete nonsense.”
December 10
Trump retweets a post from a Republican congressman who said Trump should order Barr to appoint a special prosecutor to “investigate irregularities in the 2020 election.”
December 14
Trump’s assistant sends Deputy Attorney General Jeff Rosen a document about alleged irregularities in Michigan and says it’s “from POTUS,” according to emails released by the Senate Judiciary Committee. Later that day, while the Electoral College meets in state capitals, Trump announces that Barr will resign and Rosen will soon replace him in an acting capacity. CNN reported that Trump seriously considered firing Barr, but Barr decided to quit.
Jeffrey Rosen, deputy attorney general, speaks during a news conference at the Department of Justice (DOJ) in Washington, D.C.
December 15
Trump summons Rosen to the Oval Office and pressures him to take action regarding supposed irregularities in Pennsylvania, Michigan and Georgia, according to Rosen’s testimony to the Senate. Trump also urges Rosen to file legal briefs supporting GOP-backed election lawsuits and to appoint a special counsel to hunt for fraud, according to The New York Times. Rosen refuses to do Trump’s bidding.
December 18
After failing to persuade Rosen, Trump turns to some of the most extreme members of his coterie, including Powell and retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn. (Powell represented Flynn in his criminal case for lying to the FBI about his Russian contacts. That case ended when Trump pardoned Flynn a few weeks before the White House meeting.) CNN reported that Flynn and Powell push Trump to consider declaring martial law or signing executive orders to seize voting equipment. Trump also thought about circumventing the Justice Department and naming Powell as a special counsel within the White House to investigate bizarre vote-rigging conspiracies.
December 21
Trump falsely claims – yet again – that he won “in a landslide” and says “we need backing from the Justice Department” to uncover the supposed fraud and keep him in power.
December 23
Barr officially resigns, and Rosen becomes acting attorney general.
Shortly before December 24
Trump meets with Jeffrey Clark, the acting assistant attorney general for the Civil Division, who later will play a key role in the effort to use the Justice Department to keep Trump in power.
December 24
In a phone call, Trump tells Rosen to “make sure the (Justice) Department is really looking into” voter fraud claims in Pennsylvania and Arizona, according to Rosen’s testimony to the Senate.
December 26
In a series of tweets, Trump bashes the Justice Department and the FBI for having “done nothing” about supposed voter fraud. He says “history will remember” their inaction and promotes his upcoming rally in DC on January 6, when Congress will affirm the Electoral College results.
12/28
Trump continues pleading with Rosen to intervene in the election. In a phone call, Trump tells Rosen and his deputy Richard Donoghue that they should “just say that the election was corrupt” and “leave the rest to me and the (GOP) congressmen,” according to Donoghue’s contemporaneous notes, which he later provided to the House Oversight Committee. Rosen informs Trump that the voter fraud allegations are unfounded and that the Justice Department “can’t, and won’t, just flip a switch and change the election.” After that, Trump mentions that he’s thinking about getting rid of Rosen and putting Clark in charge of the Justice Department.
Clark circulates a draft letter among Justice Department leadership that he wants to send to officials in Georgia. The letter would’ve done exactly what Trump wanted: It says prosecutors found “significant concerns” with the election results and urges the Republican governor to “immediately call a special session” of the state legislature to appoint pro-Trump electors. Clark calls this a “proof of concept” that could be replicated in other states Trump lost.
Separately, Trump meets with a supportive attorney, Kurt Olsen. Trump directs Olsen to get in touch with top Justice Department officials about filing a lawsuit that would nullify the results from several key states that Biden won
12/29
Trump’s assistant sends a draft lawsuit to Rosen, saying Trump wants him to review it, according to emails released by the Senate Judiciary Committee. The lawsuit, which was peddled by Olsen, isn’t ever filed. But the draft envisions that the Justice Department would ask the Supreme Court to nullify the results from several battleground states that Biden won.
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@markbrowning4334
1/3
Rosen and Clark go to the Oval Office for an “Apprentice”-style showdown, according to testimony from top officials. Trump considers firing Rosen and installing Clark as acting attorney general, because Clark is willing to send the letters to Georgia and other battleground states telling them there were “irregularities” with their elections. Trump opens the three-hour meeting by saying, “One thing we know is you, Rosen, aren’t going to do anything to overturn the election
1/4
Separately, Trump meets with Pence in the Oval Office. Also in attendance is right-wing lawyer John Eastman, who pitches Pence on a legally dubious scheme to declare Trump the winner while Pence presides over the counting of the electoral votes, according to a bombshell book from Washington Post journalists Bob Woodward and Robert Costa. (Eastman later told CNN that he sought only to delay certification, not to throw the election to Trump.)
