Dahr Jamail | Iraqi Doctors Call Depleted Uranium Use "Genocide" Dahr Jamail, Truthout: Contamination from depleted uranium munitions is causing sharp rises in congenital birth defects, cancer cases and other illnesses throughout much of Iraq, according to numerous Iraqi doctors. Read the Article The Death Penalty, Missouri and the Continued Devaluing of Black Life William C. Anderson, Truthout: Death penalty states like Missouri have been treating their predominantly black death row prisoners like test subjects while protests over the worth of black life continue in Ferguson and around the country. Although there hasn't been as much protest around those condemned to death, their lives matter, too. Read the Article Pesticide Use by Farmers Linked to High Rates of Depression, Suicides Brian Bienkowski, Environmental Health News: Some research suggests that the chemicals that farmers and their workers spread on fields may alter certain brain chemicals, and that chronic exposure to low levels of herbicides over time may raise the risk of depression. Read the Article Laura Flanders | From Indigenous Socialism to Colonial Capitalism, Examining Native History of a Settler State Laura Flanders, Truthout: Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, author of An Indigenous People's History of the United States, argues that an understanding of the history and functioning of the settler state is essential to all of us. Watch the Video and Read the Transcript AIG Bailout Trial Bombshells: The Repellent Hank Greenberg May Have a Case Yves Smith, Naked Capitalism: Hank Greenberg, the former CEO of AIG, is hardly a sympathetic figure. Yet in his lawsuit against the governmental team that led the AIG bailout, he may come out looking better than the defendants. Read the Article "Hands Up! Don't Shoot!": Gesture, Choreography and Protest in Ferguson Anusha Kedhar, The Feminist Wire: Unlike other slogans, "Hands up! Don't shoot!" is not just voiced. It is also embodied. Contained within the phrase is both a plea not to shoot, as well as the bodily imperative to lift one's hands up. The hands up gesture "has been transformed into a different kind of weapon." Read the Article Is This "American Exceptionalism"? The Daily Take Team, The Thom Hartmann Program: While jingoistic politicians might argue that the United States is the greatest country in the world, the facts really speak for themselves: We aren't and inequality is to blame. The United States will only be exceptional when all Americans have an equal shot at success. Read the Article Building an Ark: How to Protect Public Revenues From the Next Meltdown Ellen Brown, The Web of Debt Blog: A publicly owned bank can provide security from risk while generating a far greater return on the local government's money. As we peer into the jaws of another economic meltdown, moving our public funds into our own banks is an investment we can hardly afford not to make. Read the Article A Trip to Kuwait (on the Prairie): Life Inside the Boom Laura Gottesdiener, TomDispatch: In the US heartland, thousands of workers shaken loose from other worlds have been heading for boom times in North Dakota and elsewhere in our fracklands. The author reports from the front lines of this fossil fuel extraction boom. Read the Article Sunshine State Uses Fees to Prevent Sun From Shining on Judicial Records Alison Fitzgerald, The Center for Public Integrity: When the Center for Public Integrity requested records from Florida's 17th judicial circuit regarding the procedures and policies surrounding foreclosure cases, officials were more than happy to comply - for a price. A price of $132,348, to be exact. Read the Article On the News With Thom Hartmann: Pollution Inequality Worse Than Income Inequality in the US, and More In today's On the News segment: Most of us know how bad income inequality has become in the United States, but pollution inequality is even worse; researchers have discovered a new way to see the features hidden deep under water; humans aren't the only multilingual species; and more. Watch the Video and Read the Transcript Company That Sues Soldiers Pledges Reform, Changes Name Paul Kiel, ProPublica: USA Discounters, promising to change how it pursues military debtors, will now be known as USA Living. The Virginia-based retailer was the focus of an investigation in July into its lending practices to service members. Read the Article |
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