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Tucker Lieberman's avatar

Each of us can do our job to share clear-cut facts, even if we're not journalists working for newspapers.

What you said here — "Trump appointed three justices who all wanted to overturn Roe v. Wade. Subsequently, they did so" — is a very easy thing to share on social media, and I just did so.

https://bsky.app/profile/did:plc:iljscruiowwcxjz2vga3rffg/post/3kt5u2mg2lc2h

It so happens that I blogged a similar sentence yesterday. A couple days ago, Trump made news for saying he'd consider restricting birth control and was about to issue a "very comprehensive" policy; predictably, he changed his mind a few hours later and swore he'd "never" do so. I took that opportunity to remind my readers of Trump's record. It's a huge red flag when he pretends not to know what his own position on birth control is — for one thing, he's had five children with three wives, in addition to deliberately bringing about the end of Roe v. Wade — and there's no reason for anyone to infantilize him. Also, I pulled up the Project 2025 policy document, searched for "contracepti–", and there was the beginning of the Republican plan for it. If we really want to know what Republican policy is, we'd do better to consult Project 2025 than scry Trump's word salad.

We bloggers can also do our part to restate obvious facts, and maybe some newsroom journalists will follow.

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Curious mathematician's avatar

Median PPP (https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/median-income-by-country) would be a better metric to use in your comparison (using the median removes differences due to income inequality and using purchasing power removes differences due to cost of living).

The US is still substantially richer than the UK, France, and Germany under this metric, so your point stands, but using a better metric would avoid people pointing out that the numbers you cite don't necessarily imply what you claim (e.g. Ireland's per capita GDP is almost double that of the US, but the the median Irish person is about as wealthy as the median French person and substantially poorer than the median American -- Ireland and France both have a per capita PPP that is about 2/3 that of the US).

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