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Trump stands behind Hegseth after attack plans shared in second Signal chat; Pollution exemptions granted to AR coal plants; Coping with OR's climate change-fueled pollen season; Federal funding cuts could hit MT harder than other states.

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Defense Secretary Hegseth faces calls to resign for discussing battle plans in a second Signal chat. Indiana denies students the use of college IDs to register to vote, and the White House signals the U.S. might stop trying to end the Russia-Ukraine War.

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Money meant for schools in timber country is uncertain as Congress fails to reauthorize a rural program, farmers and others will see federal dollars for energy projects unlocked, and DOGE cuts threaten plant species needed for U.S. food security.

Historian visits MI to address threats to American democracy

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Tuesday, October 29, 2024   

With the election of the nation's next leader just eight days away, a renowned historian visits Michigan to discuss his views on growing global threats to democracy and the rise of authoritarianism.

The event was hosted by United to Preserve, a nonpartisan initiative raising awareness about anti-democratic threats facing the country.

Yale University's Richard C. Levin Professor of History Timothy Snyder specializes in books and lectures on tyranny and democracy. He shared his insights at Kalamazoo's State Theater.

Snyder warned his audience that American democracy is always under threat - highlighting wealth inequality as one of the major concerns.

"If you allow too much of the wealth to be in the hands of too few people," said Snyder, "then those too few people end up having control over too much of the oratorical space, too much of the rhetorical space, too much of the media space - and then it becomes very hard to have a normal democratic conversation."

Some critics of Snyder's viewpoint maintain that he tends to exaggerate the threat of authoritarianism in the West, and is too quick to compare current political movements to 20th-century fascist regimes.

Snyder also highlighted social media's harmful impact on American democracy, calling it a "machine" that has eroded vital face-to-face conversations.

"If you can't have a local conversation, you also can't have a national one," said Snyder, "and what the machine has done, what social media has done, is gotten in the way of our ability to have local conversations. That's something which is true all over the world. It's an international factor."

Those who disagree argue that his view of social media is too negative, noting that social media also supports democratic engagement and gives marginalized groups a voice.




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