No Justice in Sanford, No Peace in the Borderlands: Stand Your Ground, Border Policing and the Mass Production of Corpses of Color Murphy Woodhouse, Truthout: In light of the Zimmerman verdict, the Border Patrol shooting of Jose Antonio Elena Rodriguez in October 2012 is emblematic of another form of one-sided violence likely to intensify if Comprehensive Immigration Reform is passed in its current form. Read the Article The Chemical Industry Divides an Environmental Coalition into Disarray Peter Montague, Truthout: The bill presently before Congress to modernize the 1976 Toxic Substances Control Act would provide virtual carte blanche to the chemical industry. And thanks to some classic "divide-and-conquer" industry maneuvering, it also divides the greens who have been lobbying for reform of regulations of toxins in consumer goods for decades. Read the Article Robin Thicke's "Blurred Vision": A Critique of a Rape Anthem in Two Parts Jimmy Johnson, Truthout: With his new song, "Blurred Lines," and accompanying videos, Robin Thicke says he wants to turn sexism upside-down. But his attempt is simply a faithful reproduction of his target and, to the significant degree that he embraces rape symbols, language and apologia, even an amplification, says Jimmy Johnson. Read the Article Southern Leaders Opt to Exclude 2.7 Million From Health Care Keith Griffith, Equal Voices News: In the Deep South and Florida, Republican governors and state legislatures have turned down federal funding to expand Medicaid coverage. Read the Article After a Pause, Walmart Strikes Back Jenny Brown, Labor Notes: Walmart is lashing out at workers who walked out in early June. In a coordinated purge, sixty people have been fired or disciplined. Read the Article Ken Cook on Improving the Chemical Safety Improvement Act Theresa Riley, Moyers & Company: Environmental Working Group's president Ken Cook testified before the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works about the The Chemical Safety Improvement Act. In this interview Cook discusses the controversial bill. Read the Article Fiscal Crisis Coming to a City Near You George DeMartino and Ilene Grabel, Triple Crisis: Detroit's demise was inevitable given that free trade and free financial flows were widened, without at the same time attending to basic labor and human rights and environmental protections. Read the Article Let Us Now Sing About the Warmed Earth Subhankar Banerjee, ClimateStoryTellers: The journal Nature published an article about the "Economic time bomb" that is slowly being detonated by Arctic warming, but nobody heard about it because the media was busy celebrating the birth of the royal son. Read the Article Woman President Shows Malawi the Way Mabvuto Banda, Inter Press Service: Malawi's President Joyce Banda, the first female southern African head of state, discusses her plans keep women's empowerment high on her agenda. Read the Article This week in SpeakOut: John Rickford discusses the Zimmerman trial and how witness Rachel Jeantel's testimony reveals racism's impact on perception and communication; Lawrence Davidson looks at the NSA surveillance scandal and analyzes whether the actions of whistleblower Edward Snowden gained a positive response from the American people; The Rainforest Action Network (RAN) continues to find evidence of child labor on palm oil plantations in Indonesia; "While Zimmerman's racial or cultural identity muddies the discussion of race, it should not muddy the issue of justice," writes Public Intellectual Dr. Roberto Rodriguez; Mohammed Ilyas discusses Britain and terrorism, arguing that the British government needs to redirect its focus on the "politics of inclusion rather than exclusion;" Arkan Akin argues that rather than police brutality, the uprising in Syria was caused by a "long accumulation of oppression, injustice, concentration of wealth and power as well as neoliberal policies;" and more. Read the Articles |
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