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Successful Labor Struggles Celebrated at Labor Notes - No April Fooling; Labor for Bernie and Beyond

Judy Atkins; Dan La Botz
The speakers and the workshops at the Labor Notes conference celebrated labor's new potential both in fighting the boss and becoming more active in pro-worker electoral struggles. The 2,000 or more participants overfilled the Hilton Hotel and spread out into two other nearby venues. The young workers definitely outnumbered those with more seniority at these kind of events, and the diversity of participants was great. Special reports by Judy Atkins and Dan La Botz.

Bernie Sanders Adds to His Momentum With a Big Wisconsin Win

John Nichols The Nation
Bernie Sanders wins a battleground state by a 57-43 margin. The win in Wisconsin is huge, with Sanders winning seven of the last eight contests. The hope of Sanders and his supporters is that their momentum math will ultimately influence the delegate math, by cutting Clinton's pledged-delegate lead and convincing superdelegates to swing his way - as happened in 2008, when a number of superdelegates who were initially leaning toward Clinton ended up with Obama.

Obama Supreme Court Nomination: A Missed Opportunity

Bill Mosley Washington Socialist
We should demand that the Senate respect the nominee of the President and give him a fair hearing and a vote But we should do more: we need an ongoing grassroots movement to pressure the White House to select judicial nominees – not only for the Supreme Court but all federal courts – who would bring to the courts a greater regard for social justice as well as more racial and gender diversity.

Claudia Rankine Challenges White Teachers, Pities White Racists

Boris Kachka New York Magazine
Claudia Rankine, is better known for broadsides than bromides. Her stated topic at the annual AWP conference was “what keeps us uncomfortable in each other’s presence” or, more specifically, what she sees as persistent racial tokenism in MFA workshops.

What ‘White Folks Who Teach in the Hood’ Get Wrong About Education

KENYA DOWNS PBS NewsHour
Dr. Chris Emdin, who is also the university’s associate director of the Institute for Urban and Minority Education, has had enough of what he calls a pervasive narrative in urban education: a savior complex that gives mostly white teachers in minority and urban communities a false sense of saving kids.

The Panama Papers Could Lead to Capitalism’s Great Crisis

Rana Foroohar Time magazine
The Panama Papers illuminate a key aspect of why the system isn’t working–because globalization has allowed the capital and assets of the 1 % (be they individuals or corporations) to travel freely, while those of the 99 % cannot. I think we’re heading towards a root to branch re-evaluation of how our market system works–and doesn’t work.

Why Bernie’s Right About Glass-Steagall

Edward Morris History News Network
Sanders believes that the repeal of Glass-Steagall in 1999 led to the formation of banks that became “too big to fail,” contributed to the financial crisis in 2008—and will lead to another crisis without corrective legislation. And he has a strong argument, one that can be effectively made using Citigroup, the two-century old bank that has a history of wreaking havoc on itself and the economy when it mixes commercial banking with with investment banking.

 The Panama Papers Expose the Hidden Wealth of the World’s Super-Rich

Chuck Collins The Nation
 The Panama Papers reveal the widespread use of shell corporations in the British Virgin Islands, the Seychelles in the Indian Ocean, and Panama. Historically, North American investors prefer tax havens in the Caribbean or Panama, with an estimated 54 percent of offshore investments going to those areas.   The release of the Panama Papers should give a strong boost to US and global campaigns to crack down on these global secrecy jurisdictions and practices.