Henry A. Giroux | Noam Chomsky and the Public Intellectual in Turbulent Times Henry A. Giroux, Truthout: Noam Chomsky reminds us that caring about other people is a dangerous idea in the United States today, and he trades in ideas that defy scholastic disciplines and intellectual boundaries. Read the Article The Road to Ruin: Can We Afford the Anti-Tax Movement? Ellen Dannin, Truthout: The anti-tax movement leaves us without money to meet public needs, while privatization advocates promise that the market will provide. As it turns out, privatized infrastructure depends on public money - and a lot of it. Read the Article The Race for the Future of Newark Public Schools Owen Davis, Truthout: In the Newark mayoral race, one candidate favors corporate school takeovers while the other wants to give traditional public schools more resources. Read the Article Early Childhood Educators Partner With Union and Workers' Center, Score Historic Victory Jonathan Leavitt, Truthout: Last week, historic legislation - expanding Vermont labor law and allowing previously excluded early childhood educators to form their union - was passed in a victory for grassroots organizers, the Vermont Workers' Center and unions. Read the Article Cornealious "Mike" Anderson and Mandatory Sentences Raj Jayadev, Equal Voice News: The story of Cornealious "Mike" Anderson, the convicted Missouri man who, because of a state Department of Corrections error, lived free for the 13 years of his prescribed prison sentence, sparked a national debate: Should a rehabilitated man be sent to prison? Read the Article Does Cliven Bundy Represent the Ugly American? The Daily Take Team, The Thom Hartmann Program: If the United States is to live up to the values we espouse, we must respect and embrace all cultures and societies. Our media should identify and shame "Ugly Americans" like Cliven Bundy and his ATV buddies for what they are: the American Taliban. Read the Article The Three Faces of Drone War: Speaking Truth From the Robotic Heavens Pratap Chatterjee, TomDispatch: Some people who have been involved in drone assassination campaigns in distant parts of the world, using the fruits of the NSA's electronic surveillance, are hoping to draw attention to the grave costs of some of the NSA's activities. Read the Article Chris Hedges | The Power of Imagination Chris Hedges, Truthdig: Poetry, music, theater, dance, art, fiction and ritual move human beings toward the sacred. The prosaic world of facts, data, science, news, technology, business and the military is cut off from the mysteries of existence. We will recover this imagination, or we will vanish as a species. Read the Article US Government's New Plan for Internet IDs Has Scary Implications Kevin Mathews, Care2: While internet activists are distracted with recent attacks on net neutrality, the government is quietly introducing an internet ID program in Pennsylvania and Michigan that - if eventually broadened as intended - would strip internet users of their privacy and rights. Read the Article On the News With Thom Hartmann: Climate Change Isn't a Problem of the Distant Future, and More In today's On the News segment: Climate change is no longer a problem of the distant future; while our lawmakers bicker over the facts of climate change, college students around our nation are getting busy working on solutions; the world's largest solar plant is officially operational, and it's located right here in the United States; and more. Watch the Video and Read the Transcript Ignoring a Solution to Chronic Drug Shortages T.J. Lewan, Remapping Debate: Since shortages of critical drugs became a fixture of the American medical landscape a decade ago, pundits have proposed an array of incentives to encourage more production. But an obvious alternative - having the government manufacture the drugs - appears not to have made it to anyone's list. Read the Article Peru's Conga Mine Conflict: Cajamarca Won't Capitulate Lynda Sullivan, Upside Down World: The fight over the Conga mining project is one of Peru's largest social conflicts. The situation remains tense, with an intensified sense of urgency, because, as the battles are won and lost, many feel that the conflict is nearing its conclusion. Read the Article |
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