Jacobin

  • Australia’s Right Wants to Ban “Globalize the Intifada”

    In Australia, the Parliament of New South Wales (NSW) is considering whether to ban the slogan “globalize the intifada.” This follows moves in the UK to criminalize the slogan, and the NSW government has similarly justified the push by arguing that the slogan “is hate speech and encouraging of violence in our community.” Their argument

  • In Harlem, a Democratic Socialist Takes On the Dem Machine

    When Zohran Mamdani won the New York City mayoral race last fall, he proved that socialism could win citywide, even against a well-funded establishment opponent and a media-enabled red-baiting campaign. In the wake of Mamdani’s victory, a new cohort of democratic socialist challengers is looking to build on that momentum. Darializa Avila Chevalier is one

  • Latin America Is the Prime Target for Trump’s Warmongering

    The US attack on Venezuela and the kidnapping of Nicolás Maduro forms part of a declared plan from the Trump administration for imperial retrenchment in the western hemisphere. Donald Trump and his allies have already made threats of further military aggression against countries like Cuba and Colombia. How seriously should we take those threats, and

  • How Economists Depoliticized the Economy

    It’s the autumn of 1920, and we are in Brussels. Politicians and economists from across Europe sit at worktables, gathered for the first international economic conference in history. Despite the formal tones and elegant attire, the tension in the air is palpable. Their statements reveal a sense of encirclement, even anguish, over what they consider

  • Crypto and Big Banks Fight Over Who Gets to Fleece You

    Wall Street and Silicon Valley are embroiled in a legislative slugfest over which business interests will get to fleece more of their customers’ money. A loophole under current law allows stablecoins — crypto tokens pegged to the US dollar —  to essentially pay interest on their investors’ holdings, similar to a bank account except without

Dissident Voice

  • Why Are Chronically Low-performing Charter Schools Renewed?

    The easy answer is greed, profit, and kickbacks. But how are such actions undertaken so frequently? One of the most fundamental rationales put forward decades ago by charter school advocates for why charter schools should exist is the so-called “accountability-for-results” bargain. The basic “logic” here is that traditional public schools are “unaccountable failing monopolies” controlled The post Why Are Chronically Low-performing Charter Schools Renewed? first appeared on Dissident Voice.

  • The Measure of Our Plans

    Human achievement is often celebrated as personal success, but its true value lies in its impact on the world around us. Fourteen years ago, I asked whether our accomplishments serve more than our own ambition. Today, that question is unavoidable. Every degree earned, every promotion secured, every innovation celebrated shapes the world we share — The post The Measure of Our Plans first appeared on Dissident Voice.

  • Our Right to be Human and the Need to be Humane

    Yeah, this latest column/commentary of mine came out Dec. 31, in the Lincoln County Leader. You have to understand my method, though: while I am a full-fledged communist, I have to navigate my local community. I have already been banned from teaching in the k12 system, at the local community college. I am an unemployable The post Our Right to be Human and the Need to be Humane first appeared on Dissident Voice.

Mother Jones

  • Hakeem Jeffries Says No to Funding ICE. Democrats Still Aren’t United.

    House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) said on Wednesday that he would reject a bill to fund the Department of Homeland Security for the rest of the fiscal year over concerns that it did not sufficiently curb Immigration and Customs Enforcement operations.  The announcement came in a closed-door meeting with Democratic caucus members, following continued

  • Meet the Minneapolis Neighbors Standing Up to ICE by the Thousands

    A new, activist twist on neighborhood watch is taking shape in Minneapolis and other cities under occupation by federal immigration agents: ICE Watch. As Immigration and Customs Enforcement personnel drive around these cities, they’re often tailed by people in the neighborhoods. The idea is to make sure witnesses are present for any immigration arrest, to

  • Clergy Are Raising Holy Hell About ICE

    Over 2,000 clergy members from around the country signed onto a letter to Congress, demanding an investigation into ICE agent Jonathan Ross’s killing of Renée Nicole Good in Minneapolis, calling for federal agents to be removed from that city, and urging “moral accountability” and “urgent action” to address “ongoing abuse of power at the hands

