
Life and Death Squads in the World’s Homicide Capital
In a society ravaged by crime, radical “law-and-order” forces end up being at the root of the problem.
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.
In a society ravaged by crime, radical “law-and-order” forces end up being at the root of the problem.
While some level of personal sacrifice on the part of union organizers is inevitable, that can’t justify rendering them powerless over their own workplace conditions.
In resisting standardized testing, today’s teachers are part of a rich tradition of struggle against dehumanization in the workplace.
What would a national core curriculum to prepare students for work in the Age of Service look like?
What does it mean to strike when “production” isn’t the production of widgets, but care for children, the ill, disabled, or elderly?
The Oscar ceremony has finally acquired an ideal twenty-first century host in the smirking, tap-dancing, bland-faced Seth MacFarlane.
The Left has a checkered history when it comes to Palestine.
The reaction to a new film about sex workers tells us more about liberal reviewers than the workers themselves.
Was the mid-century dominance of southern Democrats essential to the defeat of Hitler and the triumph of American democracy?
By organizing based on international law, the struggle for Palestinian liberation has been transformed into a question of rights.
The Oslo Accords weren’t a failure for Israel — they served as a fig leaf to consolidate and deepen its control over Palestinian life.
Postcolonial theory discounts the enduring value of Enlightenment universalism at its own peril.
Without radical change, disquiet finds other outlets. Dystopic visions have replaced Shulamith Firestone and Adrienne Rich’s utopian ones.
Zero Dark Thirty is a film that didn’t need to be made — it strives for realism, but ends up rehashing Bush-era tropes about the ‘war on terror.’
Two-state proponents argue that comprehensive peace is only possible with deeper American involvement in the process. They couldn’t be more wrong.
For today’s beleaguered left, it’s tempting to pine over the past. But the lives of two socialist intellectuals remind us that no one should be too nostalgic for the twentieth century.
As the policy wonk has risen in prestige, we seem to have reached the point where this entire class of commentators is highly susceptible to what I’ll call “Charlie Rose disease.”
The struggle for structural reforms is essential to changing the “common sense” of the US political arena. But it is not enough to wound the rabid beast; one must ultimately bring it down.
While Egypt’s Youssef himself cites Stewart as an influence, he’s the only one of the two who actually challenges the holders of power.
The Internet has changed. What was once open and public has become the frontier of modern capitalism.