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Great Gamble on the Mekong

Nathaniel Eisen Foreign Policy in Focus
A proposed dam on the Mekong River would provide energy for the region, but at a significant environmental cost.

What We Can Learn From Ella Baker In A Post-Ferguson Era

Peter Dreier Talking Points Memo
In 1964 . . . Ella Baker said: "Until the killing of black men, black mothers' sons, becomes as important to the rest of the country as the killing of a white mother's sons, we who believe in freedom cannot rest. Baker's words continue to resonate today . . . sparked by the police killings of young black men, but rooted in the underlying grievances of racial injustice around jobs, housing, schools, and the criminal justice system.

After Cuba, Obama Can Make History by Recognizing Palestine

Juan Cole The Nation
Secretary Kerry’s attempt to conclude . . . accords was . . . always quixotic and doomed to failure. A powerful Israeli state simply has no reason to abide by its commitments with a stateless, weak people divided into bantustans and encircled by checkpoints. If Palestinian statelessness is at the root of the crisis, then the solution is obvious. The Palestinians must erect, and be recognized as, a state.

My Glorious Brothers

Uri Avnery / Morris U. Schappes Uri Averney's English weekly / Masses & Mainstream (Trussel)
The heroes of antiquity are perhaps due for another revision of their status.

Big business cries wolf over NLRB election rules

John A. Logan The Hill
The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) issued long-awaited new rules to modernize and streamline union certification elections and to eliminate the worst cases of pre-election delay. The board is mandated to protect the rights of employees to form unions and bargain collectively, but numerous academic studies have demonstrated that the current NLRB election process fails to protect workers' free choice.

Who's Afraid of Peer Review?

John Bohannon Science Magazine
A spoof paper concocted by Science reveals little or no scrutiny at many open-access journals.

Immigration Bill’s New Bracero Program Will Hurt Farmworkers

David Bacon Labor Notes
One of the most important parts of the Senate's bill, and of all the "comprehensive immigration reform" proposals, is a big increase in guestworker programs. Employers demand them as a price for supporting legalization of the undocumented. But our history tells us that this is a very high price. Especially for farmworkers, guestworker programs have been a terrible idea.

The Income Tax Turns 100 — Who Pays What?

Joshua Holland Bill Moyers and Company
How is it that American corporations are paying a smaller share of federal income taxes when the rates paid by individuals dropped much further? It’s simple: ordinary American families don’t have teams of lobbyists to win them loopholes or armies of tax accountants and attorneys to exploit them.