Jan 6th
Timeline of the coup: How Trump tried to weaponize the Justice Department to overturn the 2020 election
CNN
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Let's give trump credit, when his insane bunch of clowns posse suggested martial law, he didn't do it.
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SECRETARY BLINKEN: Well, first, it’s wonderful to be with my friends, wonderful to be back in Munich at the Security Conference, known among all of us as speed dating for diplomats. (Laughter.)
But we’ve done a couple of things, and I’ll come quickly to your question. From the start of this administration, we’ve made an investment, a reinvestment, in our alliances, in our partnerships, and in the multilateral system. We’ve reinvested, we’ve re-engaged, we’ve tried to rejuvenate, we’ve even reimagined. And the reason for that is simple: it’s because it’s in our interest to do it. Not a single one of the challenges that we have to face and that are so important to the interests of the American people can we effectively deal with alone, as powerful and as resourceful as we are. And so across the board, we’ve seen our comparative advantage as having a strong network of voluntary alliances, voluntary partnerships. And if you’re not at the table in the international system, you’re going to be on the menu. So it was very important for us to re-engage multilaterally, and we’ve done that.
When it comes to strategic competition – and there’s no doubt that we have one with China – there are a few things to be said. First, we have an obligation to manage that relationship responsibly, and I think that’s something that we hear from countries around the world, and it’s clearly in our interest to do so, and that’s exactly what President Biden is doing. And when it comes to other countries, the point is not to say to country X, Y, or Z, “You have to choose;” the point is to offer a good choice. And if we can do that – and I believe we can and we have and will continue – then I think the choice becomes fairly self-evident.
Over the last six or seven months, we have engaged in a sustainable way with China. I just met my counterpart Wang Yi here in Munich, but that follows a series of meetings, notably and most importantly President Biden and President Xi, and I think we’ve brought greater stability to the relationship, not moving away from or ignoring the fact that, yes, we have a competition, there are areas where we are contesting each other, but there are also areas where we can and should cooperate because it’s in our interest to do that.
One of the best examples of that is the agreement reached with China on fentanyl. The single largest – the number one killer, number one killer of Americans aged 18 to 49 is the synthetic opioid, fentanyl. Now we have meaningful cooperation from and with China on fentanyl. That’s going to make a difference in the lives of Americans.
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More context: this was the first reply and blinken's was second
FOREIGN MINISTER BAERBOCK: Well, first of all, good afternoon. Very good to have this important session with my dear colleagues.
In a nutshell, it’s more important than ever. Because we are not naïve: Obviously, there are ruthless actors who don’t want to – to drub up the title of our panel – negotiate the slice of the pie, but they want to rob the whole bakery. And having that in mind, I believe it’s even more important than ever that those who are at the table negotiating about the slices of the pie stay there, first of all, resolute, respectfully, and also reflective. And this is the core also of our national security strategy, which we have drafted as the German government, making very clear in the light of this ruthless war of aggression against Ukraine that we are resolute in defending international law. It’s the best protection for everybody around the world.
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@RasheedBarnes 1. “Reparations won't help anyone”
Do I really need to say why that’s a silly statement?
I’m not against universal programs."
THere's are reason universal programs are good. And that's because they are universal.
They don't require the kind of tribalism that seems rampant in america. There is no discussion of who's worthy. Or who to exclude.
And it's because you're so ingrained in the way America thinks, and such a white racist sort of way that you don't see the alternative.
It is not the same time period. Universal programs would help black people more than any unrealistic reparation
2. “No one has talked about compensating people at the border.”— https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YWpfrxOuVSo
Almost no one is talking about that. And that is still a contemporary problem instead of one that's 155 years old.
And regardless of how long slavery was around, The U.S was only around as a country for 89 years during slavery.
Most wealth is in herited? How many immigrants are coming here with nothing.
