Counterinsurgency Has Been Calamitous Doctrine for US Michael Arria, Truthout: Col. Gian Gentile, a combat battalion commander in the Iraq War and author of a new book, talks with Truthout about the persistent myths surrounding the United States' reliance on a failed counterinsurgency policy in the wars in Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan. Read the Interview If It Takes Blocking a Bank Door With Your Body to Keep Your Home, Would You Do It? Eleanor J. Bader, Truthout: In her new book, Laura Gottesdiener puts faces to the facts of the subprime mortgage crisis; specifically the faces of black Americans, who are bearing the brunt of the scandal and have been thwarted from owning real property since Reconstruction. Read the Review Chris Hedges on Obama's Decision to Attack Syria and "Give Congress a Voice" Paul Jay, The Real News Network: "The notion that we have a right to act as the world's policeman … you would think we would have learned our lesson in Iraq or we would have learned our lesson in Afghanistan, but apparently we have not," says Chris Hedges. Watch the Video and Read the Transcript To Change Greece Requires Changing the Nation's Political Culture - and This Could Be a Tall Order, Especially for the Left C.J. Polychroniou, Truthout: For Greece to overcome the crisis, the country's political culture must be changed, argues Polychroniou, and that implies a new public philosophy, where, first and foremost, rights are accompanied by obligations and a deep sense of responsibility toward the common good. Read the Article Finishing the March for Livable Wages Terrance Heath, Campaign for America's Future: Livable wages will benefit workers, employers and the economy, but they're not just good economic sense. Livable wages are simply economic justice, says Terrance Heath. Read the Article Getting Syria-ous About Peace Talks Robert Parry, Consortium News: Obama's decision to seek congressional approval before attacking Syria may slow Washington's stampede into another war, but the only way to stop the bloodshed is to get the various sides into peace talks - and it is the US-supported rebels who won't go. Read the Article Overeducated, Underemployed and in Debt: What Now? Joel Boyce, Care2: Not only are there huge class disparities in Western nations today, there are also generational disparities. Middle-class individuals in their 20s and 30s are facing a perfect storm of a tough job market, higher student debt and brutal housing prices. Read the Article The Ancestral Values We Inherited: Protecting Indigenous Water, Land and Culture in Mexico Tory Field and Beverly Bell, Other Worlds: Saúl Atanasio Roque Morales, a Xoxocotla indigenous man from the state of Morelos, Mexico, discusses his community's fight to preserve its resources from the government and foreign companies. Read the Article Truthout TV Interviews Dr. Brian Moench About the TransPacific Partnership Ted Asregadoo, Truthout: Dr. Brian Moench discusses the TransPacific Partnership (TPP) and how, if enacted, will undermine sovereignty, democracy, health, safety and jobs for US citizens and exempt participating corporations from federal, state and local laws that regulate their industries. Watch the Video This week in SpeakOut: E. Douglas Kihn gives us a revolutionary glossary to help navigate our way through authoritarian pressures; Tim Benjamin gives a poignant analysis of Edward Snowden's newfound celebrity and what that means for his legacy; "Traumas like the Boston bombing force this tension into the limelight, and offer an opportunity to reassess what we are willing to risk for the life we want, and conversely, how far we will go to avoid pain," writes Simon Davis-Cohen in his Freudian analysis of the Boston bombings; Lawrence Davidson gives his thoughts on the history of conflict in Syria; and more. Read the Articles |
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