Truthout has never been afraid to confront the realities of inequality in the United States and across the world, to examine the structural causes and to give a platform for bold solutions. In fact, we've been talking about economic inequality longer than most. Will you help sustain our work and help us raise the $32,000 we still need? Make a tax-deductible donation now! Click here to donate. (Truthout is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit. EIN: 20-0031641) You can also donate by check, made payable to: Truthout, P.O. Box 276414, Sacramento, CA 95827 (Please include your email address on your check.) Or call in your donation: 213.489.1971 Dahr Jamail | The Future of Food? Dahr Jamail, Truthout: Global agricultural projection needs to increase by 70 percent, at a minimum, by 2050 in order to keep pace with a projected 40 percent increase in population by that time. A fish farm and vegetable garden in Houston, Texas could provide a blueprint for a sustainable and community-based solution. Read the Article Activists Working to Transform LA County Sheriffs Hope Changes Will Apply for the Entire Country Bethania Palma Markus, Truthout: Los Angeles activists' vigorous push to reform the violent and corrupt Sheriff's Department may develop into an effective national program to reduce police violence, racism and classism. Read the Article Chris Hedges | Thomas Paine, Our Contemporary Chris Hedges, Truthdig: Thomas Paine's unrelenting commitment to truth and justice, along with his eternal rebelliousness, saw him later vilified by the leaders of the new American republic, who had no interest in the egalitarian society championed by Paine. Read the Article The New York Times: Everybody Who's Anybody Wants to Bomb Syria Robert Naiman, Truthout: Why would the Obama administration want to get the United States more deeply involved militarily in Syria? Didn't the US public - Democrats, Republicans and Independents - decisively reject this last fall? Didn't Congress refuse to authorize it? Read the Article The Government-Corporate Complex: Surveillance for the Money Beatrice Edwards, Berrett-Koehler Publishers: The NSA's surveillance programs are illegal as well as not useful for counterterrorism. Had the agency developed the in-house and inexpensive Thin Thread program instead of alternatives dictated by private financial interests, 9/11 might have been foiled and the Fourth Amendment might still have meaning. Read the Excerpt The Rights of Journalists in Decline Around the Globe Lizabeth Paulat, Care2: Cracking any big story leaves journalists open to harassment. Harassment is one thing, however, but jail and torture are quite another. Around the globe, journalists have been experiencing a direct crackdown on what they are allowed to write and where they are allowed to go. Read the Article If the Law Is Bullsh*t, You Must Acquit The Daily Take Team, The Thom Hartmann Program: If you haven't heard of jury nullification before, that's not all that surprising. The powers that be really don't want anyone to know about it because it represents a direct threat to the status quo. Read the Article Derailing the Dynasty Train Chuck Collins, OtherWords: The first implication here in the United States of Piketty's work is for us to demand that Congress plug the holes undermining the US estate tax. Without timely action, we'll see the rich become dynasties and everyone else robbed of opportunity. Read the Article EU Safety Institutions Caught Plotting an Industry "Escape Route" Around Looming Pesticide Ban Jonathan Latham, Independent Science News: EU documents newly obtained by the nonprofit Pesticide Action Network of Europe reveal that the health commission of the European Union is attempting to develop a procedural "escape route" to evade an upcoming EU-wide ban on endocrine disrupting pesticides. Read the Article On the News With Thom Hartmann: The Poor Are More Ethical Than the 1% In today's On the News segment: The poor are way more ethical than the 1%; the city of Portland, Oregon is breaking up with Walmart; last week, news broke of yet another massive media merger; and more. Watch the Video and Read the Transcript Mexico and Monsanto: Taking Precaution in the Face of Genetic Contamination Timothy A. Wise, Triple Crisis: To listen to the current debates over the controversial requests by Monsanto and other biotech giants to grow genetically modified maize in Mexico, you'd think the danger to the country's rich biodiversity in maize was hypothetical. It is anything but. Read the Article Hemp Defies Hurdles to Make a Comeback in Spain Inés Benítez, Inter Press Service: Spain is experiencing a resurgence of hemp, one of the species of cannabis with the lowest THC content, which has been used for millennia to produce textile, medicinal and food products. Read the Article |
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