5. If you don’t get why Americans are "hung up on it", you don’t know American history. Anti-Black racism is pervasive in every inch of American history, and at every moment—labor, religion, politics, entertainment, economics, education. By racism, I mean government policy and white terrorism--not just some jackass dropping n-bombs.
This has nothing to do with it. It's almost just like you're trying to punish long dead people for a symbolic victory.
Reparations would not change any existing racism. It would not help more than medicare for all or free further education and training.
6. - History isn’t the past. History is now. “Harms compound. Just like a dollar saved compounds in its value, so does a dollar stolen.” Well said, Mayor Pete. Still not voting for you.
This is definitely the past. You want reparations for specific things a century ago.
Everything else just isn't worthy of something like reparations because it was not the state. You don't get compensation for people generally being racist.
And this won't help that.
"Income and spending patterns among Black households
https://www.bls.gov/opub/btn/volume-3/income-and-spending-patterns-among-black-households.htm
"
What did you want me to see in this data because it seems very useless. Blacks would spend a lot on tobbaco? You won't get a sweeping change where suddenly they're rich. Change is slow. And money won't be the thing that does that. I've already seen the change. For the people that need help, we just need an avenue. Free healthcare would provide that.
What we get wrong about closing the racial wealth gap
https://socialequity.duke.edu/portfolio-item/what-we-get-wrong-about-closing-the-racial-wealth-gap/
Is the jist that blacks need more homeownership Because everyone is having a hard time with that anyway.
A specific problem to address everyone's homeownership or better wage(or stronger unions) would address this just as well.
You're not making a point if you just give out data without context. And this doesn't seem to have any answers either.
https://www.amazon.com/Color-Money-Black-Racial-Wealth/dp/0674970950
Again I don't even have access to this book so what is it's conclusion because all the synopsis says is that black banking won't do it. Something no one but pro blacks thinks is the answer.
7. “don't sacrifice the future to it. “
- We CAN cancel everyone’s student loans (disproportionally white)
And we'd give all blacks the ability to go to school easier and trade schools.
- We CAN give the military 750 billion annually (disproportionally white)
Something everyone is against. The only argument for it is that it bolsters the U.S' ability to be the superpower.
- We CAN allow the 100 most profitable companies pay no taxes (overwhelmingly white)
Something people complain about with severity and we're trying to change.
And adding the word overwhelmingly white is just annoying. The point is to integrate.
- We CAN give everyone health care (universal)
Yes, we can, and it would help black americans much more. Or we could use that money to give to a small number of the total population so that they can feel better about their own government. Even tho most blacks don't even care about this issue.
- We CAN spend 100 billion dollars on a space station (disproportionally white)
How the fuck can the space station be white. Which space station are you talking about. And that is unrelated and I'll presume scientific. Now you're against the medicine that would help black people. Or the cars that they'll drive.
- We can’t pay African Americans what they’re owed which would be good for the economy
though not for the racial hierarchy.
Let me tell you a harsh truth. They aren't owed it. It's a sad fact that they aren't.
THe U.S randomly decided to make a promise. And like a lot of it's promises, it really half assed it.
BUt it wasn't a document. It's not how anything works though. It can even be argued that the U.S didn't even promise it.
And the people that might have been owed it are long dead.
The language you use to this makes it sound like you obviously want it as a sort of ego thing. You don't want the other minorities involved. It's all very race base.
You can consider all universal programs the same as reparations. You can consider affirmative action the same as reparations.
And I know the right talking point that will be used. That black americans have already used much more than any proposed plan via welfare services.
It'd be like asking the egyptians for reparations to the jews. Or asking africans to reparate other africans.
8. "You aren't a slave here" - Most private wealth is inherited. Much of it dates back to the new deal and homestead acts. Black people were sharecroppers and "not a slave" until the 1960s. What does that even mean?
It means no one alive was witnessed to slavery. And again, just racism is not cause for reparations. And it means that immigrants come here all the time with no inherited wealth. THere is a cycle of poverty people can be stuck in.
Why address it only for blacks tho?
On the arguement for it is the fact that the jews did get reparations(but only the ones that suffered the holocaust). And as you mentioned that I didn't know about, Native americans to some extent. And Internment camps. On the other hand one of those was more modern. And involved fewer people. And those people lost something that wasn't theoretical.
Like I've said, I'm not against it. It could be a powerful act to do so. But it won't help black people as much as universal programs would. Or it would take from these universe programs. Some people want these programs only applied to black people ect.
