Author Topic: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.  (Read 289445 times)

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Tripon

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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #781 on: September 19, 2019, 11:16:21 PM »
https://twitter.com/QueenInYeIIow/status/1174799923583377408

Hillary and Warren didn't like each other, so why did Hillary supporters seem to move en masse to Warren?

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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #782 on: September 19, 2019, 11:20:07 PM »
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curly

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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #783 on: September 19, 2019, 11:37:25 PM »
https://twitter.com/QueenInYeIIow/status/1174799923583377408

Hillary and Warren didn't like each other, so why did Hillary supporters seem to move en masse to Warren?

Because the images of the candidates held by their supporters and detractors only faintly resemble the candidates themselves. See Berners convinced that Warren is the second coming of Hillary (although I suspect many don't buy that but are using it as a convenient line of attack).

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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #784 on: September 20, 2019, 02:09:49 AM »
Also the people who are vocal about politics on social media represent a really tiny and generally deranged fraction of voters.

Most Sanders supporters don't hate Warren, former Hillary voters have been pretty widely dispersed according to polls, etc. The version of politics on Twitter etc. is basically console warz.

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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #787 on: September 20, 2019, 12:36:33 PM »
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HardcoreRetro

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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #788 on: September 20, 2019, 12:46:05 PM »
Clitnon.




Tripon

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curly

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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #794 on: September 21, 2019, 04:21:57 PM »
I know it's fun to dunk on them but Jacobin is basically all the American left has right now for socialist perspectives that counter the hegemonic conservatism that dominates the -

https://twitter.com/jacobinmag/status/1174533573585432577

Fuck, never mind.

From the headline I was thinking it was Matt Bruenig but Amber makes more sense

curly

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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #795 on: September 21, 2019, 04:28:06 PM »
The giveaway was spending the first paragraph telling us she has cool and hot friends

EchoRin

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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #796 on: September 21, 2019, 06:34:19 PM »
Cuba was an interesting visit. Was still able to see it under Fidel's rule (think he broke his hip around that time or whatever). Never seen so many anorexic cattle in my life.

curly

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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #797 on: September 21, 2019, 08:46:25 PM »
give the libs hell shosta


jakefromstatefarm

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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #799 on: September 21, 2019, 11:46:20 PM »
Jake, but I can't find the post :maf
http://www.thebore.com/forum/index.php?topic=44608.msg2291958#msg2291958

As John Holloway phrased it the objective reality is the support for the subjective struggle of socialists. Asking "so what if there is exploitation, why ought I become a socialist?" is like asking "so what if it's poisonous, why shouldn't I eat it?"
there’s an ought in both these arguments. You might think the one in the second is so obvious it’s trivial but it’s not. It needs to be there if you wanna say “you shouldn’t eat something poisonous”.

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The task of Marxist analysis is to lay out a picture of political economy so stark (and yet true in all its claims), and a future so plainly better, that participation is the only rational choice.
this is the rub. The kind of scientific marxism I tried to draw up as an ideal type closes itself off from making normative claims dependent on ‘justice’, ‘right’, sometimes even ‘morality’ because it thinks those terms are shot through with capital’s (or something else specific to a certain temporal/material setting) influence/interest. So it’s not terribly clear in what sense communism would constitute a ‘better’ state of affairs than capitalism. To reply: “it’s better because there isn’t exploitation or alienation” doesn’t work, because under this account (viz. scientific marxism) these terms are purely descriptive. To claim they aren’t would be to equivocate.

My purpose in quoting this is to show that the people who were the most committed to the scientific aspects socialism when it was seriously under debate were in fact the ones who were the most vociferous in advocating for class struggle, who were the most involved in the actual political movements that swept through Europe in the 20th century, people who literally died for it.

If "no one like this ever existed"... who were you talking about?
its exactly those people who were so committed to the cause that they were willing to sacrifice, even die, for it that I find so hard to believe also wouldntve said communism was desirable. It might* be expedient, in purely means-ends terms, for people within a cause to believe they have iron-clad necessity on their side. But that’s different than thinking it actually is and that (some) people should be committed to that cause. It’s that pair of claims that I think is incoherent.

