How Monsanto Went From Selling Aspirin to Controlling Our Food Supply Jill Richardson, AlterNet: Monsanto controls our food, poisons our land and influences all three branches of government. By 2000, the company had undergone such a sea change from its founding a century before that it claims it is almost a different company. Read the Article Plan B Ruling: Fox and Family Research Council Seize Opportunity to Spread Misinformation Valerie Tarico, Truthout: Valerie Tarico deconstructs Fox News' and the Family Research Council's misinformation campaign in response to the recent Plan B court ruling allowing girls to obtain the morning after pill without a prescription. Read the Article Nearly Half of Guantanamo Prisoners Now on Hunger Strike Carol Rosenberg, McClatchy Newspapers: The hunger strike figure rose by 14 prisoners overnight, and more than 10 percent of all detainees were being tube fed, according to the military. Read the Article Contaminated Nation: Inhuman Radiation Experiments John LaForge, Counterpunch: This year marks the 20th anniversary of the declassification of top secret studies, done over a period of 60 years, in which the US conducted 2,000 radiation experiments on as many as 20,000 vulnerable US citizens. Read the Article Real Faces of the Minimum Wage Richard Eskow, Campaign for America's Future: Most minimum-wage workers are adults, the majority of them are women, and many are parents who are trying to raise their children on poverty wages. Read the Article Gitmo Dilemma Remains a Monkey on the Back of US Democracy Megan Cowell, Council on Hemispheric Affairs: It is clear that closing Guantanamo Bay is not one of Obama's top priorities this term, especially after a March proposal for a $49 million expansion of the prison facilities. But unrest will continue to be felt between prisoners and civilian protesters alike. Read the Article Truthout TV Interviews Ellen Dannin and Ann Hodges About the Attack Against the National Labor Relations Act Ted Asregadoo, Truthout: Workers' rights have eroded over the past 30 years, while the rights of corporations have increased. Ted Asregadoo talks to Ellen Dannin and Ann Hodges about judicial rulings that have chipped away at the National Labor Relations Act of 1935. Watch the Video This week in SpeakOut: Mary Zerkel explains why the poor leadership in the economy today will only be a burden for future generations; Lakota Elders continue their struggle to lodge a complaint of genocide to the United Nations; John Spritzler uses the Israel-Palestine conflict to remind readers that injustice cripples the oppressor as well as the oppressed; Joseph Gerson reports on the efforts of peace activists in the wake of the Boston Marathon bombings; while the Associated Press has dropped the word from their vocabulary, Andrew Lam Helen Zia and Chitra Divakaruni offer their own views on the term "illegal" from their own immigrant experiences; Lee Camp reminds the American people that, despite the rhetoric from the right, unemployment it not their fault; and more. Read the Articles |
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