r/Political_Revolution • u/SocialDemocracies • 51m ago
r/Political_Revolution • u/adamempathy • 57m ago
Workers Rights Pay your workers Jeff. This stupid shit ain't it
r/Political_Revolution • u/greenascanbe • 3h ago
Healthcare Reform A health care provider that faced dozens of prisoner lawsuits is filing for bankruptcy | Wellpath, a health care provider for hospitals, prisons and jails, has been dogged by wrongful death and medical negligence suits.
r/Political_Revolution • u/lokey_convo • 5h ago
Article Crazy idea, start advocating for 0% unemployment using "America First" rhetoric?
r/Political_Revolution • u/Mongooooooose • 6h ago
Article We can afford so much nice things, but instead here we are throwing all our money at landlords and sprawl
r/Political_Revolution • u/therealsancholanza • 14h ago
Article Pepperidge Farm remembers Trump’s position on H-1B Visas. It also remembers he speaks in lies
r/Political_Revolution • u/SocialDemocracies • 22h ago
Environment Industrial and business groups send Trump a deregulatory wish list | David Michaels, a professor of occupational health: "This is a wish list for unchecked exposure to toxic chemicals, more air pollution, dirty drinking water, contaminated food, unsafe workplaces and fewer consumer protections"
r/Political_Revolution • u/SocialDemocracies • 23h ago
Article Rising Authoritarianism and Plutocracy Are a Dangerous Mix for Press Freedom [October 30, 2024]
r/Political_Revolution • u/MattTheShitlord • 1d ago
Video All the Loopholes Billionaires Use To Live Above the Law
r/Political_Revolution • u/WhoIsJolyonWest • 1d ago
Article School vouchers remain a GOP priority even as voters reject them
School voucher programs championed by President-elect Trump have faced stiff headwinds from voters but remain a priority for the incoming Republican-led Congress and the White House.
r/Political_Revolution • u/SocialDemocracies • 1d ago
Article The billionaire owner of the Los Angeles Times (who stopped the paper's endorsement of Kamala Harris and reportedly blocked critical editorials about Trump, & has called the paper an "echo chamber") has reportedly asked the newspaper's editorial board to 'take a break' from writing about Trump: Memo
r/Political_Revolution • u/thepoliticalrev • 1d ago
Video SNL skit that was aired once in 1998 then immediately banned
It’s a mediopoly
r/Political_Revolution • u/twbassist • 1d ago
Discussion The Power of Words: Reclaiming Language in an Age of Manipulation
I was trying to think of some places to share this that might be good. I've been trying to take a look at things from a high level that I have seen maybe touched on in conversations, but not necessarily on its own. I'm not much of a writer, so I try to keep things short and relatively simple. Hopefully this just helps anyone who feels like they've been taking crazy pills and puts some things into context.
r/Political_Revolution • u/greenascanbe • 1d ago
Article 100-plus cities in the U.S. banned homeless camping this year. But will it work?
r/Political_Revolution • u/HammondXX • 1d ago
Article Mapping Trump's connections to a powerful group of right-wing tech barons (The Paypal Mafia)
r/Political_Revolution • u/DappyHayes • 1d ago
Article US business leaders set to break record on donations to Trump inaugural fund
r/Political_Revolution • u/dream-machine-reddit • 1d ago
Healthcare Reform Healthcare Exec Admits To Denying Insurance For Profits
r/Political_Revolution • u/IceOnTitan • 1d ago
Video Human beings are expendable commodities in our current system
r/Political_Revolution • u/New-Frame-8426 • 1d ago
Discussion American society has become incapable of creating change.
the recent assassination of the UnitedHealth CEO has forced me to confront my own biases and the systemic injustices i’ve quietly accepted as an American citizen.
i’ve had my own negative experiences with the US healthcare system, and to make matters worse… i work in the medical field, where i see countless cases of inequity every day. for a long time, i thought this was something i just "had to put up with." i never once considered challenging it.
i DON'T condone the assassin’s actions, but i do understand the desperation behind them. it’s incredibly frustrating and disheartening to feel trapped in a system that screws everyone over. i could never do what he did (i just don’t have the balls for it). but the fact that i feel guilty for not being radical enough to take extreme action tells me something is seriously wrong with the foundations of our country.
It is our collective complacency that has caused individuals to resort to radical measures to create real change. "Vigilantes" are a product of a system perpetuated by every single one of us. But we do not need to be a vigilante to be heard. The voice of the collective is the voice of the individual. It's easy to forget that when you are bombarded with news articles and TikToks that exploit our diminishing attention spans.
Policymakers EXPECT us to be complacent. They RELY on us to be "triggered" and "woke" for a couple weeks... before moving onto something new. It's gotten to the point where school shootings are NORMAL now. Just a typical Tuesday. Barely breaking news. How disgusting is that?
We are all jaded and equally responsible for the violence that is perpetuated in the modern sociopolitical landscape. I am just as guilty, and I feel completely useless—exhausted from talking in circles and taking actions that don’t seem to get us anywhere. I believe this sense of inadequacy is practically inbuilt into American politics and society as a whole.
with the current shifts in the American political landscape, i don’t feel like my voice is powerful enough to make a real difference. writing to admin, organizing protests, sparking open discussions—they all seem like productive actions on paper… but they just don’t feel effective anymore. peaceful, collective movements are more powerful— but right now, are we capable of organizing a peaceful nationwide movement? — such as the recent public protests in South Korea that led to their president getting impeached? is the American public conscious enough to boycott corporations it has wrongfully become enslaved to?
maybe I’m just spiraling, but i can't help but wonder— are we overlooking the power of our collective voice?
TL;DR: feeling disillusioned and burnt out in healthcare, frustrated by systemic inequality, and unsure how to make a real difference.