*this is modest, it definitely is

re: the objective reality being the support of the subjective struggle. I mean, I’d hope it would be. Having the best descriptive account is exactly what every other political program claims, and itd also be entirely consistent with a ‘prescriptive’ marxism.

benjipwns

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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #800 on: September 22, 2019, 03:20:13 AM »
Marx Marx Marx Marx, meanwhile Rousseau had the way better origin story:
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Rousseau wrote Discourse in response to an advertisement that appeared in a 1749 issue of Mercure de France, in which the Academy of Dijon set a prize for an essay responding to the question: "Has the restoration of the sciences and arts contributed to the purification of morals?" According to Rousseau, "Within an instant of reading this [advertisement], I saw another universe and became another man."
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Rousseau [said he] was totally blinded by a sudden inspiration ... in which ... [he had] seen in a single glimpse his entire philosophical system.
He claimed multiple times thereafter to have these visions of the entire philosophy displayed to him.


curly

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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #802 on: September 22, 2019, 11:12:56 AM »
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The difference between ww1 and ww2 is unbelievable. During the 20 years the whole meaning of warfare changed. WW1 was already a modern war yet a sense of... honour still remained. No longer was it a battle between the kings but as Churchill said it was a battle between nations but human values were the same. WW2 on the other hand was brutish and so murderous that it's hard to believe that they were sperated only by a generation.
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People would play catch with the enemy trenches and throw cigarettes to each other. WWi seems like a fever dream compared to modern warfare

VomKriege

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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #803 on: September 22, 2019, 03:08:21 PM »
:neogaf

The whole honour thing was dead pretty much from the first charge on the Western front.
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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #805 on: September 22, 2019, 11:35:59 PM »
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Tripon

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curly

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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #808 on: September 23, 2019, 12:54:15 PM »
She's not good enough for him

Crash Dummy

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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #809 on: September 23, 2019, 12:58:27 PM »
it had me until the "he keeps a pic of hegel by the bed"

jakefromstatefarm

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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #810 on: September 23, 2019, 07:05:26 PM »
Ok, I think I figured out the source of our dispute and I’m pretty sure it has to do more with a miscommunication than anything. A miscommunication that I’ll accept blame for misleading anyone. When I say ‘scientific marxism’ I mean the view that the achievement of communism or the communizing process is inevitable. (And there are weaker claims like merely the collapse of capitalism is inevitable, not the construction of ‘socialism’, or ‘communism’, or whatever on top of its ruins.) The nomothetic explanations or universal covering laws that i was expressing skepticism about, and think are inconsistent with normativity*, are the ones that apply to history, specifically. The claims that only deal with poli econ -viz. the LTV, the tendency for the rate of profit to fall, etc.-were not my target here (but I acknowledge that running together the distinction between history + poli econ is one of the big features of marxism) and I think that’s relatively clear from how I’ve implicitly treated them as entirely consistent with a ‘prescriptive’ marxism. I think my scope of intended targets here is a lot narrower here than you thought. It’s the historical inevitability strain in marxism that I take to be “intellectually bankrupt”; it’s also my impression that there aren’t too many people around anymore that subscribe to it, or at least not as many as there used to be.

*i still think that those pair of claims I outlined in my last post are indeed “incoherent”, but for two different reasons. If you just thought that communism was inevitable, there’d be no need for a normative account to explain why it’s a good thing. So 1) viewing communism as a good thing is superfluous. If you also thought that most ways of making normative statements were horseshit (and/or, particular to certain historical conditions), then 2) it’s not clear whether it’d even be possible to argue that communism is a good thing. When I say that this strain of ‘scientific’ marxism (that accepts 1. and 2.) is ‘irrelevant to political discussions over the right and the good’ I mean it in a non-pejorative sense. It’s irrelevant because this kind of ‘scientific’ marxism and, e.g. liberalism, are just categorically different kinds of claims (bundles of claims, really). Thats what I mean by them being incommensurable with each other.

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My whole point is that they do say it's desirable and they've said it a million times over in the clearest possible terms, buttressed by facts they claim to be objective. Your attitude toward the history of marxist polemic is so sterile here it's incredulous.
i perfectly well acknowledge that some have said it’s desirable, and also emphasize its inevitability and also that justice, right, and morality are shibboleths. I’m saying this bundle of claims is untenable. The marxists who thought otherwise were being inconsistent. The marxists who thought that communism wasn’t desirable but still effectively advocated for its inevitability are the ones I’m saying never really existed, because either not honest about or not aware of the actual contents of their minds. If that sounds too woolly for you, I’d ask whether it’s really that much more woolly than thinking that moral and ethical claims are all cynical illusions designed to help siphon resources up a social hierarchy.

