Richard D. Wolff | Political Corruption and Capitalism Richard D. Wolff, Truthout: Corruption is endemic to the capitalist system and has not been successfully regulated away. Perhaps a system change is warranted? Read the Article Minnesota Law Substitutes Military Test for Graduation Requirement Pat Elder, Truthout: In Minnesota, radical changes to graduation testing requirements make it easier for high school students' personal information to be sent to military recruiters without parental consent. There are no privacy protections built into Minnesota's new law. Read the Article Calvin and Jobs: Why the Right Hates (but Still Needs) Social Welfare Douglas Jamiel, Truthout: Calvinism's embrace of wealth as a sign of divine election lives on in the red state/blue state religious and social welfare divides. Read the Article A Fast Track to Eroding Our Rights Wenonah Hauter, OtherWords: The Trans-Pacific Partnership threatens the very essence of our democratic process by promoting the privatization of public resources and corporate self-regulation. Read the Article Apple Meets Its Worst Nightmare: Federally Appointed Antitrust Lawyer Hell-Bent on Doing His Job Lynn Parramore, AlterNet: Why has Apple become so secretive and combative? Perhaps the company is nervous because it is actually becoming a giant, monopolistic rip-off machine and doesn't want you to know what kind of tricks it is up to. Read the Article Truthout Interviews Featuring William Rivers Pitt on the State of the Nation Ted Asregadoo, Truthout: In this interview, William Rivers Pitt critiques Obama's State of the Union speech and says we're at a point in our history where we need transformational policies and politicians. Watch the Interview The Surveillance Blitz John Feffer, Foreign Policy in Focus: Our privacy is getting hit from two sides - from corporations as well as the government. Read the Article Rethinking Economics: From the UK, a Global Student Movement Takes Shape Ruby Russell, Occupy.com: When the financial crisis hit in 2007, economics students around the world found that theories handed down in classrooms failed to explain the reality outside, and an international movement began to demand a change in the way economics is taught. Read the Article The "Skills Gap" Is a Convenient Myth Toni Gilpin, Labor Notes: When skilled slots do go unfilled, it's because employers seek high-value workers at discount rates. It's hypocritical for employers to bemoan the shortage of skilled labor while they lay off workers and pay less to those they retain. Read the Article New Study: Anti-Homophobic School Policy Reduces Suicide Risk - for All Students Aaron Cantu, AlterNet: Heterosexual males were half as likely to attempt suicide in schools with gay-straight alliances. Read the Article Left Out of Obama's Commission on Elections? Race Brentin Mock, Demos: "I'm not sure how you can talk and walk around race, when in North Carolina right now, it's easier for a black teenager to go to jail than it is for him to vote." Read the Article Haiti: Billions in Aid, Pennies in Progress Since Earthquake Nathalie Baptiste, Foreign Policy in Focus: Four years since its devastating earthquake, progress in Haiti is slow and reconstruction efforts are lacking at best. Read the Article This week in Speakout: Nick Malinowski laments the political exploitation of the memory of Martin Luther King, Jr.; a stunning infographic from Best Psychology Degrees shows the psychological effects of poverty in the US; documentary film maker Carolyn Brown sheds a light on the struggle of migrant workers and their children; David Amram shares the late Pete Seeger's final hours; Rudy Avizius takes a look at how the financing of public works projects enriches Wall Street; Lee Camp interviews Richard Wolff; Joseph Boutilier looks at how media coverage of the "Honor the Treaties Tour" focused on celebrity Neil Young; Jim Cullen looks at our failures to protect the population from corporate toxins; Paul Thomas considers Paul Sherman and the "thug" label; Dennis Trainor Jr. delivers a SOTU minus the corporate influence; and more. Read the Articles |
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