Dahr Jamail | UN Report: Human-Caused Climate Disruption Is "Severe, Pervasive, Irreversible" Dahr Jamail, Truthout: A recently released draft report of the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change concluded that anthropogenic climate disruption is fully upon us and will dramatically worsen unless something is done immediately - on the level of a wartime response. Read the Article William Rivers Pitt | Fascism 101: The Police and Media Control William Rivers Pitt, Truthout: If you are a cadet in training with the St. Louis County and Municipal Police Academy, good news! Beginning at 8 am on October 24, you are welcome to attend a seminar titled "OFFICER-INVOLVED SHOOTING - YOU CAN WIN WITH THE MEDIA." Read the Article At New York March, Activists Work to Connect Capitalist Culprits to Climate Crisis Matt Surrusco, Truthout: At the largest climate march in history, which saw some 310,000 people converge on New York City streets on September 21, individual activists and organizations made a point to tie climate disruption to those seen as most responsible - major corporations, the financial industry and the governments that allow them to pollute with impunity. Read the Article Dean Baker | The Mysteries of Inequality Are Only Mysterious to Elites Dean Baker, Truthout: The government openly acts to ensure that wages don't rise, and it also protects Wall Street high flyers who managed to sink their banks with their bad bets. Maybe an economist will win a Nobel prize for figuring out why inequality is increasing. Read the Article Imagining Our Dark and Stormy Future: Naomi Klein's This Changes Everything Emily Johnston, Truthout: If you generally avoid reading about climate change (out of paralysis, fear or grief) or wonder whether there's any hope, or what hope would even look like in the context of a biosphere in crisis, read Naomi Klein's This Changes Everything. Read the Review Education With a Debt Sentence: For-Profit Colleges as American Dream Crushers and Factories of Debt Astra Taylor and Hannah Appel, TomDispatch: In the past, US higher education has always been associated with upward mobility, but with student loan debt quadrupling between 2003 and 2013, it's time to ask whether education alone can really move people up the class ladder. Read the Article Can a "Firewall Strategy" Keep Big Energy Out of Climate Talks? It Worked for Fighting Tobacco Alexis Goldstein, YES! Magazine: Kicking the polluters out of the negotiations may sound like wishful thinking. But there is a precedent: the global effort to regulate the tobacco industry. Read the Article Marijuana Decriminalization a Racial Justice Victory in Philadelphia Kate Aronoff, Waging Nonviolence: Philadelphia will soon become the largest US city where you can have marijuana and smoke it too - at least without going to jail. Rather than arrest, being caught with anything under an ounce of marijuana will carry with it a $25 fine and a citation. Read the Article Attacking J Street Won't Bring Justice for Palestinians Robert Naiman, Truthout: Take issue with J Street, which seeks a two-state solution in the Middle East and also supported strikes on Gaza, but any plausible vision for a future progressive victory includes J Street in the winner's circle. Read the Article On the News With Thom Hartmann: Senate GOP Blocks Legislation on Gender Pay Gap, and More In today's On the News segment: Senate Republicans block legislation aimed at closing the gender pay gap; voters in Sweden say "no" to austerity; our government may have bailed out Wall Street, but Rolling Jubilee is bailing out students; and more. Watch the Video and Read the Transcript The Troubling Way We Pay Hospitals in Maine and Throughout the US Philip Caper, Bangor Daily News: A study published in the current issue of Health Affairs found that hospitals in the United States spend about twice as much per capita on administration as the seven other countries studied. Read the Article Uganda's Youth Discover the Beauty in Farming Amy Fallon, Inter Press Service: According to the State of Uganda Population Report 2013, four out of every five of Uganda's 17.3 million women are employed in agriculture. The majority of these women work as subsistence farmers. Read the Article Editorial Cartoon: "Obamacare" Cartoonist Jen Sorensen - whose work will now be featured weekly on Truthout - gives right-wing Obamacare naysayers a dose of their own medicine. Read the Cartoon |
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