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You're way, way more familiar with this stuff than I am
im really not though. The regulars in this thread have read way more of the canonical socialist/communist authors than I have (excepting the Frankfurt schoolers). I can’t pull quotes with the same facility you guys can. And I don’t want to shit up this thread, because you guys are better at conducting it. I can really only ask: is it not the case that socialism/communism as an historical inevitability is an actual line of thought in Marxist discourse, more prominent maybe ~100 years ago? And is it not also the case that it exists alongside another trend that urges commitment to revolutionary causes? Both strains existing in the same thinker, sometimes within the same text?

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Not only is this an irritating hand-wave but it's also wrong. Most political stalemates are arbitrary struggles between ideas.
i think Rawls and Nozick have substantive disagreements over the best method of distributive justice, and over which political values should be prioritized the most, and over a handful of other stuff too. I think people who argue for markets bring to bear certain facts about how markets work that are designed to “buttress” their case in pretty much exactly the same way you seem to be claiming marxists do. We can think that all of these people are wrong, but i fail to see how these are merely arbitrary struggles between ideas, or how they’re not informed by descriptive accounts of states of affairs.

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"People have the right to self defense". "Everyone deserves to go to college". "We shouldn't let certain species go extinct".
well...do they? Don’t they? Shouldn’t we? If you’re taking issue with the state of popular political discourse, then I’m right there with you in viewing it as vapid, ineffectual, and unhealthy. But I don’t see how you can make these (legitimate) problems just disappear by taking away the vocabulary to talk about them. In fact, that sounds like it’d make the problems worse. I feel like I might be misunderstanding you here, though.

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Descriptive accounts by comparison are so powerful they can change the terms of the entire discussion.
Are you saying that we should be attracted to purely descriptive accounts because they cut to the chaff? And because they’re more expedient means to realize desired ends? This is just old normative wine in new descriptive bottles. We care about people’s lives, livelihoods, etc. for normative reasons. You haven’t stepped outside the sphere of moral discussion.

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How much has environmentalism benefited from the science of climate change?
im deliberately remaining agnostic about how theory links up to practice. I have no idea, but I imagine that the solution is a lot hairier than most of us realize.

To reply: “it’s better because there isn’t exploitation or alienation” doesn’t work, because under this account (viz. scientific marxism) these terms are purely descriptive. To claim they aren’t would be to equivocate.
What sick son of a bitch did this to you?  :'(
idk what else to tell you here. For ‘exploitation’, we could equally read “the capitalist’s taking wealth generated by the laborer”. If we accept this, then we still also need a separate normative account that says exploitation = a bad thing before we can commit to a political program that tries to eliminate exploitation. Because by itself, the theory explaining how the capitalist takes wealth from the laborer doesn’t tell us that that shouldn’t happen anymore than Newton’s third law tells us that objects shouldn’t exert an equal and opposite force on objects that hit them. Again, to reply: “whatcha mean, ‘its not a bad thing?’ It’s right there in the term: to exploit”; this is why I cautioned against equivocation. This sneaks in the colloquial sense of a word at the end of an argument after we’ve already decided that talk of right, justice, and/or morality is horseshit.

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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #811 on: September 23, 2019, 07:23:42 PM »
didn't read lol
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benjipwns

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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #813 on: September 23, 2019, 08:24:46 PM »
#latestagecapitalism #garbagethread crosspost
https://www.townandcountrymag.com/society/money-and-power/a29038520/abigail-disney-income-inequality-interview/
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Abigail Disney Has a Plan to Fix Capitalism
The heiress has become a warrior for income inequality, but she's no socialist. If you like capitalism, she says, you "better fix it."
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Sitting in her newly renovated Manhattan apartment, Disney tells me, “I don’t think the problem is capitalism; I think it’s fundamentalist capitalism that we’re practicing right now. And every fundamentalism does a violence to the text that supports it, right? Because the letter killeth, and the spirit giveth life. We need to bring a social and emotional intelligence back into the way we understand the practice of business.”
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Disney has said she is worth “around $120 million” and estimates that she has given away $70 million over the past 30 years to such causes as the Global Fund for Women and Peace Is Loud.

In the course of “do-gooding around New York City,” she got invited to join a group of women on a trip to Liberia in 2006, which had just come out of a civil war and a period of brutal military dictatorship. There she met the peace activist (and future Nobel laureate) Leymah Gbowee, who became the subject of the documentary Pray the Devil Back to Hell, which Disney herself produced. Up to that point she had been a stay-at-home mom to her four children. “It was really a lucky break,” she says. “If I’d been left to my own devices, I don’t know if I ever would have figured out my life.”