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I was saying this kind of thing 15 years ago or more! I used to call it cultural imperialism. Now the U.S is Japan's China. Which means the U.S has gotten a taste of it with China too. It was why I dislike the way the U.S tries to culturally change everyone in a sort of forced, "this is right way". Even when they were wrong shortly before. They don't let others develop at their pace, and just give some understanding to cultural differences.
Remember when getting uncensored anime was seen as a victory, and of progress too. The U.S had just gotten over it's overly americanization attempts, and censorship. And now like two decades later, they've ramped it back up.
Back in the day, the japanese market was focused on Japan, so even if the U.S censored stuff, which it did even into the 90s, it didn't matter. But now the U.S market is important. And companies like netflix have a say in some stuff. And now funimation, and crunchyroll are flexing too.
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@VitalVampyr I didn't make it a binary offensive or defensive allotment. That's how your thinking. I even asked how you defined it. You're projecting your mentality onto me. Maybe because you're reading my response to your response. Also you used a historical view at first, and now you're switching to a contemporary one. That in itself is not a problem. But don't act like that's what we were talking about before.
How do these people feel about U.S involvement? I'm not one of them. So I can't say.
And I can't say I know the situation in these places. This is a disclaimer. Let's see what a quick search shows.
The U.S invaded Afganisthan
Pakistan seems to be an ally
Yemen is in a civil war. And I'm guessing you didn't read the article I linked or read about it's history. That was also a civil war. The U.S might not be correct in who it backs at all. part of the reason they're at war is because the previous leader backed the U.S... C'mon.
I feel like you're trying too hard already to support whatever military centric view. People tend not to like another country apply their power on them. The U.S is fighting the government of Yemen, backed by saudi arabia. That's them being aggressive.
Uganda is an ally but the U.S isn't fighting them or even defending them. The U.S is backing someone that is damn near a dictator. And helping him terrorize people.
And the rabbit hole that is U.S involvement in the Congo.
You can't see how they flipflop with who they support. Like the death of Patrice Lamumba by their backed Motobu. This is the history of U.S involvement.
Again, no one is against the U.S helping people who are approved by, everyone, allies, supported by the U.N, who aren't full of human rights violation. But that's not what's happened. So why are they going into these costly wars conflicts. And even if they aren't, they're definitely back horrible people.
If they help one of these people win, that becomes on them. When it doesn't have to be.
U.S definitely invaded Iraq.
U.S was involved in Syria. Even before there was a war. They literally helped cause a war. I don't know what that falls under. But that's pretty fucked up.
At least twice, you're acting like the aftermath and occupation of an invasion, means that there weren't invasions. The occupation is related, and connected to the invasion. And that's another Civil War.
Well I'm asking these questions rhetorically. Your viewpoint I can imagine.
suffice it to say that Syria is not a good example of the U.S being in support. And even Assad has accused The U.S of regime change. So I don't know how much in defense that is. But he's not someone to support either. Either way the U.S would have to live with the morality of it's decisions because it chose to get involved. I'm not even sure if the U.S knows who it's supporting.
Basically, Using your own definition, I don't think Syria falls under the "defense" angle.
So 4/7 were invasions. But Uganda is like supporting saudi arabia. And the history of U.S involvement in the African countries can't be said to be good.
2/3 are horrible governments.
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It isn't even good advice if a mom meets a man that is willing to date her. Each one of these is bad:
1. Like a childless person doesn't know how to deal with a kid and you don't give him the chance to learn? Or maybe he's stepping off to see what you consider appropriate.
2. Punish him for trying to be helpful or anything other than a cheerleader.
3. is this even a stereotype for men? that men are cryptic and women have to read between the lines? Also why not admit that you made a mistake. A relationship doesn't have to be worth it just because you like your child. Anyway what this means is that they were in a relationship where the guy wasn't serious, and they got hurt. I understand it. But I also doubt the guy was cryptic about it. Maybe vague, maybe hot/cold when he wanted to sleep with her or something. But those by themselves are signs he's not into you.
4. She admits she can be fooled. It doesn't matter if you realize you were conned after you've been conned. You aren't smart for that. The fact she thinks romantic gestures are a sign of a mask just goes to show she's been played a lot by a particular type of person. She just wrote the whole thing off precisely because she can't differentiate between good and bad.
