
Hezbollah and the Workers
Hezbollah’s record shows that the party’s interests are more aligned with elites than with workers.
Ryan Switzer is a PhD candidate in sociology at Stockholm University. He researches right-wing politics in welfare states.
Hezbollah’s record shows that the party’s interests are more aligned with elites than with workers.
How, in an age in which “the fast eat the slow,” has Thomas Friedman not been gobbled up?
Liberal pundits would have us write off all Trump supporters. But only a broad working-class movement can defeat the far right.
The slaveholding class defeated in the Civil War were no ragtag band of sectionalists — they were the masters of the US state.
A Road Unforeseen is an inspiring account of the autonomous Kurdish region in Syria, but it glosses over Rojava’s contradictions.
The Democratic donor class will resist the very policies that could unite workers of all races. They can’t subdue Trumpism.
Colombia’s new peace deal won’t deliver justice, but its failure would be catastrophic.
Blaming third-party voters for Trump’s win isn’t just bad politics. It’s bad math.
Donald Trump’s election win is bad news for the Paris Agreement and very bad news for the climate.
On the occasion of his birthday, let’s celebrate the incredible contributions of Marx collaborator Friedrich Engels.
We already live in a planned economy. Why not make it a democratic one?
Hillary Clinton won rich suburbs in record numbers. But her campaign failed to mobilize workers of all races.
The recent prison officers’ strike in Britain is rooted in the repressive nature of incarceration.
Fidel Castro was a towering champion of the oppressed, but we shouldn’t ignore the limits of the socialism he helped build.
Have we ever seen anything like this election season’s mixture of anger and cluelessness? Yes, at the local zoning board.
The US media’s commercial nature is great for business, terrible for democracy.
Standing Rock points the way forward for indigenous people and the Left.
What would the United States have looked like had microbes and strength of arms not been on the Plymouth Protestants’ side?
South Korea’s unions and civil society have taken to the streets to demand conservative president Park Geun-hye step down.
An organizer with Labor for Bernie argues that the gains won within the Democratic Party must be defended and expanded.