
Striking for Patients
Nurses in Vermont are on strike not just for better pay, but for a system that puts patients over profits.
Enver Motala is an associate of the Centre for Education Rights and Transformation (CERT) at the University of Johannesburg and of the Centre for Integrated Post-School Education and Training at the Nelson Mandela University.
Nurses in Vermont are on strike not just for better pay, but for a system that puts patients over profits.
More and more people are calling themselves democratic socialists. That’s a very good thing if you care about the cause of human freedom.
A regional party in Germany is flexing its muscles and shifting the country’s politics significantly to the right. Is Angela Merkel’s supremacy coming to an end?
Cynthia Nixon explains why she’s running for Governor of New York, why the Koch Brothers love Andrew Cuomo, and her place in the rise of progressive politics within the Democratic Party.
HBO’s new owner sees tremendous profit opportunities in the network. That’s bad news for anyone who likes good TV.
Tennessee unions’ recent experiences show that writing off nonmembers rather than winning them over will not make the labor movement any more militant or successful.
Why do workers have a right to strike? Because it’s one of the best means they have to resist their oppression.
David Harvey on why Karl Marx’s Capital is still the defining guide to understanding — and overcoming — the horrors of capitalism.
Today in Bulletin: A heartwarming tale about Nazis, Republicans, and election laws … Plus: Completing Marx’s complete works … America will lose, China will win … And: Socialism or barbarism, millennials edition.
Despite its free speech posturing, the Right has been silent about the persecution of J20 protesters — one of the most egregious government crackdowns in years.
In an extensive interview, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez discusses the nuts and bolts of her recent victory, why centrist Democrats are vulnerable to left-wing challengers, voter disenfranchisement, the political status of Puerto Rico, and much more.
Groomed by the “respectable” right, Kavanaugh will grease the skids for the Trump agenda.
In the wake of Janus, it’s tempting for some trade unionists to give up on representing all workers in a given workplace. This is exactly what the boss wants.
Today in Bulletin: Could globalization end with a whimper? … Christian Democracy in the USA … China’s Marxist millennials … and more.
With far-right forces on the rise across Europe, Ada Colau’s progressive administration in Barcelona shows how local government can be a base of resistance.
Abstinence-only ideology in twelve-step treatment programs is making it harder for addicts to stay clean.
Creeping marketization has created perverse incentives for researchers — threatening the wholesale corruption of science itself.
Radical candidates. “Crazy” platforms. Shocking upsets. The history of US conservatism holds lessons for the Left about how the impossible can become the inevitable.
America’s schools are more segregated than ever. We can integrate them — but only by forcing the state to expand universal public institutions and redistribute wealth.
Kim Moody reflects on his time in the New Left, turning to the working class, and opportunities for socialists in the labor movement today.