Bulletin: The Russia Freakout
If the goal of Russian hackers was to cause chaos in the US, they’re succeeding — national security elites are in full meltdown mode.
Seth Ackerman is an editor at Jacobin.
If the goal of Russian hackers was to cause chaos in the US, they’re succeeding — national security elites are in full meltdown mode.
HBO’s new owner sees tremendous profit opportunities in the network. That’s bad news for anyone who likes good TV.
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.
Today in Bulletin: Could globalization end with a whimper? … Christian Democracy in the USA … China’s Marxist millennials … and more.
Le Monde Diplomatique’s Serge Halimi dissects the collective suicide of France’s center-left — and how its new far left can pick up the pieces.
Financial markets are adjusting to a “new, new normal.” But the old rules of class conflict still apply.
Henry Wallace was a brilliant progressive with an open mind. That’s where the trouble began.
For South Koreans, the biggest threat to peace isn’t North Korea but the United States.
Finance isn’t just an industry. It’s a system of social control.
With the rise of Donald Trump, we need to think seriously about what it would take to form a democratic organization rooted in the working class.
Refusing to engage with Trump’s base will only guarantee the growth of the far right.
Vox’s attack on Bernie Sanders is sold as a policy critique. It’s actually a dishonest exercise in managing the Democratic Party base.
Frederick Douglass believed there was an alternative. So should we.
Some notes on a recent controversy.
Bernie Sanders’ signature issues aren’t “white” issues.
Turning Uber into a worker cooperative would be surprisingly simple.
The Right is trying to essentialize Muslims. The Left should not fall into the same trap.
Vox says higher wages for fast-food workers will lead to mass layoffs. Here’s why they’re wrong.
Piketty’s warnings of a capitalism without meritocracy are being challenged by an ossified economic theory.
Let’s have a debate over the Left and the state. But not on the libertarians’ distorted terms.