5. is actually okay and honest. It makes sense that a parent would, and should, put the child first (upto a point, other people still matter, and your relationship still matters).
6. THAT WAS ALWAYS THE PROBLEM. She should be looking for a dad. She should have been looking for one before she had a child. Someone with either the qualities or intentions. She overly emphasizes how much they don't need him. And how much they don't want him in the family. But they're a package deal? Things don't just happen. People make things happen with their intentions. There is no situation where the people involved will just be a family. It's a choice. And it's a choice both will make. And the best way is to filter out the people that don't want that choice in the first place. So you're looking in the right place, among the right group.
7. this one is half right. It is a standard level of dignity to not be a bootycall ect. But I can imagine she's been all those things. But she's also, maybe by accident, telling women to leave relationships over very basic things. People all fight over stupid shit, friction is normal in any relationship, evne friendships and family. And balance is another word for routine. It can be a synonym for comfort in this case as well. But comfort isn't always right or good. From this advice, a woman might through a guy that either throws off her routine, or she has to change it. To a guy that she wasn't expecting, and that lack of expectation in her future plans might be enough to throw him out.
8. people's bodies are temples only to themselves. And we have physical proof that she does put out. And she mentions falling for guys earlier. And even said she chooses to be a notch in some assholes belt. I don't believe in the weak man/strong man thing. But they certainly want someone submissive to a cruel degree. They want you to know you are being used (which is still putting out).
9. I agree that the kids aren't baggage. Her baggage is baggage. Look what she said about assholes, and using people. She has baggage. She's been through crap relationships. The child is innocent, he's a result of it, he's a result of her life. And her life has definitely has bad choices when it comes to dating.
This article is just self centered. It's not dating advice for women. It's just wanking them off to make them feel good.
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@jonsmith9838 I agree. Anything that is like physical or legal oppression or flat out illegal is fine to talk back on, and take a stand on.
The trans room thing is fine. I think most younger people weren't very vocal about it. What I've seen them be vocal about is trans athletes, which requires explaining. And when young trans kids should start transitioning, which also requires explaining, and different trans people have ideas on.
We have to realize that some people are against the whole thing(they take any anti argument essentially in bad faith). But some people require explaining, or are more reasonable. But might have caution. But aren't going to vote in a republican. Ultimately this is like an issue for doctors and the people involved cause it's not like we're going to be that well informed by comparison.
These cultural issues aren't on that level usually. So we or you think we're talking about this but they're talking about something on a less grandiose level that affects them.
I agree it's not about throwing anyone away.
I think it's about having some tolerance.
About leaving some people alone.
About understanding where some views come from(backgrounds, different eras ect), and understanding that some people are at different points of the journey.
Going back to economic policy. Sometimes we're talking about young people, some that didn't go to school, or didn't like what they were told there cause it seemed one sided. Who just aren't looking at economic policy or aware of it.
Their first exposure to this is culture war stuff. And I don't know where that will take them. Whether it's down to right-wing economics or just not voting. Worst case scenario is if they're white, is racism. Racist lurk in those right-wing outrage circles.
Let me state again I don't think it's right wing republicans necessarily that matter here. It could be regular but apolitical people.
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It could go either way. Things have changed a lot even before Covid. A good portion of the right could hide behind this kind of attitude, and this opposition to cultural issues that don't matter as much. Most of those commentators have fallen.
Hillary, both for being unlikeable and related to the clintons, and potentially for being a woman, has been replaced.
Biden, for worst, is slightly more conservative. An old white guy, who is semi popular with both older black people and white people. The old will vote for him. The young might from having no choice.
Then there's the energizing affect of Trump as opposition.
These are different circumstances. And right now, Biden is winning despite people being cautious with results.
It's possible if Covid dies down enough to be a distant memory by november. And Biden blows the debates totally. And if Trump doesn't blow them, and doesn't screw up more than he has. Or Covid is either not done, or still fresh in peoples minds.
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@TheHigherVoltage it's not that that isn't true Christianity. It's that that is your idea of it. It is a bias looney toons.
Your idea that people cheered.
And your idea that is specifically because of religion. And your idea that there existed anyone any different.
And your idea that people don't revel in it publicly but secretly.
You don't even explain how the idea of loving is dehumanizing.
