Jacobin

  • Can an Economic Populist Win Maine’s Governor Race?

    It’s not just Graham Platner. In Maine’s gubernatorial race, logger and labor leader Troy Jackson is mounting an economic populist campaign that promises to build bridges between urban progressives and rural working-class voters.

  • The Devil Wears Prada 2 Hits the Right Bleak Notes

    At this point, the Devil Wears Prada franchise is a major cultural phenomenon. And The Devil Wears Prada 2 is a worthy addition, with more than a dash of topicality in its treatment of some of the bleaker aspects of contemporary existence.

  • Workers Don’t Have to Die in the Heat

    California’s heat protections for workers decreased heat-related deaths by 31% in recent years. With deaths climbing around the United States, extending these protections throughout the country could save as many as 1,500 lives each year.

  • Trump Is Siccing Shady Private Debt Collectors on Immigrants

    The Trump administration has hired a team of private debt collectors — known for widespread abuses when previously hired to collect federal student debt — to hound immigrants slapped with new multimillion-dollar civil penalties for not leaving the US.

  • The Voting Rights Rollback Shows We Need a New Constitution

    The Supreme Court’s decision in Louisiana v. Callais last week dealt a major blow to the Voting Rights Act. The ruling underscores the many antidemocratic features of our political system and the need for a new, actually democratic constitution.

Dissident Voice

    Mother Jones

    • FBI Raids Office of Lawmaker Who Led Virginia Redistricting

      On Wednesday, FBI agents reportedly raided the office and business of state Sen. L. Louise Lucas, the Virginia legislator and prominent leader of the state’s recent redistricting effort that won Democrats four more likely seats in the House of Representatives.  The senator’s office and cannabis dispensary, located on the same block, were swarmed by armed

    • Is Trump a Racist? Let’s Look at the Stats.

      A version of the below article first appeared in David Corn’s newsletter, Our Land. The newsletter comes out twice a week (most of the time) and provides behind-the-scenes stories and articles about politics, media, and culture. Subscribing costs just $5 a month—but you can sign up for a free 30-day trial. Last month, when MAGA luminaries Tucker Carlson, Megyn

    • As Household Bills Soar, Activists Dream of a Green New Deal Remake

      This story was originally published by the Guardian and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration. Americans do not care about the climate crisis, only economic issues: That’s the message some wonks have put forth in the past year, as the Trump administration has dismantled environmental protections. But the shift away from climate is misguided, an influential group of progressives

    • The Secrets Behind “The Talented Mr. Epstein”

      In 2002, journalist Vicky Ward—then a writer for Vanity Fair magazine—was assigned to investigate a mysterious New York City financier named Jeffrey Epstein. During her reporting, she stumbled upon sexual abuse allegations against Epstein by Maria and Annie Farmer, whose account was ultimately cut from Ward’s piece, titled “The Talented Mr. Epstein.” That decision sparked

    • Exclusive: The Only Woman on Death Row in Mississippi Alleges New Civil Rights Violations in Confinement

      Lisa Jo Chamberlin, who spoke to a Mississippi reporter in January about her experiences as the only woman on the state’s death row and her allegations of cruel and unusual punishment behind bars, now says that after speaking to the press, she faced targeted retaliation by prison officers for having gone public about her concerns,

    The Real News Network

    The Progressive

    Z Network

    • Canada Is Quietly Putting War Into Your Portfolio

      Canada is set to host the headquarters of the proposed Defence, Security and Resilience Bank (DSRB), a new multinational institution designed to mobilize tens of billions in financing for military and security projects among allied nations. In short, what we are seeing is the quiet normalization of something far more consequential: the permanent financialization of

    • Using Food as Information to Improve Health and Well-Being

      Modern nutrition science has continued to see food through numbers. Calories, macronutrients, ingredient lists, and percent daily values have become the primary language of eating. This approach, often referred to as “nutritionism,” assumes that the effects of the food we consume can be understood by breaking it down into isolated components and optimizing those components. If

    • Moments of Bifurcation: From Gibraltar to Hormuz

      The Moment of Bifurcation In the scientific field, the term “bifurcation” was first used by Henri Poincaré, but in the second half of the 20th century, the concept and theory of bifurcation came to be associated with the chemist and Nobel laureate Ilya Prigogine. Prigogine’s theory of bifurcation is based on the following ideas: the

    Occupy.com

    • Donald Trump Fits the Bill for the Biblical Antichrist

      Whether Republicans want to be the party of Christianity or the party of worshipping false idols is a question they’ll have to seriously reckon with very soon, unless they want the American electorate to speak for them.

    FAIR

    Counterpunch

    • Two Centuries of U.S. Contempt For Cuba

      Donald Trump tightened already suffocating sanctions on Cuba on May 1, at the same time as he made renewed threats to “take” the island as soon as he finishes committing the greatest foreign policy blunder in U.S. history in Iran. The new measure to heap further unmerited suffering on Cubans was justified on the laughable pretext that their government poses an extraordinary national security threat to the United States, which, if it were true, would constitute an equally extraordinary confession of military impotence on the part of the United States.[1] More The post Two Centuries of U.S. Contempt For Cuba appeared first on CounterPunch.org.

    • “Their Greatest Effort Ever”:  The British General Strike, One Hundred Years On

      The General Strike was “the greatest effort the British workers had ever made,” wrote the historian and economist G.D.H.Cole. One hundred years ago, on May 4, 1926, a million British workers walked off their jobs. These workers struck in sympathy with miners – the more than a million miners who had been locked out by their employers. The miners had refused to accept cuts in pay; in some places, the employers demanded as much as 25%. And they had refused to work longer hours. “Not a penny off the pay, not a minute on the day,” was their response. More The post “Their Greatest Effort Ever”:  The British General Strike, One Hundred Years On appeared first on CounterPunch.org.

    • The Pendulum Swings: The Slow Death of Europe’s Pro-Israel Consensus

      The European Union is the “chief of all cowards,” Amnesty International declared in a searing statement issued on April 21. The condemnation was a direct response to the European bloc’s systemic failure to sever ties with Israel during the Foreign Affairs Council meeting in Luxembourg. Despite months of legal warnings, the EU once again prioritized More The post The Pendulum Swings: The Slow Death of Europe’s Pro-Israel Consensus appeared first on CounterPunch.org.

    Antiwar.com

    • Obliteration Ecocide from Gaza to Lebanon and Beyond

      Israeli military aggression has “reshaped both the physical and ecological landscape” of southern Lebanon, according to the Lebanese report (which does not consider the impacts of Israel’s latest barrage of attacks this spring). In her foreword, Lebanon’s minister for the environment Tamara el Zein notes: “The scale and intentionality of the damage to forests, agricultural