
A Promise He Can’t Deliver
Real estate barons benefit from New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio’s affordable housing policies — not tenants.
Frantz Durupt is a journalist at French daily Libération.
Real estate barons benefit from New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio’s affordable housing policies — not tenants.
Historian Eric Foner on slavery, freedom, and contemporary US politics.
Framing China as an environmental villain only serves to excuse American inaction.
Podemos has gained traction by drawing on lessons from the Latin American left.
Though he’s largely forgotten, Arthur Scargill was an ardent foe of Thatcherism and a champion of militant trade unionism.
The surrogacy industry shows how difficult it will be to make new reproductive technologies benefit all.
Bill de Blasio has put forward some progressive policies as New York City mayor. But he’s also primed the pump for real estate and finance.
Fifteen months after her election to the Seattle City Council, Kshama Sawant is still attracting support.
Education is not a design problem with a technical solution. It’s a social and political project neoliberals want to innovate away.
Jesus “Chuy” Garcia’s campaign to replace Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel doesn’t present a real break from neoliberalism.
For Syriza, there is an alternative to “strategic retreat.”
Taking on climate change will require massive state investment and the destruction of the fossil fuel industry.
A new proposal to eliminate capital gains taxes would realize a dream the Right has had for decades.
As humanity pushes outward into space, how will the galaxy’s wealth be shared?
A recent biography tries to prove Marx’s irrelevance. It fails miserably.
The gains of the Civil Rights Movement won’t be expanded through constitutional law, but solidarity and militant struggle.
Venezuela is a “national security threat” only because it refuses to be controlled by the US.
New applications and mobile services for Palestinians are being called liberatory. But they’re more a way for capitalists to profit from occupation.
Bill McKibben on capitalism and the state of the climate justice movement.
Our challenge is to see in technology both today’s instruments of employer control and the preconditions for a post-scarcity society.