#historical-parallels

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US politics
fromwww.aljazeera.com
19 hours ago

How Trump's 2026 Iran war' script echoes and twists the 2003 Iraq playbook

The Trump administration employs similar WMD rhetoric as the 2003 Iraq invasion to justify escalation against Iran, but faces fractured diplomacy, isolated decision-making, and information chaos.
UK politics
fromLondon Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com
1 week ago

Military leaders warn Starmer the UK is 'unprepared' and is facing its '1936 moment' - London Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com

Britain's armed forces are currently unprepared for major conflict and require an urgent doubling of defence spending to five per cent of GDP to restore readiness.
Video games
fromGameSpot
4 months ago

What Final Fantasy Tactics Gets Right (And Wrong) About SWANA Representation

The Ivalice Chronicles revitalizes Final Fantasy Tactics with improved gameplay and nuanced SWANA-coded characters, offering timely themes of inequality and meaningful representation.
fromFast Company
3 months ago

Why Silicon Valley's obsession with logic is breaking the world

Take a moment to think about what the world must have looked like to J.P. Morgan a century ago, before his death in 1913. A shrewd investor in emerging technologies like railroads, automobiles, and electricity, he was also an early adopter, installing one of the first electric generators in his house. Today, we might call him a Techno-Optimist. He could scarcely imagine the dark days ahead: two world wars, the Great Depression, genocides, the rise of fascism and communism, and a decades-long Cold War.
Philosophy
#authoritarianism
fromwww.npr.org
5 months ago

What Ancient Rome and Greece can teach us about comedians and free speech

As president Donald Trump celebrates the cancelation of comedians Jimmy Kimmel and Stephen Colbert and says he hopes the same fate will befall others who have been similarly critical, a look at the comedians in the ancient world who faced serious penalties for making jokes about the powers that be and what lessons we can learn from their stories about the fate of free speech in this country.
Arts
History
fromwww.theguardian.com
7 months ago

New book sheds light on Lincoln's misunderstood killer: he's not that person at all'

The book explores the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, focusing on its significance as a crime of the century and its historical parallels to current societal divisions.
US politics
fromwww.esquire.com
7 months ago

The Big, Beautiful Bill Passed. House Republicans Cheered.

Legislative actions have dire consequences for many citizens, with cheers from representatives despite public disapproval.
UK politics
fromwww.theguardian.com
8 months ago

Thatcher, Farage and toe-sucking: Adam Curtis on how Britain came to the brink of civil war

The current mood is fragile, with predictions of revolution and chaos in the political landscape.
Science
fromBig Think
8 months ago

10 quotes about science's value to society

The US government is undermining science, reflecting historical patterns seen in Germany in 1933.
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