Skip to main content

Why Passengers Cheered a Vermont Bus Strike

Ellen David Friedman Labor Notes
The bus drivers' strike in Burlington, Vermont succeeded through a powerful combination of workers organizing on the job and organized community solidarity, the roots of which go back to at least 2009.

`Jobs vs. the Environment': How to Counter This Divisive Big Lie

Jeremy Brecher The Nation
We can, and must, create common ground between the labor and climate movements. To paraphrase Abraham Lincoln, if God had intended some people to fight just for the environment and others to fight just for the economy, he would have made some people who could live without money and others who could live without water and air. There are not two groups of people, environmentalists and workers. We all need a livelihood and we all need a livable planet to live on.

How Billionaires Use the Government as a Tool to Destroy Companies They've Bet Against

Les Leopold comments_image 35 COMMENTS Alternet
This is the heart of the new financialism and it is happening all over the country. If this were just one isolated case, we could probably live with it. It might even lead to a new law that would outlaw Ackman's outrageous behavior. But this kind of de-creative destruction is now a central feature of our new financialized economy. It is now routine for big-time investors to make bets against companies and then try to bring those companies down using a variety of tactics.

Earth Day, Labor, and Me

Joe Uehlein ZNetwork
When it comes to the environment, organized labor has two hearts beating within a single breast.

Raising Our Expectations

Sam Gindin Jacobin
Jane McAlevey challenges the Left to stop lamenting its disappointments in the working class and address our own failures.

Carl Bloice: 1939-2014 Goodnight Sweet Poet

Conn Hallinan Dispatches From the Edge
Conn Hallinan remembers Carl Bloice— Foreign Policy In Focus columnist, longtime journalist and lifetime advocate for the dispossessed.