Jacobin

  • Nativism vs. the Bottom Line

    In Donald Trump’s Republican Party, immigration is one of the few issues on which there remains a party line. On trade, Republicans are divided between protectionists and free traders. On foreign policy, Russia hawks joust with China hawks, though both seem open to bombing Mexico. On economics, rhetorical commitments to protecting entitlements sit side by

  • Bring Back the Yugoslav Basketball Team

    In the storied tradition of global sport, few regions have given us a legacy as rich and influential as the former Yugoslavia in basketball. For decades, the courts of Belgrade, Zagreb, Sarajevo, Ljubljana, and Skopje bred a unique style of play: technical, improvisational, fiercely competitive, yet fundamentally collective. It was a style that punched well

  • Pandemic Programs Worked, So Business Elites Killed Them Off

    There is an enduring perception that the United States is an individualistic nation whose people oppose collective guarantees to the basic necessities of life. This perception is false. Look at, for example, the overwhelming popularity of our Social Security program and the guarantees of free public education contained in every state constitution; the United States

  • The Trump Administration Is Deregulating Forever Chemicals

    Amid industry lobbying, the Trump administration is taking steps to further deregulate dangerous “forever chemicals” — increasingly ubiquitous per- and polyfluoroalkyl chemicals (PFAS) that don’t easily break down and are linked to a wide range of health risks, including cancer and birth defects. This move comes after President Donald Trump’s choice to head the Environmental

  • Polluters Will Say Anything to Hide Their Emissions Records

    Powerful business lobbyists are asking the US Supreme Court to use the First Amendment to block California from requiring corporations to publish their emissions data. Pro-industry trade groups and their lawyers argue that new transparency and disclosure requirements violate businesses’ free speech rights. An emergency appeal filed in recent weeks by the US and California

Shadowproof

  • Shadowproof Is Shutting Down

    After eight years, we have decided that it is time to shut down Shadowproof, but that does not mean that the independent journalism that we fostered is coming entirely to an end. The post Shadowproof Is Shutting Down appeared first on Shadowproof.

In These Times

    Occupy.com

    Current Affairs

      Mother Jones

      • GOP State Senator Balks at Redistricting After Trump Again Uses the R-Word

        On Thursday, President Donald Trump once again found it acceptable to use the r-word, directing it towards Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, in a Truth Social post which also attacked Somali immigrants in the state. “The seriously [r-tarded] Governor of Minnesota, Tim Walz, does nothing, either through fear, incompetence, or both,” Trump posted. For Republican Indiana

      • This Disability Education Law Turned 50 Today. Disability Advocates Want More.

        On November 29, 1975, Republican President Gerald Ford signed the Education for All Handicapped Children Act into law, which later became the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). IDEA requires that disabled students have access to public education, discourages segregating disabled kids from their peers, and that qualifying students have access to individualized education plans,

      • The Mystery of the Missing Porcupines

        This story was originally published by High Country News and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration. Porcupines are easy to recognize but hard to find—so elusive, in fact, that few people have ever seen one in the wild. Emilio Tripp, a wildlife manager and citizen of the Karuk Tribe in Northern California, might have

      • Alabama’s Threats to Prosecute Abortion Helpers

        In August 2022, Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall made a guest appearance on a local conservative talk radio show. It was two months after the US Supreme Court had overturned Roe v. Wade, and abortion was now illegal in Alabama. And Marshall addressed rumors that he planned to prosecute anyone helping people get abortions out

      • New York’s Next Mayor Wants Affordable Housing. Just Don’t Ask Where He’ll Put It.

        Zohran Mamdani and President Donald Trump had a surprisingly chummy meeting in the Oval Office last week, especially after Trump had described Mamdani during the New York City mayoral campaign as a “100 percent Communist lunatic,” a “total nut job,” and a “Jew hater.” A reporter asked the mayor-elect, often depicted in the press as

      Dissident Voice

      • Ximdo: Peoples Peace Movement Grows in Horn of Africa

        Ximdo is a people’s peace movement that has been growing in the war and famine-plagued Horn of Africa for several months now. The word is from the Tigrinya language, used by Eritreans and Tigrayans in Ethiopia. It has a number of meanings, but the best is “coexistence and cooperation” between people, peacefully. Like when two The post Ximdo: Peoples Peace Movement Grows in Horn of Africa first appeared on Dissident Voice.

      • Nine Days in Gaza: Dr. Amr Gharib’s Testimony from Nasser Hospital

          The post Nine Days in Gaza: Dr. Amr Gharib’s Testimony from Nasser Hospital first appeared on Dissident Voice.

      • Fossil Fuels at COP30: Sacred, Profane and Unmentioned

        If the camel is a committee’s version of a horse, then the concluding notes of the 30th United Nations Conference of the Parties (COP30) at Belém, Brazil, were bound to be ungainly, weak, and messy. That is what you get from an emitting gathering of over 56,000 mostly subsidised attendees keen to etch their way The post Fossil Fuels at COP30: Sacred, Profane and Unmentioned first appeared on Dissident Voice.

      The Progressive

      Counterpunch

      • Pay to Pollute, Starting in 2026

        The United States of America was unofficially represented at COP30, the annual UN climate conference (November 10-21) in Belem, Brazil by Senator Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI). He was not granted the privilege of officially representing the U.S. The State Department refused to facilitate his trip, refused to acknowledge the senator as a representative of a congressional delegation, refusing to acknowledge COP30, refusing to acknowledge global warming. This is the first time in Senator Whitehouse’s career that the executive branch of government has dictated a congressional member’s CODEL (Congressional Delegation paid trip for members). More The post Pay to Pollute, Starting in 2026 appeared first on CounterPunch.org.

      • It’s Not Just About Venezuela: Trump Intends a Wider Domino Effect

        It’s increasingly obvious that the US military threats against Venezuela have a wider agenda. Their game plan is regime change, but not only in Venezuela. This is the objective – on a longer timescale in some cases – across several of the countries in the Caribbean Basin, aiming to cleanse the region of governments deemed undesirable to Washington. More The post It’s Not Just About Venezuela: Trump Intends a Wider Domino Effect appeared first on CounterPunch.org.

      • Annals of the Covert World: How Assassination Became Policy at the CIA

        The CIA’s role in assassination is one of those topics handled gingerly by the press or Congress from time to time and then hastily put aside, with the habitual claim that the CIA may have dreamed of it, thought about it and maybe even dabbled in it, but had never actually gone successfully all the way. But in fact, the Agency has gone all the way many times. More The post Annals of the Covert World: How Assassination Became Policy at the CIA appeared first on CounterPunch.org.

      The American Prospect

      Antiwar.com

      FAIR

      Consortium News