Bernie in the Age of Clinton
Seven tidbits from Bernie Sanders’s memoir, Outsider in the White House.
Jonathan Sas has worked in senior policy and political roles in government, think tanks, and the labor movement. He is an honorary witness to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada. His writing has appeared in the Toronto Star, National Post, the Tyee, and Maisonneuve.
Seven tidbits from Bernie Sanders’s memoir, Outsider in the White House.
What would winter look like in a world where human needs trumped private profits?
Sixteen notes on the presidential campaign.
Climate change is driving Bangladeshi women out of the countryside and into exploitative garment factories.
Richard Levins was a profound thinker who devoted his life to an emancipatory vision of science.
Without the right design, a universal basic income would do little to advance radical change.
Affirmative action was a hard-won victory by left-labor activists. It must be defended.
David Bowie showed that even if artists can dream, they can never fully remove themselves from the world.
In the wake of last month’s general strike, rank-and-file workers in Quebec are pushing for a stronger agreement with the government.
The tiny house movement embraces individualistic visions of property while ignoring the real causes of housing insecurity.
Ellen Meiksins Wood saw a great danger in the reluctance of today’s intellectuals to criticize capitalism.
By the end of his life, Martin Luther King Jr was an avowed socialist.
There is no figure in recent American history whose memory is more distorted than Martin Luther King Jr.
Hillary Clinton’s record cuts against the claim that she’s an ardent champion of women’s rights.
Instead of a captivating revenge film, The Revenant quickly becomes an overwrought mess.
The Chinese state has dramatically escalated repression against workers organizations.
Ellen Meiksins Wood showed so many of us what it means to be a committed intellectual.
Ellen Meiksins Wood breathed life into Marxist political theory.
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.