
suds
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Xenophobia has been part of the human condition since the beginning of recorded history. Today, Christians are persecuted to some extent in over three quarters of the world's countries. Muslims are a close second. It's persecution motivated by religious identity. It's fair to say that Jews have been the victims of that same xenophobia. But unlike Christians and Muslims they had no safe retreat until 1948. I hope this helps.
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Tulsi Gabbard Joined the Republican Party
suds replied to WestCanMan's topic in Federal Politics in the United States
Ok, I get it now. I wasn't trying to 'play dumb' either. But the thread is about Tulsi Gabbard joining the Republican party. So where's the connection between her joining the party and what you posted? -
Tulsi Gabbard Joined the Republican Party
suds replied to WestCanMan's topic in Federal Politics in the United States
No idea of what you're trying to convey. Is this in response to my post??? -
Tulsi Gabbard Joined the Republican Party
suds replied to WestCanMan's topic in Federal Politics in the United States
Smart move. If she plays her cards right, she could be President one day. -
Why would Trudeau even target Peterson in the first place? He's not a politician. He has nothing to do with official government policy. And as far as I can tell, there's no apparent conflict of interest. I support Peterson because he's a free speech advocate, and we could use a few more just like him. It doesn't mean I agree with everything he says.
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Elon Musk is bad for Western Democracy
suds replied to NAME REMOVED's topic in Media and Broadcasting
Not only are you blind to your own hypocrisy, you're blind to your own stupidity. -
Elon Musk is bad for Western Democracy
suds replied to NAME REMOVED's topic in Media and Broadcasting
So "there's a small amount of truth in that" ...... ya think??? Fox is no different than the rest of them except they support the Republican candidates. Musk openly endorses Trump, and Zuckerberg gives $420 million to local Democrat activists for 'get out the vote efforts'. Fox supports a free press (even for its competition), while the rest of the MSM wants Fox shut down. Personally, I admire both Musk and Zuckerberg. Not for who they support but for what they've accomplished. You're just blind to your own hypocrisy. -
Elon Musk is bad for Western Democracy
suds replied to NAME REMOVED's topic in Media and Broadcasting
I also remember a few years back when a couple of Democrat congressmen tried to coerce a cable provider to pull Fox News off the air using official government paper and letterhead. No real reason given except the contract between Fox and the cable provider was set to expire. The difference is that these Democrat congressmen were serious and Trump is a bullshitter. Was he serious or not? Who the hell knows. -
Elon Musk is bad for Western Democracy
suds replied to NAME REMOVED's topic in Media and Broadcasting
They mostly regulate local TV and radio. What I posted concerning satellite, cable, and online content, comes straight off an FCC website. So I don't disagree. -
Elon Musk is bad for Western Democracy
suds replied to NAME REMOVED's topic in Media and Broadcasting
Congress handed social media over to private entities simply because the people demanded such a platform and private entities are not forced to abide by the 1st amendment. And that's pretty much it. -
Elon Musk is bad for Western Democracy
suds replied to NAME REMOVED's topic in Media and Broadcasting
FCC limitations begin with the 1st amendment. Speech transmitted by cable or satellite TV is generally not regulated. The FCC does not regulate online content, which is significant in a thread devoted to Musk, and Twitter, being bad for western democracy. https://www.fcc.gov/consumers/guides/fcc-and-speech -
Elon Musk is bad for Western Democracy
suds replied to NAME REMOVED's topic in Media and Broadcasting
By what law, or whatever, would give the US government the authority to do that? I seem to have come to a dead end. -
Elon Musk is bad for Western Democracy
suds replied to NAME REMOVED's topic in Media and Broadcasting
Technically on U.S. social media, free speech only applies to the owners of social media platforms. They're the ones who make all the rules concerning what's allowed and who gets to post. Free speech by the users of the platform lies solely at the owners discretion. When a government can get the FBI to coerce an owner into making certain topics off limits, how is that not a first amendment issue? -
Would have never happened if the Arabs agreed to the UN Partition Plan (Resolution 181). In plain language, Palestine would have been partitioned into Arab and Jewish states with Jerusalem under international control. Both Arabs and Jews (upon independence) would have become automatic citizens of the state they resided in (outside of Jerusalem) with all full civil and political rights. Arabs over 18 residing in the Jewish state would have had 1 year to decide whether to stay or move to the Arab state, and same for Jews residing in the Arab state at the time of independence. Basically, Resolution 181 would have become part of any future constitution drawn up by either party. But no, war was a better option.
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Elon Musk is bad for Western Democracy
suds replied to NAME REMOVED's topic in Media and Broadcasting
I never claimed Musk had no obligations only that social media was treated entirely different than news media. For obligations see Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act. -
Elon Musk is bad for Western Democracy
suds replied to NAME REMOVED's topic in Media and Broadcasting
While it's possible that certain things be updated, twitter (X) has between 200 to 250 million users daily. How conceivable is it that Musk be made liable for the content of every one of the 250 million daily users? -
At the very least they've learned they have the ability to sway official government policy with their actions. An inherent weakness of democracy that they will exploit at every opportunity and was likely a main reason for them going forward with Oct 7.
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I agree except for the flag part. I'd be more concerned if some do-gooder used this incident to propose a bill making the public burning of a Canadian flag some sort of offense. What would it accomplish really? Would it improve our quality of life? I doubt it. Let em burn as many flags as they want so there's no doubt about the way they really feel about us.
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Yep, and its root cause is politics. Something that the leaders of all parties are guilty of.