Home  
0
0

Contact Us

Feedback Form

About Us

Web Links

Visit this group

Ponzi Capitalism and the Deepening Moral Crisis

The Roller Coaster: The Communist Party in the 1940s

Rebuilding the Labor Movement in the 21st Century, an Interview with Scott Marshall

Police Escalate Attacks on First Amendment Rights

Public Option: Worth the Fight

Our Socialist Inheritance and Future

Past, Present and Future: The Politics of Reform in the Era of Obama

Needed: Constitutional Amendment for the Right to a Earn a Living Wage

Why Should Grassroots Liberals Consider Marxism?

Is That Specter Really Collapsing?

Carlo Tresca: The Dilemma of an Anti-Communist Radical

The Brief, Revolutionary Life of Joe Hill

Movie Review: Giải phóng Sài Gòn

Review: Logicomix: An Epic Search for Truth

Poetry, November 2009

/Archives - Dates and Topics /2009 online /November 1-30, 2009 | Print

archived articles

Dave Zirin, 11/19/2009
Here's a sentence I never thought I'd write: if you care about democracy and the rule of law, you need to care about women's ski jumping. This juxtaposition, straight out of a Hunter S. Thompson acid trip, relates to a court ruling in Canada that is both frightening in its scope and outrageous in its implications.
| click here for related stories: women's equality and liberation

Victor Grossman, 11/19/2009
It recalled ancient Greek tragedies. The Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD), founded in the 19th Century, is the country’s oldest party, and now its saddest one. On September 27th it suffered its worst election defeat since 1897, losing six million former voters and ending up with only 23 percent of the vote.
| click here for related stories: elections

Combined Sources, 11/19/2009
It is possible that any day now President Obama may decide to escalate the war in Afghanistan. Here in the U.S. and no doubt around the world, people will react in pain, anger and sorrow, knowing what tragedy and suffering will follow.
| click here for related stories: peace/antiwar

Communist Party USA, 11/19/2009
As the historic fight for health care reform passes to the Senate next week, and then to conference committee before final vote, a continued and expanded push is needed to prevent blockage of this key legislation.
| click here for related stories: your health

Joseph Turcotte, 11/18/2009
As a Veteran of Operation Iraqi freedom, and a veteran of sorts of the anti-war movement within the US, it seems to me that the left as a whole has done a poor job of speaking to veterans over the last ten years.
| click here for related stories: peace/antiwar

Joel Wendland, 11/18/2009
The US Supreme Court refused this week to hear a case involving a lawsuit by Native American activists seeking to revoke the federal trademark status for the name "Washington Redskins." The decision came without comment and in the middle of Native American Heritage Month.
| click here for related stories: racism, civil rights and equality

Ramzy Baroud, 11/18/2009
A Muslim family sits across of me in café, in a largely Muslim Asia country. An older woman shyly hunches over and desperately trying to avoid eye contact with the giant plasma screen TV, blazing loud music on the popular music video channel, MTV. The scantily dressed presenter introduces her ‘top song’ for the week.
| click here for related stories: imperialism/globalization

Earth Talk, 11/17/2009
According to the non-profit Earth Pledge, today some 8,000 synthetic chemicals are used throughout the world to turn raw materials into textiles. Domestically, the U.S. Department of Agriculture reports that one-quarter of all pesticides used nationwide go toward growing cotton, primarily for the clothing industry.
| click here for related stories: environment/nature

Combined Sources, 11/17/2009
The U.S. unemployment rate exceeded 10% in October for the first time in a quarter century. Nearly 16 million Americans who are able and willing to work cannot find a job. More than one out of every three unemployed workers has been out of a job for six months or more.
| click here for related stories: economy

Jonathan Springston, 11/16/2009
State lawmakers representing parts of Fulton and DeKalb Counties this week discussed key local issues sure to come before the 2010 Session of the Georgia General Assembly in January.
| click here for related stories: democracy matters

Earth Talk, 11/16/2009
Image (in yellow) of the gulf Stream now threatened by cooler waters resulting from ice cap melting. (Photo by Donna Thomas/MODIS Ocean Group)
The theory goes that a warming-induced influx of cold, fresh water into the North Atlantic from melting polar ice caps and glaciers could shut down the Gulf Stream, an underwater channel of warm ocean water that winds its way north from the Caribbean and moderates temperatures in the northeastern U.S. and Western Europe.
| click here for related stories: environment/nature

Joel Wendland, 11/16/2009
In its ongoing campaign to pass health reform, the White House last week highlighted a new report from the Business Roundtable (BRT) on healthcare costs. The BRT, which is an organization for CEOs, concluded that on the issue of healthcare, "the status quo is not sustainable."
| click here for related stories: your health

Sherwood Ross, 11/16/2009
Every time the young stick-up man tugged at my companion’s purse with his left hand, she would pull back, causing the muzzle of the pistol he held in his right hand to swing back and forth. Its line of fire each time was directed across my chest and if he accidentally or deliberately squeezed the trigger this piece might never have been written.
| click here for related stories: democracy matters

Carl Bloice, 11/16/2009
There are two mantras trotted out frequently when the subject of unemployment comes up that President Obama would best not repeat. The first is that, yea, things are getting worse but not as fast as they were. The second – one that he seems taken with – is that joblessness is expected to be a "lagging indicator," that is, the "recovery" will, by its nature, come quicker than improvement in the jobs picture.
| click here for related stories: economy

David Swanson, 11/14/2009
The last time I was on Laura Flanders's GRIT tv I argued that the American public opposed the occupation of Afghanistan, but another guest -- some Washington, D.C., "progressive" -- argued that this had no relevance, since the American public didn't know anything about Afghanistan.
| click here for related stories: peace/antiwar

Victor Grossman, 11/13/2009
(Courtesy Wikimedia Commons, cc/2.0)
I hate to sound like the grouchy Grinch. Radio and TV here in Berlin are celebrating the Fall of the Wall twenty years ago so intensively that there’s hardly a moment for the weather report, which, unfortunately for all the planned events, turned out nasty and rainy.
| click here for related stories: democracy matters

Matthew Cardinale, 11/13/2009
The Georgia Supreme Court, in their recent ruling against VoterGA upholding electronic voting in the State of Georgia, implicitly acknowledged that E-voting results cannot be independently audited. At the same time, they emphasized that it's the voter's choice to vote electronically, when paper ballots are available through the absentee process.
| click here for related stories: elections

Akahata, 11/13/2009
About 21,000 Okinawans held a rally on November 8 in Ginowan City demanding the immediate closure of the dangerous U.S. Marine Corps Futenma Air Station and opposing the plan to move it to Henoko to provide a state-of-the-art air base in Okinawa.”
| click here for related stories: peace/antiwar

People's Democracy, 11/13/2009
Terrorist attacks are taking place in Pakistan with alarming rapidity. The vulnerability of the US's Af-Pak policy is clear. The conflict in Afghanistan is engulfing Pakistan. India has not been spared either: the attack on our embassy in Kabul proves that.
| click here for related stories: peace/antiwar

Joel Wendland, 11/13/2009
When J. Richard Cohen, president of the Southern Poverty Law Center, told Fox News' Bill O'Reilly last July that CNN's Lou Dobbs should be kicked off the air for his biased and racist anti-immigrant claims, O'Reilly defended Dobbs and accused the civil rights activist of "overreacting."
| click here for related stories: media


  | < 1 >  2  3  Next >>

Take a Stand
( 10/01/2003 18:49 )


newcatcher@cpusa.org