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Bad News for Brazilian Democracy

Gianpaolo Baiocchi Boston Review
Well aware that the votes were most likely not going her way, she stoically delivered a defense aimed more at the history books and the broader public than at the senators. She recalled her previous appearance at a show trial during the dictatorship, and the torture she endured as a result. She discussed the Workers’ Party project and policies. To the irritation of her accusers, she repeatedly referred to the proceedings as a “coup” and an affront to the Brazilian people

Standing Rock Protests: This is Only the Beginning

Rebecca Solnit The Guardian
What’s happening at Standing Rock is extraordinary and possibly transformative for native rights, Sioux history, and the intersection of the climate movement with indigenous communities.

Census Data 'Starkly Illustrates' the Time for Single Payer Is Now

Nadia Prupis Common Dreams
The data "starkly illustrates how our inefficient, private-insurance-based system of financing care is fundamentally incapable of providing universal coverage," said pediatrician and PNHP president Dr. Robert Zarr. "The fact that 29 million people remain uninsured—a figure that won't change much over the next decade, according to the Congressional Budget Office—is totally unacceptable to me as a physician."

Saudi Arabia Bill Opens US to Avalanche of Lawsuits

Stephen Kinzer The Boston Globe
No one could sue the United States for damages, reasons Representative Jerrold Nadler of New York, a sponsor of the bill, because “the United States does not engage in international terrorist activity.” He may honestly believe that, but judges in other countries might disagree.

Honduras and Israel: A New Special Relationship

Belén Fernández TeleSUR TV English
Just as it serviced murderous regimes in Central America in the 1980s, Israel will now be exporting forms of repression to Honduras' abusive government.

IRS Goes After Pastors for Peace for Sending Aid to Cuba

Nora Gamez Torres In Cuba Today
For years, the U.S.-based Pastors for Peace defied the embargo on Cuba with “caravans” of humanitarian aid hauled across the U.S.-Mexico border that were then shipped to the island.

Donald Trump in the Bayou

Arlie Russell Hochschild TomDispatch
This essay has been adapted from Arlie Hochschild’s new book, Strangers in Their Own Land: Anger and Mourning on the American Right (The New Press), which will be published on September 6th. The Tea Party, a Sinkhole in Louisiana, and the Contradictions of American Political Life.

2016 Election Curriculum

Linda Burnham and others Organizing Upgrade
Moderator's Note: This curriculum is a powerful and accessible tool for political education and mobilization! Download this, tailor for your own specific use, launch discussion and debate and then plan collective ACTION for justice and peace!

Reframing the Minimum-Wage Debate

Michelle Chen / David Howell The Nation / The American Prospect
Why “no job loss” is the wrong standard for setting the right wage floor.