Skip to main content

The Environmental Consequences of Privatizing Mexico’s Oil

Christopher Sellers Dissent Magazine
Today’s American readers will find the arguments favoring Peña Nieto’s energy reform familiar. They center around the flaws of the state-run enterprise: its corruption and inefficiency, its coddling of unions, and its monopoly in the national market for consumer goods such as gasoline, which has kept prices high. But thus far, the debates have hardly touched upon the local consequences of this reform for regions that will be most affected.

On Syria, a U.N. Vote Isn’t Optional

By Oona A. Hathaway and Scott J. Shapiro The New York Times
The question Congress and Mr. Obama must ask now is whether employing force to punish Mr. Assad’s use of chemical weapons is worth endangering the fragile international order that is World War II’s most significant legacy.

The Activist

By Kurt Chandler Milwaukee Magazine
No stranger to protest, the head of Voces de la Frontera, Christine Neumann-Ortiz, has put herself and her organization at the center of one of the most bitter labor disputes in recent Milwaukee history. Can she win?