She has since produced dozens of documentaries and directed one, 2015’s ­Emmy-winning The Armor of Light, about the evangelical minister Robert Schenck’s change of heart on gun control. “We couldn’t be more opposite in so many ways, religiously, politically, culturally—certainly in terms of our economic status,” Schenck says. “But through this project, which I reluctantly took on, we forged a friendship. And that friendship took me on an odyssey that precipitated a huge shift in my opinions on a whole range of things.”

In 2017, Disney was approached by ­Killer Content co-founder Adrienne ­­Becker with a plan to buy the Weinstein Company library and channel the profits from reselling it to victims of sexual assault. “I just thought that was genius,” Disney says. But the women grew disillusioned with the process, which they came to feel favored a rival bidder, so they decided to transition what they had taken to calling Project Level Forward into ­Level Forward Inc.

They backed Broadway’s recent revisionist staging of Oklahoma!, which won a Tony for best revival, as well as the one-­woman show What the Constitution Means to Me, which was nominated for best play. Their next show, the Alanis Morissette musical Jagged Little Pill, comes to Broadway in November.
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Disney’s next documentary as director, as yet untitled, will be an in-depth look at income inequality. “I’m trying to get it out really quickly before the next election,” she says, “because I think this issue is going to be very prominent.” When asked about 2020, she expresses admiration for Elizabeth Warren but says she isn’t ready just yet to commit to a single candidate. “I’m waiting for the field to break out,” she says, adding that she knows who she won’t support.

“I’m not a socialist. I think capitalism works very well when it’s done with a human angle. We have a class of people who are living so far above everyone else, it’s corrosive to democracy.”

When I start to say, “So your position is that if you like capitalism—” Disney is quick to finish the sentence.

“You better fix it.”
let there be Disney Revolutionary Justice™ :jeb

Tripon

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VomKriege

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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #816 on: September 24, 2019, 11:23:13 AM »
The good kind of chemtrails.
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kingv

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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #819 on: September 24, 2019, 01:15:08 PM »
I like my auto I stink fan fic:

we are capable of automating tons of jobs, but due to the erosion of labor rights, it never pays out to automate menial jobs like fast food workers or warehouse pickers. So instead, it’s only our bosses that get automated and we all just move into menial labor jobs that pay minimum wage.

If you’ve ever been to a Walmart distribution center, this is kind of how it works. There is like this Alexa like computer that speaks out of a headset that all of the warehouse “pickers” wear. It tells them where to go next and how many to grab. It’s basically the dispatcher and it’s just a computer. But all of the actual picking is done by humans. That’s our future. We just pull all the levers that the machine tells us to.

OnlyRegret

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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #820 on: September 24, 2019, 03:47:20 PM »
I like my auto I stink fan fic:

we are capable of automating tons of jobs, but due to the erosion of labor rights, it never pays out to automate menial jobs like fast food workers or warehouse pickers. So instead, it’s only our bosses that get automated and we all just move into menial labor jobs that pay minimum wage.

If you’ve ever been to a Walmart distribution center, this is kind of how it works. There is like this Alexa like computer that speaks out of a headset that all of the warehouse “pickers” wear. It tells them where to go next and how many to grab. It’s basically the dispatcher and it’s just a computer. But all of the actual picking is done by humans. That’s our future. We just pull all the levers that the machine tells us to.










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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #831 on: September 26, 2019, 12:33:10 PM »
retire bitch
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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #832 on: September 26, 2019, 01:13:07 PM »
©ZH

EchoRin

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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #833 on: September 26, 2019, 02:13:10 PM »
That J Beep bit at 7:44  :lol :lol :lol

benjipwns

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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #834 on: September 26, 2019, 11:30:55 PM »
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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #835 on: September 27, 2019, 01:10:42 AM »
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EchoRin

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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #836 on: September 27, 2019, 01:15:46 AM »
He looks like a dinosaur getting sucked off.



benjipwns

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Re: Laissez-faire Politics Thread - Praxis? I didn't play Deus Ex, sorry.
« Reply #839 on: September 28, 2019, 03:01:42 AM »
https://www.cosmopolitan.com/politics/a29255694/bernie-sanders-cosmopolitan-interview-election-immigration-gun-control-healthcare-young-women/
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Cosmo Asks Bernie Sanders the Questions Young Women Want Answered

In new series The Candidates Come to Cosmo, presidential hopeful Bernie Sanders sits down with Editor-in-Chief Jessica Pels to talk reproductive rights, climate change, gun control, and why he could really, really use a vacation.
the looping image at the top of the article is the greatest thing since he scared that dude with SOCALISM!