
(Not) Born This Way
There’s nothing natural or innate about inequality — but a long history of pseudo-science will tell you there is.
Karl Leffme is a socialist in New York CIty.
There’s nothing natural or innate about inequality — but a long history of pseudo-science will tell you there is.
Jean-Luc Mélenchon’s senior economic advisor explains his proposals to grow the economy and carry out an ecological transition.
A Mélenchon victory wouldn’t solve Europe’s crisis, but it will put us in a better position to rebuild the movements that can.
Two hundred French educators explain why they’re supporting Jean-Luc Mélenchon in tomorrow’s presidential election.
Irish activists won major concessions against water privatization. Now, the state is looking to imprison them.
Trump’s election isn’t cause for reassessing politics as we know it. Shifts in the economy and political parties created an easy opening for him.
The difficulties facing Benoît Hamon’s campaign reveal a French Socialist Party being outflanked on its right and left.
It’s hard to think of a piece of media that understands itself less than Duke Nukem 3D.
Why has the history of Iran’s left been erased?
The FN’s new image doesn’t mean the far-right party had a change of heart — it means the mainstream has accepted its program.
The National Front hasn’t changed. It just learned how to articulate its longstanding racism and xenophobia with mainstream French republican discourse.
The US economy is creating a historically low level of jobs. But robots aren’t the culprit.
On this day in 1943, a band of Jewish resistance fighters launched an armed insurrection against the Nazis. They were proud socialists and internationalists.
The British left’s task isn’t to win the next general election — it’s to fight for the survival of the Labour Party itself.
Marshall Berman’s Modernism in the Streets is a final testament to his delicately intimate, thoroughly urban Marxism.
French Guiana has taken to the streets to protest decades of underinvestment and neglect.
Both capitalist exploitation and workers’ resistance look fundamentally similar all over the world. Within the West and outside of it, socialism speaks to those experiences.
For twenty-five years, European left parties have joined broad coalition governments and come out with nothing to show for it.
The establishment’s panicked reaction to Mélenchon should convince us that he stands a real chance of winning.
Even after his victory yesterday in Turkey’s referendum, President Erdoğan is much weaker than he appears.