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African Ebola Outbreak: Growing Inequality in Global Healthcare at Root of Crisis

Juan Gonzalez, Amy Goodman, Dr. Paul Farmer Democracy Now!
The Ebola outbreak, which is the largest in history that we know about, is merely a reflection of the public health crisis in Africa, and it’s about the lack of staff, stuff and systems that could protect populations, particularly those living in poverty, from outbreaks like this or other public health threats.

St. Louis Prosecutor Has "Long Standing and Personal Bias"

Jamelle Bouie Slate Magazine
Demonstrators massed in Clayton, Missouri Thursday, August 21st, to demand a Special Prosecutor investigate the police killing of Ferguson teenager Mike Brown. They charged St. Louis County Prosecutor Robert McCulloch has a long-standing and personal bias in favor of the police and should be removed from the investigation. Also on Thursday, NAACP President Cornell William Brooks said, "It is impossible to believe" McCulloch can be "unbiased in this case."

Information Scarce, Warnings Mount as US Expands War in Iraq

Sarah Lazare Common Dreams
The information given the U.S. public on the exact scope and objective of the increased U.S. military role in Iraq is very "thin." Critics warn the increased air attacks could not only presage a wider war, but contradict other stated U.S. policies in the region and deepen the humanitarian crisis there as well.

Bank of America Gets Fined But Public Loses

Deon Roberts Charlotte Observer
On August 21st Bank of America agreed to pay a record $16.65 billion in fines for selling "toxic" mortgage securities. Critics charge the settlement will do little to help struggling homeowners victimized by the banks' illegal practices. And that portion of the settlement designated to go to public agencies and the states may be tax deductible. Bank of America's stock shares "surged" 4% following the announcement of the settlement.

EPA Forced to Require Pollution Monitoring of Oil Refineries

Jazelle Hunt BlackPressUSA
For the first time, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) may require oil refineries to regularly measure the air quality at their perimeters. These fence line measurements will give surrounding communities, largely low-income communities of color, data on the level of pollution they are exposed to each day. The new EPA rulemaking is in response to a lawsuit filed against the EPA for failing to adequately protect residents living near oil and chemical plants.

Israelis in US: An Open Letter to American Jews on Gaza War

Noam Sheizaf +972 Magazine
In its public appeal to the American Jewish community, Israelis For a Sustainable Future (IFSF), a new organization of Israelis living in the U.S., says "maintaining the occupation is what this war is all about." The IFSF appeals to American Jews to oppose the current policies of the Israeli government, and support Israeli voices for peace. "Israel needs your support to break out of the cycle of violence," the IFSF Open Letter says.

The Fed Should Be Meeting In Ferguson, Not Jackson Hole

Isaiah J. Poole Campaign for America's Future
The central bankers and the Ferguson residents would do well to switch places. Ferguson is actually a much better place from which to understand the consequences of the past six years of economic policies.

Obama Administration Calls the Supreme Court’s Hobby Lobby Bluff

Ian Millhiser Think Progress
The Obama Administration’s new rules will likely put an end to the Supreme Court’s ability to move the goalposts every time someone raises a new objection to the administration’s policy. Now, the country will have to wait to find out whether Hobby Lobby actually permits this latest set of rules — or whether the language in the Supreme Court's Hobby Lobby decision was simply Lucy pulling away the football one more time

The Coming Race War Won’t Be About Race

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Time
Kareem Abdul Jabar says that Ferguson is not just about systemic racism — it's about class warfare and how America's poor are held back