The Bloomberg Factor
Michael Bloomberg’s potential presidential run is the latest sign elites are rattled.
William G. Martin teaches at SUNY-Binghamton and is co-author of After Prisons? Freedom, Decarceration, and Justice Disinvestment (2016) and a founding member of Justice and Unity for the Southern Tier; he covers local justice matters at www.justtalk.blog
Michael Bloomberg’s potential presidential run is the latest sign elites are rattled.
The revolutionary thought of Rosa Luxemburg continues to inform and inspire anticapitalist movements today.
Market-led development pits private profit against the public good. It can’t solve El Salvador’s epidemic of violence.
In Iowa and New Hampshire, Barack Obama won over high-income liberals. Bernie Sanders’s campaign points in a different direction.
The Australian establishment has unleashed a wide-ranging attack on the country’s labor movement.
No, socialism isn’t just more government — it’s about democratic ownership and control.
The Flint water crisis shows the human toll of running government like a business.
Hillary Clinton’s sizable lead over Bernie Sanders among black voters appears to be narrowing.
Climate change will displace millions within decades. But where will they go and how will governments receive them?
Syriza was elected a year ago today, only to retreat in the face of European pressure. Is there a way forward for the Greek left?
Vox’s attack on Bernie Sanders is sold as a policy critique. It’s actually a dishonest exercise in managing the Democratic Party base.
Seven tidbits from Bernie Sanders’s memoir, Outsider in the White House.
What would winter look like in a world where human needs trumped private profits?
Sixteen notes on the presidential campaign.
Climate change is driving Bangladeshi women out of the countryside and into exploitative garment factories.
Richard Levins was a profound thinker who devoted his life to an emancipatory vision of science.
Without the right design, a universal basic income would do little to advance radical change.
Affirmative action was a hard-won victory by left-labor activists. It must be defended.
David Bowie showed that even if artists can dream, they can never fully remove themselves from the world.