Home  
0
0

Contact Us

Feedback Form

About Us

Web Links


How the Media Got "Class" Wrong in the Democratic Primaries

Jazz on the Rocks: A Rap on Pulp Music

John Howard Lawson’s Smash-up: A Lesson on Cold War Culture

Make It Happen and They will Rise!

Close the Mis-named National Endowment for Democracy

In Defense of All Our Families

The Role of Non-violence in History

Change '08

Mac the Knife: Cut the Needy to Feed the Greedy

¡Cierran a la mal llamada Fundación Nacional por la Democracia!

Book Review: The Race Beat

/Archives - Dates and Topics /2004 – online /Nov. 15-21, 2004 | Print

November 15-22, 2004 articles

Mark Gruenberg, 11/19/2004
Bush's Radical Right agenda could well include: Repeal of the National Labor Relations Act; destruction of workers' rights to sue for damages when they're hurt on the job a.k.a. "tort reform;" baseball-style "arbitration" of labor disputes; more unilateral bans on unions in the name of "national security;" and --last but not least--privatization of public services, thus killing unions where they are now growing.

» Find more of the online edition.
| click here for related stories: right wing watch

Joelle Fishman, 11/19/2004
Although hopes to wrest the House and Senate from right-wing Republican control were not realized on Nov. 2, the Bush administration may find some stumbling blocks in pushing their agenda through Congress. The stage is set for major battles, given majority public opinion in opposition to privatization of Social Security, tax breaks for the wealthy, the war on Iraq, and appointment of extremist judges.

» Find more of the online edition.
| click here for related stories: right wing watch

CPUSA, 11/19/2004
President Yasser Arafat
From his earliest days as a student activist, to his later roles as chairman of the Palestinian Liberation Organization and president of the Palestinian Authority, Arafat devoted his entire life to the cause of his people’s freedom, to an end to the cruel U.S.-backed Israeli occupation of Palestinian lands seized in the 1967 war, and to the cause of national liberation and peace.

» Find more of the online edition.
| click here for related stories: Middle East

Norman Markowitz, 11/18/2004
Political Affairs contributing editor Norman Markowitz corresponds with the New York Times, the major ruling class newspaper in the country and, even though they advertise that they publish "all the news that’s fit to print" they never see fit to print his letters. These are some recent letters on topics that PA readers may find interesting.

» Find more of the online edition.
| click here for related stories: democracy matters

Richard Gwyn, 11/18/2004
Did George W. Bush actually mean the comparatively encouraging comments he recently made about a possible Israeli-Palestinian peace deal — when Bush said he wanted to use his political "capital" to create a democratic Palestinian state during his second four-year term — or had only said this to help out his buddy, Tony Blair.

» Find more of the online edition.
| click here for related stories: right wing watch

Barbara B. Kennelly, 11/18/2004
Social Security is about to be sold off to the highest bidder. Wall Street can barely wait to get its hands on the $940 billion in fees (according to one estimate) that it will collect if Social Security is converted into individual investment accounts, as President Bush's Commission on Social Security has proposed.

» Find more of the online edition.
| click here for related stories: social security

Michael Adam Reale, 11/17/2004
This is a gripping account which shows one man’s gradual transformation from war to non-violence and from non-violence to passive resistance and active suffering. It is also a compelling story of courage and passion of a man to close a school whose sole purpose is to train death squads and assassins in Latin America and now in the Middle East.

» Find more of the online edition.
| click here for related stories: peace/antiwar

Political Affairs, 11/17/2004
From Abu Ghraib to Fallujah, where will Bush's illegal war take us next?
The Iraqi Red Crescent Society has called on the US and Iraqi interim government forces to allow it to deliver foodstuffs, medicines and water a civilians who have decided to stay in Falluja, because of the disastrous conditions in the city, and have been refused, according to ANSA.

» Find more of the online edition.
| click here for related stories: peace/antiwar

Thomas Riggins, 11/16/2004
The Motorcycle Diaries: Notes on a Latin American Journey was written by Ernesto Guevara (he had not yet become "Che") from notes he made when he was 23 years old and traveling from Cordoba in Argentina to Caracas in Venezuela in late 1951 through the summer of 1952 with his friend Alberto Granado on the latter’s motorcycle.

» Find more of the online edition.


David Zirin, 11/16/2004
Maurice Clarett
Maurice Clarett didn't know what hit him. This past week, the former Ohio State running back came clean to ESPN The Magazine to reveal all that's rotten in one of the NCAA's premier programs. Clarett dropped dime on the perks of big time College Football, making Ohio State sound like an amusement park operated by Tony Soprano.

» Find more of the online edition.


Dahr Jamail, 11/15/2004
Violence is taking a heavy toll in Iraq, but everyday economic difficulties could be hurting people more. Nearly 20 months into the occupation, Iraqis find themselves in a desperate situation, with countless struggling to survive.

» Find more of the online edition.
| click here for related stories: peace/antiwar

Labor Research Association, 11/15/2004
When the dust from the 2004 presidential election has cleared, the real legacy of the Bush administration will remain unchanged. That legacy is a military buildup that has drained the nation of money, jobs and productive capacity, and established the Department of Defense (DoD) as the largest business organization in the world.

» Find more of the online edition.
| click here for related stories: peace/antiwar


Take a Stand
( 10/01/2003 18:49 )


newcatcher@cpusa.org