Though there can be a case that Christianity specifically made homosexual relations bad.
You can expand this to other things.
Heh your cartoon version of Christianity is silly because you've made it so.
You should stop thinking of them as cartoon people. Maybe actually someone. Steve Harvey said it best, there is a scale to it. A priest a nun a lay person, and within lay people, cultural, devout, ect. People will take anything differently.
But if you asked anyone, even a right winger about it personally responsibility, they'd probably say it's theirs. At least to the stuff that makes sense if you don't ask a rightwinger.
The Bible isn't Christianity. The Bible is a tool to learn it. That should be obvious by the fact it's a freaking book. It includes bad things in purpose, for history, or myth.
Honestly it could be you were taught by people who were already right wing and lacked empathy in the first place. Which is my point.
The idea is which one begets the other.
We know for a fact and by your own admission, people can be brought up empathic and Christian.
So it makes sense that it is the opposite. That these people were already lacking empathy. Which is more likely.
This isn't a discussion on the merits of religion or Christianity. But on this very specific idea.
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@jordansdad8612 no news is going to cover everything. And everyone has some bias. But do they still state the facts, and is it the verifiable truth.
I don't think I could recommend one. Just be exposed to a topic and then look it up if you want to know more about it or the reporting sounds off or it'd hard to be believe. Usually more than one source comes up. And if a source lies as blatantly as telling you Trump didn't lose, then you know not to trust them.
If you want YouTube news and opinion people, I'd say secular talk. Or rising since it has saagar, who's republican.
Or a centrist/any big newspaper. Or even a local newspaper. Or local news. Maybe read something like the Christian Science Monitor?
Honestly you could stay with fox, or even conservative youtube. Just remember to peel away the ones that are liars. And that they will also only give you certain types of stories. Obviously ones that would interest or reinforce their viewpoint. Just remember that's what it is. I'm not even saying that's wrong.
But remember that if you meet opposition when you discuss it. To be open, look it up yourself. See if it's true. Don't have what they told you be so ingrained that you dismiss the truth because what they say becomes part of your identity.
Some things are, and you might be stuck with them for life honestly. Some things just take an uncomfortable period. so if you find the truth, and it's uncomfortable. Stop arguing, and give yourself time to process it.
And if you have an ingrained truth you can't overcome. Give it context. Beware of how people think of it. Give it some real weight. You might still think it's best for you or in general but someday you might find an argument for it that you can justify acceptance of it. Or at least understand it.
I think if you have an identity as a conservative, and you want to keep it, then that's fine. I don't think I can give you a new source for that that's good. Like I'm not trying to tell you to not be conservative. If life and exposure to different people doesn't lead you out of it, then it didn't, and I'm not trying to.
You have to find good conservative people, and news. And I have no idea where they are.
I can tell you that OAN, and newsmax are even more bias, even bigger liars, and much worst tho.
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@deustaitan That hasn't happened yet. Even if it does, they wouldn't bother with PR. And wouldn't be a threat even to the U.S.
Unless you mean it happening specifically in Puerto Rico, which would then be an internal threat.
Every country has to be vigilant of anti democratic extremists, especially that would work for another country.
Historically a country in LatAm that does that is too busy trying to stabilize and keep control.
They'll have to contend with an unhappy populace. If they rock the boat too much or threaten too much, then other countries, but especially the U.S, sanctioning. Worst case scenario, assassination, or coups.
It's why every would be dictator either allies with the U.S, or just keeps to a small sphere of internal influence.
Like I keep saying, that's just not an issue.
Economics is the only issue here. You'd sooner have the issue of being in debt to china. Or debt in general. Issues with the IMF.
Economics and standard of living.
I'd also say pride but I get people who say pride shouldn't matter.
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@krabbcake8371 You aren't sent. The church itself doesn't do it. It also isn't one single sin. It doesn't work like karma. as similar as it might be. hell even karma is not a single thing.
You're acting or it can be construed as you saying the church is coming up with it when they are interpreting an existing text.
And as I pointed out, it's the same as any judge or law. Except it's entirely optional. They opine, explain, a widely open text. ANd you can decide to follow or not.
It is the option of following in a culture that is quite old and belongs to quite a few people.
The problem is with the potential extrapolation of your wording. The church does not hand out penalties. The chinese government is way more restrictive so forget this being about freedom. Hell, all governments are by virtue of not being optional.