  • Grok’s Leering Pictures Are the Newest Version of an Old Problem

    There’s a picture of myself that I had saved on my desktop for years; I suppose we could call it a caricature. A little more than a decade ago, someone on a Nazi messageboard pulled a photo of me from social media, then updated it with some antisemitic flair: a little cartoon rat sitting on

  • Trump Abruptly Drops His Threat of Economic Warfare Over Greenland

    After previewing his plans to acquire Greenland through economic warfare, President Donald Trump abruptly announced that he would not impose tariffs he had scheduled to take effect next month, citing work on a future deal regarding Greenland with NATO’s secretary general, Mark Rutte.  That move came despite the unmistakable warning embedded in Trump’s rambling, complaint-heavy

The Real News Network

The Progressive

Z Network

  • Review of James Douglass’ Martyrs to the Unspeakable

    James Douglass, longtime antinuclear activist and author of the bestselling JFK and the Unspeakable, has written his life’s work. Martyrs to the Unspeakable builds on the work of its predecessor, which detailed Kennedy’s turn toward peace during the Cold War and his resulting death at the hands of his own government. Martyrs broadens and deepens

  • After Bondi, Australia Faces a Foreign Policy Choice

    Australia has entered one of those rare diplomatic moments when grief at home collides with moral judgment abroad, and when a single invitation carries meanings far beyond the bounds of protocol. The decision to host Israeli President Isaac Herzog in the aftermath of the Bondi Beach Hanukkah massacre has become more than an act of

  • The Train of Regeneration: Green Peace for the Oases from Béchar to Tindouf

    Facing the strategic challenges in Algeria’s Southwest — water security, sustainable resource management, territorial stability, and socio-economic development — it is essential to complement major national projects with integrated approaches capable of amplifying their long-term benefits. This contribution aims to do just that. It offers a complementary perspective on a state-led infrastructure project, exploring how

Occupy.com

FAIR

Counterpunch

  • Trump’s Ignoble Interventions: How “Regional Imperialism” Leads to World War

    Shortly after Donald Trump was elected president for the first time, someone asked me in a public forum whether I thought he was a fascist.  I replied that Trump was an ultra-nationalist conservative who would attempt to privatize public services, further empower the oligarchs, and reverse many liberal social policies – but that two essential aspects of fascism were missing from his MAGA agenda.  One was a commitment to conduct aggressive wars against “inferior” nations deemed to threaten the security of the Sacred Homeland. The second was the militarization of domestic society, accompanied by uncontrolled executive power, widespread denials of civil rights, and campaigns of state terror against the Leader’s real or fancied opponents. More The post Trump’s Ignoble Interventions: How “Regional Imperialism” Leads to World War appeared first on CounterPunch.org.

  • Trump’s Foreign Policy, the Comic Book Edition

    Writers often try to gild their tawdry times or dignify their flawed leaders with lofty literary analogies — notably, America as the New Jerusalem; Lincoln as Moses leading his people through the wilderness of the Civil War; the Kennedy White House as an incarnation of King Arthur’s “Camelot“; or Lyndon Johnson living his last years as a latter-day King Lear, cast off by his ungrateful children into the moors of south Texas. More The post Trump’s Foreign Policy, the Comic Book Edition appeared first on CounterPunch.org.

  • South Sudan After the Pilgrimage: When Moral Attention Isn’t Enough

    Nearly two years after Pope Francis’s unprecedented ecumenical pilgrimage to South Sudan, the country is once again sliding towards violence, underscoring the futility of moral attention without political follow-through. The February 2023 visit, undertaken alongside the then Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, and the Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, Iain More The post South Sudan After the Pilgrimage: When Moral Attention Isn’t Enough appeared first on CounterPunch.org.

Antiwar.com

  • The Changing Face of Regime Change

    The most disturbing lesson from the 2014 Maidan Revolution in Ukraine that has been well-learned by the various intelligence agencies in this business is that the application of extreme violence – especially aimed at law enforcement, other state authorities, and civilians – provides an effective template upon which to further the regime change narrative. Everything