Jacobin

  • Mano Dura Comes to Costa Rica

    On Sunday, February 1, Costa Ricans went to the polls to elect a new president and fifty-seven members of congress. The election, which was framed as a referendum on the outgoing administration of Rodrigo Chaves, delivered a resounding victory to his chosen successor, Laura Fernández, who secured over 48 percent of the vote. The campaign

  • Trump’s Immigration Police Keep Abducting Children

    On February 4, the Trump administration quietly filed a motion to end the asylum claims of one of the countless Minnesota residents being targeted by masked immigration agents throughout the state. In this case, their mark is just five years old, one of thousands of children likely to have been abducted by adults with guns since President Donald Trump’s

  • Mothers Are on the Front Lines of the Nordic Care Crisis

    For decades the Nordic welfare states have been held up as global exemplars of gender equality and expansive public care systems. Yet beneath this image of egalitarian modernity, cracks have begun to widen. Across Europe and North America, scholars increasingly speak of a mounting care crisis — a systemic imbalance in which society’s care needs

  • At NYC’s Richest Hospital, 4,200 Nurses Are Still on Strike

    The largest and longest nurses’ strike in the city’s history is continuing at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital (NYP) after nurses there decisively rejected the hospital chain’s contract offer 3,099 to 867. About 10,500 other nurses are starting to return to work today, ending the strike at three Manhattan hospitals run by Mt Sinai and at Montefiore Medical

  • Ending the Surge in Minnesota Isn’t Enough

    On Thursday, the Trump administration abruptly announced that it was ending the monthslong occupation of Minneapolis and St Paul by thousands of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Border Patrol officers. Donald Trump’s scandal-ridden “border czar,” Tom Homan, said that “a significant drawdown has already been underway this week and will continue to the next

Dissident Voice

  • Everyone Is Allowed to Protest

    Columbia University professor Bruce Robbins exposed his students to possible criticism of the Israeli military, and was, for that reason, declared by his employer guilty of discrimination and harassment. Robbins could have written a book on the absurdities involved in defining criticism of genocide as discrimination, and defining criticism of any military on Earth other The post Everyone Is Allowed to Protest appeared first on Dissident Voice.

  • Poor Financial and Operational Performance Are Not Unique to Chicago Charter Schools

    Charter schools are outsourced schools, also known as contract schools. They are privately operated, deregulated, and laser-focused on siphoning substantial sums of public money, services, and facilities from public schools. Charter schools are essentially pay-the-rich schemes masquerading as great inventions designed to close the century-old “achievement gap.” There is nothing grass-roots about them. Recognizing that The post Poor Financial and Operational Performance Are Not Unique to Chicago Charter Schools appeared first on Dissident Voice.

  • The Antidote to Despair

    We are living at a time of historical significance. We feel it in our bones, and it relentlessly gnaws at our consciousness. The familiar is rapidly unraveling. The transition to whatever is to come is disquieting and disorienting, and we don’t know how to respond. We cannot grasp these events because the ethical codes of The post The Antidote to Despair appeared first on Dissident Voice.

Mother Jones

  • Trump Promises Billions in Aid to Gaza as Israeli Airstrikes Reportedly Kill 12 Palestinians

    Donald Trump said Sunday that member states of his Board of Peace have pledged $5 billion toward reconstruction and humanitarian efforts in Gaza.  Countries will also send thousands of personnel to “maintain Security and Peace for Gazans,” the president wrote on Truth Social. The pledge will be officially announced during the board’s inaugural meeting on

  • Tom Homan: Minnesota Should Say “Thank You” for DHS Operation

    On Sunday morning, Border czar Tom Homan said elected officials in Minnesota “ought to be saying thank you” to the Trump administration for making the state safer.  “They were a sanctuary state,” Homan said on Fox & Friends. “Their county jails weren’t working with us across the state. So you know what? We fixed it.” 