It's a culture.
And again, now you're adding unrepentant which is different from what you said the first time.
It makes it sound(potentially) as if a gestapo will come for you when you commit a sin. Which again, doesn't work that way. ANd if you followed the religion, it's very easily to absolve oneself through various means of small sins.
And even then, the torment is NEVER ETERNAL.
Now I don't know for a fact if an unrepentant sin is as such but again, if this is someone engaging in that culture, then why wouldn't they repent, even just casually engaging in it, or even thinking it, would be good enough.
So with your many retroactive caveats, it's hard to know. But it's a dumb way of phrasing it, based on trying to give it the worst possible spin, to justify outlawing people's culture.
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@kylea1436
Mr Chair, as Russia’s brutal war against Ukraine drags on, we see more and more attempts to establish long-term illegal structures in Ukraine. Russia attempts to replace the democratically elected and legitimate Ukrainian administration with its own illegal “puppet” structures within the areas currently under its military control and to legitimise these through so-called “census” and possible illegal “referenda”. Such a pretended “census” has been pursued in the Kherson region, where people were obliged to register their personal data, and similar actions are reportedly planned in the parts of the Zaporizhzhia region currently under Russian military control. The EU condemns Russia’s attempts to legitimise its illegal seizure of Ukrainian sovereign territory. This is in clear violation of the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine and we will not recognise such actions.
Other attempts to “russify” Ukrainian territories under Russian military control include the introduction of Russian standards across the political, social, economic and monetary spheres. At the same time, the humanitarian situation is deteriorating in these areas, as there is a scarcity of basic goods, including food and medicine, and services. Meanwhile, Russia’s invasion has also resulted in a serious deterioration in the human rights situation for the local population, which faces violations and abuses, including summary executions, torture, sexual violence, arbitrary detentions as well as restrictions to freedom of movement and freedom of expression. We condemn these illegal attempts to integrate Ukrainian territories into Russia and call on Russia to respect the human rights and safeguard the fundamental freedoms of the people of Ukraine.
Moreover, the European Union condemns the reported forced deportations of Ukrainian citizens, including children, to Russia, Russia-controlled territories or Belarus through so-called “filtration camps”. Eyewitness accounts from these camps describe poor conditions with a shortage of food and sanitation equipment. People are reportedly subjected to intrusive body searches by Russian officials, intimidating interrogations and the scanning of mobile phones. The EU condemns in the strongest terms these illegal and inhumane arbitrary detentions and treatment of civilians.
Furthermore, the EU strongly condemns the detention of national SMM Mission members by Russia-backed armed formations in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions of Ukraine. This is completely unacceptable. We call on Russia to take up its responsibility as participating State of this Organization and ensure the immediate release of those remaining in detention. The SMM national Mission members are still under OSCE functional legal protection despite the fact that the SMM mandate has not been extended.
Alongside these attempts to illegally impose long-term Russian structures in Ukraine, Russia is continuing its war of aggression against Ukraine and Ukrainian people. We receive more and more reports about Russia’s continued killings or wounding of civilians and destruction of civilian infrastructure and cultural sites, recently in the Luhansk, Donetsk, Kharkiv, Mykolaiv, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions. The Russian army are using weapons, such as artillery, missiles, multiple launch rockets systems, mortars, air bombs, as well as illegal cluster munitions in attacks on civilians. The authorities in Mariupol report about a devastating humanitarian situation, lack of fresh water and danger of infectious diseases, in particular due to decomposition of dead bodies. We are extremely worried that Russia is replicating the tactics used in Mariupol to encircle, besiege, and destroy other cities, including Sieverodonetsk and Lysychansk, with no mercy for civilian lives and infrastructure. In addition, we continue monitoring the situation of the evacuated Ukrainian service men from Mariupol and reiterate the need to treat prisoners of war in accordance with International Humanitarian Law.
The European Union condemns Russia’s premeditated, unprovoked, unjustified and illegal war of aggression against Ukraine in the strongest possible terms. We call on Russia to immediately and unconditionally cease its military actions and withdraw all its troops and equipment from the entire territory of Ukraine, including the illegally annexed Crimean peninsula. We also reiterate our call on Belarus to stop enabling the Russian aggression and to abide by its international obligations.
