Jacobin

  • Ben Lerner’s Transcription Is a Brilliant Meditation on Tech

    Authenticity, performance, the thin line between fact and fiction: these are, by now, the well-known central preoccupations of Ben Lerner’s fiction. His first novel, Leaving the Atocha Station, follows an American poet named Adam Gordon in Madrid in 2004, who witnesses the aftermath of the 11-M commuter train bombings. Adam is a divisive lead; he’s

  • Trump’s $1.5 Trillion for War Comes From Americans’ Pockets

    Donald Trump made an uncharacteristically blunt statement on his priorities last week, inadvertently encapsulating the modern right’s philosophy. “It’s not possible for us to take care of day care, Medicaid, Medicare, all of these individual things. They can do it on a state basis; we can’t do it on a federal basis. We have to

  • Americans (Still) Support a Federal Jobs Guarantee

    In 2024, the Center for Working-Class Politics (CWCP) and Jacobin published a report summarizing the state of public opinion on a federal jobs guarantee. Looking across nine publicly available polls conducted since 2018, we found an average of 59% support for the policy. That’s not a slim majority driven by one partisan base but a

  • A Socialist Teacher Is Running for Kentucky State House

    Socialists’ highest-profile victories in the recent election cycle were scored in blue coastal cities in blue states: Zohran Mamdani’s and Katie Wilson’s campaigns for mayor of New York City and Seattle, respectively. But candidates backed by Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) made inroads across the country last November, including in the South and the Midwest.

  • When Rank-and-File Unionists Took On the Mob

    My first contact with labor reformers in New York City was nearly fifty years ago. Like many rank-and-file dissidents before and since, these critics of union corruption were prophets without honor in their own union local. Teamsters Local 282 was at the time one of the most mobbed-up affiliates of a national union, then rightly

Dissident Voice

    Mother Jones

    • In Indian Country, Data Centers Come With a Familiar Threat of Colonialism. These Organizers Are Fighting Back.

      Last August, citizens of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation began hearing whispers of an AI data center coming to their reservation. Kenzie Roberts and Jordan Harmon, both Muscogee citizens, were immediately worried. It “didn’t seem like something that should align with our values as Indigenous people,” Roberts said. The center would be located on Looped Square

    • New Utah Law Shields Fossil Fuel Firms From Liability for Climate Chaos

      This story was originally published by the Guardian and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration. Utah has made it nearly impossible for residents to hold fossil fuel companies legally accountable for climate damages in a move one advocacy group described as putting “profits for the biggest polluters over communities,” with other states expected to follow suit. The new state legislation

    • Trad Wife Horror Story

      Trad wives have been baking, churning, scrubbing, and harvesting their ways through our social media feeds for several years now, praising homemaking and subservience to their husbands on countless dedicated TikTok channels. With her pristine makeup and prairie dresses and endless cheerful obedience, this internet persona—the trad as in “traditional” wife—seemed predestined to end up

    • Trump: Iranians Who Are Being Bombed Are Saying, “Please Keep Bombing”

      According to Donald Trump, Iranians want the US military to continue to bomb their homes.  “We’ve had numerous intercepts,” Trump told reporters in a press conference on Monday afternoon. “’Please keep bombing. Do it.’ And these are people that are living where the bombs are exploding.”  When questioned on who sent these communications, the president

    • She Helped the Authorities Deport Her Abuser. Then They Deported Her Back to Him.

      Her abusive husband had hurt her too many times. So Carmen F., an immigrant from South America, called the police. He was soon deported. Then she applied for a U visa, a special visa that gives crime victims a pathway to permanent residency in the United States if they cooperated with law enforcement to get

    The Real News Network

    The Progressive

    Z Network

    • What’s Next for the No Kings Movement?

      It was the largest protest in US history. More than 3300 rallies in all 50 states and more on every continent across the globe. It’s an understatement to say No Kings III was an overwhelming success. It wove a rich tapestry of defiance, featured colorful, handmade signs, encouraged friends and family to rally together, and was supercharged by first-time participants. A strategy of “Each One Reach One” contributed to the astonishing turnout. Last June, five […]

    • A History of US-Iran Relations

      When the US backed dictator of Iran, Shah Mohamed Reza Pahlavi was overthrown in 1979 and the Islamic Republic led by the Ayatollah Khomeini was established in its place–and in November 1979, the Khomeini regime oversaw the taking of American hostages–US National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski wrote to President Jimmy Carter:  “We are never going

    • Connecting the War on US Workers with War on Iran

      Income inequality has been escalating in this country since around 1980 and continues to get worse. Manufacturing jobs have been disappearing since the late 1970s, and the jobs that have “replaced” them have been substandard. The US labor union movement has done nothing to counter this, and as a result, the percentage of the unionized

    Occupy.com

    FAIR

    Counterpunch

    • One Blow After Another

      On March 13th, buried in the New York Times’s coverage of the U.S.-Israel-Iran conflict was a headline that would have been easy to miss amid the din of war coverage: “As El Niño Simmers, Scientists Warn of Weather Extremes Starting in Late Summer.” Many readers may not even have noticed it, but that article noted that scientists at the More The post One Blow After Another appeared first on CounterPunch.org.

    • Jonathan Kozol and the Struggle Against U.S. Apartheid

      Although bookshelves groan under the weight of tracts about U.S. racism, no one's writings on the topic are more unsettling than Jonathan Kozol's. He is among our greatest and most eloquent dissenters. He writes not from studied objectivity but with an impassioned conviction that sears the conscience and haunts the soul. His books, once read, stay with you; his insights, once seen, can never again be unseen. Horrors we once attributed to happenstance or personal failure are revealed by Kozol for what they are: our society's deliberate punishment of innocent poor people, whose very existence reminds us of moral failures we prefer to imagine do not exist.  More The post Jonathan Kozol and the Struggle Against U.S. Apartheid appeared first on CounterPunch.org.

    • ‘Macron – Whose Wife Treats Him Extremely Badly’: Trump’s Iran War Unraveling

      “I call up France, Macron – whose wife treats him extremely badly. Still recovering from the right to the jaw.” It is not the first time that Donald Trump has resorted to this kind of language. But the timing, as always, is everything. His remarks about Emmanuel Macron, delivered during a private lunch in Washington, More The post ‘Macron – Whose Wife Treats Him Extremely Badly’: Trump’s Iran War Unraveling appeared first on CounterPunch.org.

    Antiwar.com

    • Time for the White (jacket) Men

      If you wanted to indulge in partisan spin you could wax hotly about the Donald’s Easter morning desecration of the office of the presidency. His meld of profanity, blasphemy and bellicose madness all rolled into a single social media post could surely calls forth at least that much: But we don’t think “desecration” is the