Uruguay Takes on London Bankers, Marlboro Mad Men and the TPP Michael Meurer, Truthout: Uruguay is the unlikely protagonist in a fight to defend democratic self-government and national sovereignty against an emerging transnational governing order controlled by multinational corporations and banks through global trade agreements such as the Trans-Pacific Partnership. Read the Article Can a New "Progressive ALEC" Advance Effective Police Reform Through Municipal Governments? Candice Bernd, Truthout: Local Progress, a network of hundreds of local elected officials from around the nation, recently convened in New York just a day after ALEC's new American City County Exchange held its own winter conference. One of the network's main policy goals for cities: police reform. Read the Article Convicted With No Evidence by an All-White Jury, Black Community Leader Faces Life in Prison Victoria Collier and Ben-Zion Ptashnik: For decades, Rev. Edward Pinkney has been a highly irritating thorn in the side of the Whirlpool Corporation and the power structure in Michigan, a state where racial and economic divisions are ugly and stark. Now, the 66-year-old black activist, convicted of a felony by an all-white jury, faces life in prison at his upcoming sentencing. Read the Article Three College Endowments Are Doing Fine a Year After Divesting From Fossil Fuels A.C. Shilton, YES! Magazine: On college campuses nationwide, the key argument against divestment - or removing all investments from oil, coal and natural gas companies - has been that it's not economically feasible. But those colleges that have already done it say the risk is minimal. Read the Article South of the US Border, the War on Drugs Is Really a War on People Dawn Paley, AK Press: If there really was a war on drugs, it wouldn't make for very good media fodder: Bullet-riddled packets of cocaine don't bleed, and so probably wouldn't lead. As we shall see, in Mexico, Colombia and elsewhere, the primary victims of the so-called war on drugs are poor people. Read the Excerpt Amy Goodman | "We Are Like the Walking Dead": Latin American Indigenous Groups Decry Corporate Destruction of Land Amy Goodman, Democracy Now!: As the United Nations Climate Conference in Peru enters its final phase, thousands of people marched in downtown Lima on Wednesday to call for action on global warming. We hear from some of the voices who took to the streets: frontline indigenous and rural communities. Watch the Video and Read the Transcript Congress to Reinstate Taxpayer Subsidies for Reckless Derivatives Trading Mary Bottari, PR Watch: Congress is poised to roll back a key taxpayer protection contained in the 2010 Wall Street reform bill. Read the Article Drones and Discrimination: Kick the Habit Kathy Kelly, Voices for Creative Nonviolence: "On December 10, International Human Rights Day, federal Magistrate Matt Whitworth sentenced me to three months in prison for having crossed the line at a military base that wages drone warfare. The punishment will be an opportunity to speak with people trapped by prisons in the US." Read the Article US War Debt Is Over $2 Trillion, Obama Wants to Spend More, but Is That the Answer? Pierce Nahigyan, Thought Catalog: The ultimate costs of the US wars in the Middle East will accumulate long after they have officially ended. All told, Harvard calculates that the price tag for these conflicts will double and potentially triple. That means $4 trillion at its most conservative and $6 trillion at its highest. Read the Article Civil Society Support for Marshall Islands Against Nuclear Weapons Julia Rainer, Inter Press Service: Ahead of the December Vienna Conference on the Humanitarian Impact of Nuclear Weapons, activists from all over the world came together in the Austrian capital to participate in a civil society forum organized by the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons. Read the Article Richard D. Wolff | Economic Update: Mainstream Economics vs. Critical Economics Richard D. Wolff, Truthout: This week's episode provides updates on Mexican farm exploitation, Grenoble taking down advertising, US teachers being underpaid and the cutting of workers' pensions. We also respond to listeners on Harvard and Yale as full participants in capitalism's defects. Finally, we analyze modern "economics" as a discipline. Listen to the Audio Segment |
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