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Joined 10 months ago
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Cake day: January 15th, 2024

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  • For the most part I agree that in the long term Israel has not been super helpful to US interests. The people running our society had their veiws of foriegn policy formed in the 70s and this is the result.

    In general they only fight Hamas and Hezbollah, 2 groups that they created with their invasions. The only thing I can think of is their intelligence operations against Iran, but it’s not clear why they need to be the ones to do it.



  • You’re right that most Americans don’t care about this and, to the extent they do the pro-Israel group has more resources and have it as a higher political priority. On the other hand the pentagon and state dept definitely see it as a security issue. They see a highly militarized Israel as an asset as a detterent and an insurance policy if things pop off in the ME. This is the conventional wisdom, but it’s far from controversial if it’s the best policy given that Arab forces refuse to fight on the same side as the Israelis, and modern US war stategy calls for using local indigenous forces they prop up. Overall the US will never except not having a strong military presence in the ME (atleast until oil demand drops in the coming decades when renewables become very cheap) and Israel is one of the ways they achieve this.

    Edit: for some reason I said far from controversial, but I meant it is controversial.



  • Not sure I understand the reasoning here. Making the judiciary elected directly instead of appointed would make them less independent? Seems like they’d be more independent from the rest of the state. There certainly are pros and cons to different judicial systems but this particular complaint doesn’t make sense.

    I wonder if the real concern is that instead buying off just the president they’d also have to buy off the judiciary if they wanred to have more influence in Mexican politics. To be fair they seem to have trouble buying off the president anyway.





  • I do see that Nashville had decriminalized it in 2016, but it’s kinda weird since the article I posted definitely acts like it was still criminalized in 2020. I can’t find where the chief of police says anything about it being decriminalized, in the article he just says

    “I agree that General Funk, as District Attorney, has the authority to determine what cases to prosecute,” Chief Anderson said. “Marijuana possession remains a violation of Tennessee law, and we cannot be in a position of telling our officers to begin ignoring lawful statutes passed by the legislature. Nashville police officers continue to be encouraged to use their discretion in carrying out their duties, as guided by MNPD policy.”

    Maybe a bad article or it had be recriminalized?