
The Trial of Cecily McMillan
An Occupy Wall Street activist was assaulted by a police officer. She faces seven years in prison for it.
T Rivers is a pseudonymous journalist who covers East and Central Africa.
An Occupy Wall Street activist was assaulted by a police officer. She faces seven years in prison for it.
On the Hollywood blacklist and Dalton Trumbo’s marginal tax rate.
Gabriel García Márquez on Fidel Castro, the Soviet Union, and creating “a government which would make the poor happy.”
Fred Ho’s dedication to challenging capitalism$’s logic through art only grew stronger in his final days.
The nature of a product is irrelevant to how we should theorize, legislate, or organize the labor involved in producing it.
The first time Clarence Thomas went to DC, it was to protest the Vietnam War.
Elites tell us the future is inevitably bright; left curmudgeons insist it’s inevitably gloomy. We don’t win from playing this game.
Chicago Teachers Union President Karen Lewis recounts the creation of her union’s CORE caucus.
Jane McAlevey challenges the Left to stop lamenting its disappointments in the working class and address our own failures.
The failings of the Affordable Care Act are rooted in a long shift away from the idea of a truly universal health care.
Everyone deserves a great public education, but better schools alone can’t fight inequality.
Food is the easy part of the seder. For me, the hard part is making it all mean something.
The University of California’s only response to successful labor organizing is violence and intimidation.
The American labor movement won’t be able to revive itself without organizing at its grassroots.
When it comes to Venezuela, shoddy data work and simplistic reasoning are too often embraced.
The inventor of the American suburban shopping mall was a socialist. Could his creation have been saved?
Government policies are fueling rather than combating anti-Roma discrimination in Europe.
New York State United Teachers members have an opportunity to create a broad educational justice movement — if they can move their union away from politics as usual.
As New York City was transformed by real estate and finance interests in the 1990s, a group of squatters on the Lower East Side waged battle for affordable housing.
Progressives should be less concerned about how people are protesting and more concerned about who is mobilizing and what they’re fighting for.