Why So Secretive? The Trans-Pacific Partnership as Global Coup Andrew Gavin Marshall, Occupy.com: The Trans-Pacific Partnership is the most secretive and "least transparent" trade negotiation in history. The agreement stipulates that foreign corporations operating in the United States would no longer be subject to domestic U.S. laws regarding protections for the environment, finance or labor rights. Read the Article Factory Fire Kills More Than 100 People in Bangladesh Vikas Bajaj, The New York Times News Service: More than 100 people died Saturday and Sunday in a fire at a garment factory outside Dhaka, Bangladesh, in one of the worst industrial tragedies in that country. Walmart flagged "violations and/or conditions which were deemed to be high risk" at the factory in May 2011. Read the Article Independent Publisher Chelsea Green Flourishing as Employee-Owned Company Martha Sorren, Truthout: In July, in a step that more and more companies have been taking, Chelsea Green joined the ranks of companies turning ownership over to their employees in a new business model. The shift has been in place for months now, and the business continues to flourish in its niche of sustainability education. Read the Article The People Bail Out the People John Light, Moyers & Company: In canceling the debt, the Strike Debt team is taking advantage of a fairly common banking practice. When debt is severely distressed - that is, when debtors aren't paying up - banks write the loans off their books. But they often sell the debt for less than the loan was worth to recoup some of their losses. Read the Article Truthout Radio: David Bacon on the Anatomy of the Walmart Strike Ted Asregadoo, Truthout Radio: This week's guest is labor, immigration and international political writer, David Bacon. David speaks about a recent op-ed piece he wrote in Truthout entitled "Anatomy of the Walmart Strike: Walking Out, Once Day at a Time" - which chronicled his experience at a walkout at Walmart in San Leandro, CA. Watch the Video Detroit Sale of Huge Amounts of Land Could Lead to Displacement, Say Residents Victor Walker, The Michigan Citizen: A new agreement would allow a commercial urban agriculture initiative to acquire more than 1,500 parcels of city-owned land with no specific development plan. Read the Article Mr. President: How Do You Define Precise? Robert Greenwald, War Costs: Greenwald says he has never had a more haunting and harrowing experience than looking into the eyes of person after person, children and adults, and hearing them talk about their homes, villages and families destroyed by drone attacks. Read the Article Working for Change in Higher Education: The Abysmal State of Adjunct Teacher Pay Jeff Nall, Toward Freedom: Adjuncts teaching at the community college and state college level in a state like Florida, for instance, make under $2,000 per class. This means that teaching eight classes a year would yield $16,000 annually for the most highly paid community or state college adjunct. Read the Article Native Harvest for a Modern World Staff, Making Contact: For centuries, the Taos Pueblo people in New Mexico lived entirely off their land. Sustainable agriculture was a way of life, but U.S. federal policies helped put an end to that. Read the Article Trigger Mechanisms To Avoid the Fiscal Cliff? You're Kidding, Right? Joe Firestone, New Economic Perspectives: We certainly don't want to go where Europe has been going lately. They're a great example of how NOT to manage your way out of a Great Financial Crash. Read the Article |
No comments:
Post a Comment