
Neoliberalism at 30,000 Feet
Airline deregulation has wrought service cuts, endless fees, and reduced worker pay.
Adrien Beauduin is currently researching a PhD on Polish and Czech politics at the Central European University’s department of gender studies.
Airline deregulation has wrought service cuts, endless fees, and reduced worker pay.
Without a socialist consciousness, an independent Scotland risks becoming a smaller — and even more reactionary — version of its southern neighbors.
Joshua Freeman on the United States’ post-war evolution and what lies ahead for labor.
A radical critique of public education falls flat.
A non-nationalist argument for Scottish independence.
In a never-before-released thesis, Reagan’s FEMA director discussed the potential internment of millions of blacks in concentration camps.
Their latest review was no fluke — the Economist will always find the master’s viewpoint more “objective,” regardless of the evidence provided.
In the upcoming Swedish elections, despite continued popularity for the country’s welfare state, Left prospects are bleak.
In Timothy Snyder’s Bloodlands, Hitler and Stalin are one and the same. And the partisans — Jewish fighters included — only encouraged German crimes.
The successes of Canadian single-payer are overstated — not because of outsized government involvement, but because public provision isn’t generous enough.
A look back at the subjection of Tasmania shows that while Israel’s settler colonialism is brutal, it’s hardly without precedent.
It’s been years since jazz had any claim as a countercultural art form.
Lavelle Porter on race, sexuality, and the “politics of respectability.”
The call to demilitarize police overlooks the longstanding link between policing and empire.
Mike Rowe wants Americans to get interested in blue-collar jobs, but for all the wrong reasons.
The child refugee crisis is a product of US-backed policies in Central America.
Tainted by its misogyny and embrace of consumption as a way of life, gamer culture isn’t worth saving.
Eric Hoffer was a conservative who only had the time to write because he was represented by a powerful leftist union.
This Labor Day, let’s celebrate our human right to be joyous and playful.
Around the country, graduate students aren’t just unionizing — they are reforming the conservative, top-down unions they’ve joined.