worldnews
Welcome! This community is constantly upgrading and is a current work in progress. Please stay tuned.
/c/[email protected] strives for high-quality standards on the latest world events.
The basis of these standards comes from the MBFC, which uses an aggregate of methodologies, including the IFCN and World Freedom Indices, to rate the Bias and Factual Reporting of News.
These are non-profit organisations with full transparency of their funding and structure. Likewise, this community is also transparent – Please feel free to question its staff and the overall content of this community.
Does your post fit the standards? Check this thread!
Rules:
Disallowed submissions
-
~~US internal news/US politics~~ (Allowed while the Fediverse grows)
-
Editorialised titles
-
Editorials, opinions, analysis
-
Feature stories
-
Non-English articles
-
Images, videos or audio clips -- General Social media posts (Only Allowed during ongoing world events)
-
Petitions, advocacy, surveys
-
All-caps words in titles
-
Blogs
-
Old news (≥ 1-Month-old) articles
-
Memes/GIFs
-
Unlabeled NSFW images/videos
-
URL shorteners
-
Paywalls (Copy-Pasting the Article content or bypassing the paywall is allowed)
Commenters will receive one public warning with only one strike if violating any of the following rules:
-
Celebrating death/Advocating violence
-
Genocide denial/downplaying genocide
-
Disinformation/misinformation
-
Health disinformation/misinformation
-
Bigotry / Other offensive content Personal attacks on other users
-
The general rules of the sh.itjust.works instance apply!
Thank you.
todo list:
-
Automate a bot to check standards
-
Introduce tl;dr bot
-
Gain more moderators
view the rest of the comments
I agree, but you can leave out the bourgeois democracy part.
Why? The people in power within our capitalist society are not from the working class. That makes them part of the capitalist class. That means that they will serve their class interests rather than the needs of the working class. That's the literal definition of bourgeois democracy.
What country are you using here?
Every country within the Global North, and most countries in the Global South.
So every country except a few in the Global North serves class interests rather than the working class? What country in the Global South is serving the working class?
No, every single country in the Global North is a bourgeois democracy. Socdem governments in Europe are still bourgeois democracies. The countries that are actually benefiting the working class include Vietnam and Cuba, where the QoL is very impressive for the Global South. I already know what your reaction will be, so just know I'm only interested in continuing this angle of discussion if you respond in good faith.
Both of these countries are lacking in freedom. Liberties, political rights, identity, diversity, religious belief, freedom of the press and democracy
How are they freer than the first world if they struggle with this?
I'll get to those declarations in a little bit. Instead let's talk about their quality of life. They have a higher life expectancy, virtually no homelessness, healthcare is a right, people are more free to persue passions like healthcare, science, and mathematics, among several other similarities. Cuba in particular has a longer life expectancy, higher literacy rates, better healthcare outcomes, and lower infant mortality when compared to the US. The minimum wage in Cuba is equivalent to USD$17.50/hr, and the median wage is USD$33/hr. Cuba and Vietnam outperform comparable countries in most socioeconomic indicators. That is what I mean by proletarian democracy, even if I'd call the economies in those countries "state capitalism". There's a youtuber from Vietnam called Luna oi! that discusses what it's actually like to live in Vietnam as a citizen, she provides valuable insight into the political life of citizens.
Isn't that super close to the US median wage? It was way higher than I had presumed, last I checked.
No, it's close to the mean wage that includes data for billionaires. The median wage in the US is roughly $54000 or $25.96/hr. As we all know, the federal minimum wage is still $7.25/hr as set in 2009. This is the longest time in US history since the minimum wage was changed.
Do you have sources for these claims?
Thank you!
Though your sources on Cuba's infant morality and life expectancy both point out that even before communism, Cuba was already ahead of the US.
My main worries are the lack of freedoms that first world nations have. Mind you, I personally don't consider the US a First-World Nation.
The term first world literally means "the US and it's allies", so it doesn't really matter if you consider it one. Watch, I can say stupid shit too
"I personally don't consider the US part of the western hemisphere"
The modern variation of First World is countries with a high standard of living, often including high literacy rates, free enterprise, common law, economic stability, democracy and healthcare.
If you are lower class in the US, you don't have as much access to these living standards. That's why the US isn't always included in the present definitions. Is it technically first-world? Yes, especially if you're rich and can afford healthcare. If you're not, then no, it isn't.
I hope this has been enlightening for you.
The US is first world, and always will be, because first world literally means "the US and it's allies". It has nothing to do with economic opportunity or the lack thereof.
I hope you actually read it this time.
Hemispheres
No, the Global North and Global South are not strictly defined by hemisphere, though that is how the names came about. They are useful terms to describe the relationship of power imbalance through imperialism. The Global North includes the US, Canada, Australia, and Western Europe. The Global South includes countries in Africa, Latin America, South America, and Eastern Europe.