  • The Adorable Patients of This Special Bat Hospital Will Warm Your Heart

    This story was originally published by Vox and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration. Australia is famously a place with some of the world’s most dangerous and frightening animals. Venomous spiders. Deadly snakes. Jellyfish with fatal stings. But it is also home to one of the world’s cutest: the flying fox, also known as the giant

  • US Military Strikes Another Boat in the Caribbean Sea, Killing 3

    The United States military killed three more people on Friday in their 39th boat attack in six months, according to a tracker maintained by the New York Times. All told, the strikes by US forces have killed at least 133 people in the Caribbean Sea and the eastern Pacific Ocean.  President Donald Trump’s administration has

  • Judges Have Rebuked Trump’s Mass Detention of Immigrants Thousands of Times

    Hundreds of judges across the nation have ruled over 4,400 times that President Donald Trump’s immigration enforcement arm is detaining people unlawfully, according to a new Reuters review of court documents. And that’s just since October.  The Trump administration’s immense increase in detainments rests, in part, on their decision to detain people while their immigration

The Real News Network

The Progressive

Z Network

  • Bangladesh at the Crossroads: Elections and the Future of the World’s Eight Largest Country

    The Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) won a sweeping victory in the 12 February 2026 elections, securing 212 of 300 parliamentary seats. This victory represents not merely a change of government. It is the culmination of a political process that began not with the spontaneous anger of students on the streets of Dhaka in 2024, but

  • From Gaza to Cuba: How Canada Remains the World’s Most Tactful Bystander

    The world is witnessing yet another manufactured humanitarian catastrophe unfolding in plain sight in Cuba. This crisis is not the result of any internal collapse or mismanagement. It is the deliberate outcome of United States policy, a policy of collective punishment designed to impose economic suffocation on an entire population to extract political change. President

  • Elections 2026: Asia’s New Reactionary Playbook and the Future of Resistance

    The march of the Ultra-Right in the Global South continues on, but unlike their Global North counterparts like Trump, Le Penn & Farage, as bleak as the future may seem, there are green shoots amongst the concrete. On 8 February 2026 following the Thai general election, there was a paradigm shift ushering in a new era

Occupy.com

FAIR

Counterpunch

  • QAnon is Dead. Long Live QAnon!

    Alleged temple on Little Saint James, part of Epstein Files released by the DOJ on December 19 2025 Alleged temple on Little Saint James, part of Epstein Files released by the DOJ on December 19 2025 Alleged temple on Little Saint James, part of Epstein Files released by the DOJ on December 19 2025 Alleged To read this article, log in here or subscribe here. If you are logged in but can't read CP+ articles, check the status of your access here In order to read CP+ articles, your web browser must be set to accept cookies. More The post QAnon is Dead. Long Live QAnon! appeared first on CounterPunch.org.

  • Does Israel Really Think It Can Make Cattle of the Palestinians?

    Image by Hammam Fuad همَّام. Image by Hammam Fuad همَّام. Image by Hammam Fuad همَّام. Image by Hammam Fuad همَّام. Image by Hammam Fuad همَّام. Image by Hammam Fuad همَّام. Image by Hammam Fuad همَّام. Image by Hammam Fuad همَّام. Image by Hammam Fuad همَّام. Image by Hammam Fuad همَّام. Image by Hammam Fuad همَّام. To read this article, log in here or subscribe here. If you are logged in but can't read CP+ articles, check the status of your access here In order to read CP+ articles, your web browser must be set to accept cookies. More The post Does Israel Really Think It Can Make Cattle of the Palestinians? appeared first on CounterPunch.org.

  • A Bloodstained Anniversary of the Revolution in Iran

    The Shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, left the country on a journey to exile on January 16, 1979. Less than a month later, on February 11, the popular revolution triumphed and closed the book of monarchy. The day the Shah left was perhaps the happiest day in my life up to that point. I was at my university campus, Tehran Polytechnic, when the news arrived. I lit a cigarette, another bad habit of teenage years, and left the campus aimlessly just to join the joyous crowds. I had never seen an entire nation so exceptionally jubilant, deeply ecstatic, profoundly euphoric. People were holding up the front page of various newspapers, all of which read, in the largest font that could fit the page, the words “Shah Raft” (The Shah is Gone!). More The post A Bloodstained Anniversary of the Revolution in Iran appeared first on CounterPunch.org.

Antiwar.com

  • Laura Dogu and Washington’s Regime-Change Playbook: Nicaragua, Honduras, Venezuela

    Laura Dogu, newly appointed US envoy to Venezuela, is described by the Los Angeles Times as an appropriate choice because she “navigated crises” in Nicaragua and Honduras during periods of “social and political volatility.” What the LA Times fails to add is that it was precisely Dogu’s job to create crisis and volatility in both