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Neoliberal
Free trade, open borders, taco trucks on every corner. Latest discussion thread: April 2024 **We in m/Neoliberal support:** - Free trade and competitive markets
- Immigration
- YIMBYism – ‘yes in my backyard’-ism
- Carbon taxes
- Internationalism and supranational governance – e.g. the EU, UN, NATO, IMF
- LGBTQ+ rights
- Democracy, human rights, civil liberties and due process Neoliberals can be found in many political parties and we are not dogmatic supporters of specific parties. But we tend to find ourselves agreeing more often with parties that espouse liberal values, internationalism and centrist economics, such as the Democrats in the US, Liberal Democrats in the UK, FDP in Germany, Renaissance/MoDem in France, the Liberal Party in Canada, and so on. **Further reading** - I’m a neoliberal. Maybe you are too.
- The neoliberal mind
- Neo-liberalism and its prospects
- Neoliberalism: the genesis of a political swear word **News sources** Here are some suggested news sources that we like and tend to find reliable. Please note that posts and threads are not at all limited to these sources! - The Economist https://www.economist.com/
- Financial Times https://www.ft.com/
- The Guardian https://www.theguardian.com/
- New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/
- The Atlantic https://www.theatlantic.com/world/
- The New European https://www.theneweuropean.co.uk/
- Vox https://www.vox.com/
This cannot always be true, a new apartment complex just went open for lease down the street, traffic in the area has tripled, if not more.
Right but think about the counterfactual. Those people living in that new complex didn't just spring into existence on the day it opened. Wherever they were living before, they were creating traffic and emissions there too.
If they were living in a suburban or rural area, and now they live in a city, just going about their day-to-day lives is generating fewer emissions than they were before - cities (where people live close to each other and use more public transport) are generally much greener than suburbs and rural areas (where people drive a lot).
If they were living in an old building and now they are living in a new build, they probably now have a much more energy efficient home with much better insulation, and so now they're contributing fewer emissions every year through heating their homes etc.