
The Threat of a Free Haiti
The Haitian Revolution sowed fear in the hearts of Cuba’s slaveholding class.
Abigail Torre grew up in Chile and now lives in Berkeley, California where she is cochair of the East Bay chapter of Democratic Socialists of America.
The Haitian Revolution sowed fear in the hearts of Cuba’s slaveholding class.
Spinoza, Rousseau, and Robespierre may provide a model for the relationship between church and state in an emancipated society.
The policies President Obama outlined in last night’s State of the Union will only reinforce the trends that produced Donald Trump.
Aung San Suu Kyi’s electoral victory could bring political reform to Myanmar. Economic justice is another story.
The criminal trials against Golden Dawn are crucial to defeating fascism in Greece.
Equating the Sanders and Trump campaigns is meant to obscure their real political differences and defend the neoliberal consensus.
Swedish politics has taken a xenophobic turn with the explosive rise of the Sweden Democrats.
A case before the Supreme Court threatens to devastate public-sector unions. How did it come to this?
The Oregon militiamen aren’t taking a stand against mandatory minimums. Justice for landowners isn’t justice for workers.
Walter Benjamin’s Marxism owed much to his early engagement with anarchism and surrealism.
Doug Henwood responds to a critical review of his new book on Hillary Clinton.
Last summer, refugees and activists built a camp on the Italian-French border that stood against the inhumanity of borders.
We should engage with and update the revolutionary Marxist tradition — not reject it.
What’s behind the Fed’s recent interest rate hike? A desire to keep workers insecure and wages depressed.
The new economy makes it harder than ever to untangle capitalism from our daily lives.
Hillary Clinton’s finance reforms wouldn’t rein in Wall Street. Finance and global capitalism are inseparable.
We can hate the Oregon gunmen’s worldview without wishing state violence on them.
An illustrated interview with former Greek finance minister Yanis Varoufakis.
The politics of The Hunger Games series aren’t as revolutionary as they’ve been hyped to be.