Fascism and Democracy
What Gramsci can tell us about the relationship between fascism and liberalism — and the rise of Donald Trump.
T Rivers is a pseudonymous journalist who covers East and Central Africa.
What Gramsci can tell us about the relationship between fascism and liberalism — and the rise of Donald Trump.
A feminism based on lionizing hyper-successful women obscures the unjust structures that need to be dismantled.
Hillary Clinton is bragging about support from John Negroponte, a Republican diplomat linked to mass atrocities in Central America.
Five ways Hillary Clinton used the State Department to maintain and expand US power across the globe.
Executed by the Nazis on this day in 1944, the life of German Communist Ernst Thälmann was as contradictory and tragic as the movement he led.
Former British ambassador Craig Murray on the UK’s decision to invade Iraq and the lessons still not learned.
The strange story of Scientology — Hollywood’s favorite cult.
The US state has long sought to monitor and undermine black resistance movements.
Hillary Clinton’s triangulation may win in November, but it’s a politics that has little future.
Bringing together weak unions and weak social movements isn’t enough. We need a new kind of socialist party.
In Baltimore and elsewhere, repressive policing isn’t just about racism — it’s also about class.
Trump is only a symptom — the seeds of the GOP’s decline were sown long ago.
London’s striking Deliveroo drivers are in a fight against the worst exploitation and abuse of the sharing economy.
Erdoğan has unleashed a massive purge in the wake of last month’s attempted coup. But he’s weaker than he appears.
We can turn the Olympics from a corporate wonderland into a place of mass celebration and popular competition.
Recent local elections show the bleak future of South African politics: two centrist parties and no left alternative.
Soviet architecture had diverse and ambitious ideas for transforming the spaces people live, work, and travel in.
Jeffersonian Democrats made a serious attempt to implement Locke’s theories. Colonization and expropriation followed.
Framing Donald Trump as an indecent anomaly exonerates the movement and party that produced him.
The Labour Party’s historical crises are rooted in crises of capitalism.