I want to believe it'll be hard to find a school that won't already have at least a small group of people who are already going to not make it an easy "nod and clap" talk.
And the thing about regulation like this is that it just resets the bar height for everyone. It's not like this doesn't apply to all competitors.
Unless we mean non-cable competition, i.e. streaming. Maybe that's not under the jurisdiction of FCC? If not, though, then I have to wonder why this has to be an FCC thing in the first place. This is about truth in advertising, in general.
Well, too late to do anything about it. The candidates are now, as the article says,
“Come November they are going to be choosing between two individuals — Joe Biden and Trump, who is dramatically worse when it comes to making any progress at all on climate,” she said.
That's it. If we want anything different, we have to look for congressional candidates who will change voting such that 3rd party candidates can be taken seriously, and we have to fill ballots with better choices during primaries. After primaries, in our "first across the finish line" system, it's all over except for the big tug-of-war between the two parties.
And that takes time. So this year, you're either voting for Biden in hopes of "best we can do right now," or literally any other action (including inaction) is giving it over to a worse outcome for our climate goals.
It's exactly what it means. This has to be potential common ground that can help the "pro life" crowd see that their argument is an oversimplification. But I also think it's a fragile situation. This just passed. It still has to survive court scrutiny, spread, and last long enough for a majority to continue to see it as sensible. I think then in it can be part of an argument that mere conception isn't when a person suddenly exists. (And I know that's all about choosing to engage the discussion on the terms of the "pro life" crowd; the "pro choice" argument isn't contingent on the personhood status of an embryo but, rather, the right of the mother to choose what happens to her own body. But the "pro life" crowd either doesn't seem to grasp or doesn't more highly value that logic, so something like IVF might be like getting them to compare a mother's weight to that of a duck to "realize" what's really important to them, that she's not made of wood.)
I've felt like Tidal has behaved exactly like Spotify in my use so far (which has only been a couple of months). I was doing side-by-side comparison of playing, adding to the queue, inserting next in queue, etc., and it all seemed to behave exactly the same.
edit: Oh, yeah, I only compared Windows, Mac, and Android.
Only which primaries you can participate in. It doesn't require you to vote in any particular way in the actual election. The public voter roll will show which primary you participated in, but your vote in the election is secret. So anyone who says they checked and confirmed their vote was counted wrong in the election is full of shit or confused by the public voter roll's representation of party selection during primaries.
edit 1: I think Texas Standard did a nice job explaining it.
edit 2: The Texas Secretary of State office has a good FAQ, too. Some other interesting points in there that I didn't know about. Specifically, that signing petitions for candidates also locks you into their party's primaries (if applicable) for that year.
6. What if I signed a petition for a candidate for a place on the primary ballot?
If a voter signed a candidate’s petition for a place on the primary ballot, that voter is only able to vote in the primary, or participate in the convention, of that candidate’s party during the voting year in which the primary election is held. For example, if a voter signed a Democratic candidate’s petition, that voter is ineligible to vote in the Republican primary or participate in a minor party convention. (§172.026).
7. If I signed a petition for a candidate for nomination in the Libertarian Party or Green Party, can I still vote in a primary election?
No. If a voter signed a candidate’s petition for nomination for the Libertarian Party or Green Party, that voter is ineligible to vote in a primary election or participate in the convention of a different party during the voting year in which the primary election is held. (§§172.026, 141.041).
Always has been.