The European Union supports all measures to ensure accountability, including by using all tools available within the OSCE. The report by the OSCE Moscow Mechanism expert Mission was an important first international and independent effort on the collection of evidence displaying a devastating reality of a clear pattern of violations of international humanitarian law, and gross and systematic violations of human rights by the Russian Armed Forces. We also welcome that ODIHR is intensifying its monitoring of violations and abuses of international human rights and humanitarian law by deploying monitors in and around Ukraine. All perpetrators must be held to account and the OSCE has an important role to play in this regard.
Russia’s aggression against Ukraine is mirrored in its internal repression, where human rights and fundamental freedoms continue to be further constrained. We heard many representatives of civil society during last week’s second Supplementary Human Dimension Meeting describing the worrying situation within Russia. Academic freedom is also being targeted, with lectures not in line with the state propaganda cancelled. Additionally, the abuse of legislation forbidding the spread of the truth about Russia’s war and the atrocities committed by Russian Forces in Ukraine, together with the penalisation of so-called “discreditation” of the Russian army further stifle any dissent on the part of the Russian population. So far, this law has given rise to over 2000 administrative cases, resulting in high fines, and a large number of criminal cases. We deplore the banning of individuals known to fight for democracy and freedom of expression from entering Russia, and the practice of adding dissenters to the list of foreign agents.
The EU will continue to support Ukraine in all possible ways. Since the Russian aggression started, the EU mobilised around EUR 4.1 billion for Ukraine’s overall economic, social and financial resilience in the form of emergency macro-financial assistance, budget support, military assistance, emergency assistance, crisis response and humanitarian aid. We have also started working on a financial plan for Ukraine's long-term reconstruction. We will continue to stand in full solidarity with and actively support Ukraine and the Ukrainian people until they prevail.
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Nothing about that amounts to a dystopia. And no one is going to open the border. Maybe in a hundred years or 150/200, they'll be some sort of European union in the Americas of that scale. But who knows, no one is really advocating for that.
I'm not sure why you think the dems don't want a middle class, which is shrinking now. Let's talk the progressive left, who want better wealth distribution. That would actually make a solid middle class, and lift the working class up to a comfortable degree.
Most of those movies about elitism are about the rich, the ones republicans cater to. Look at Escape from New York, Hollywood leans left, their general idea of dystopia is from what might come from republicans and even worst wealth gap distribution. Look at rollerball ect.
Why do you guys act like The republicans aren't for the elites and business when that has always been their platform and their policies. TAX CUTS do not benefit the poor. The poor benefit from social safety nets and welfare. They benefit when taxes are used for schooling, and healthcare. It's the rich that don't need that because they can pay it all off. They can survive in a barebones, gilded age society. That's what republicans want. A throwback closer to a dog eat dog world of capitalism, where corporations aren't held in check.
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@troyevitt2437 I'm glad we live in a world where a tyrant like you doesn't make laws. Here's a bit of irony for you, that black young man is a republican, who was canvassing for another republican.
I recommend you watch videos comparing nordic police with the U.S, or even the U.K.
well to answer what you wrote, that's exactly how it does and should work. He wasn't arrogant, he gave the officer the answer to what the officer was looking for. The officers' wanting people to do as they say is arrogant. Again, you definitely do get to tell the police to go away. Because the police are other citizens doing a job. And if their job doesn't intersect with you, then they have no authority.
There was nothing to be suspicious of. No crime had been reported. The man was sitting, doing nothing, so again, no suspicious acitivity. At that point, it's essentially racial profiling. As someone stated, the only possible suspicion was whether he was soliciting, which he wasn't. And that seems like something he pulled out his butt. The officer also didn't state what concern or suspicion there was, because there weren't any.
You can't arrest someone because you don't like the way they look. And that's all the call amounted to.
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I don't think anyone wants an American intervention. This needs to be dealt with public pressure, through the U.N, and then whatever country that can, helping to broker a deal. Whether it's Egypt or The U.S.
But first, Israel needs to be pressured into treating the Palestinians humanely.
Honestly it would be in their best interests as well. Helping them establish an office, especially jointly to oversee Jerusalem, and the Palestinians in these territories, to transition into their own state or some sort of Union. Something like the E.U or SICA, in regards to travel, even just to Jerusalem., or just some quasi something else.
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