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Beyond Social Movement Unionism

Sam Gindin Jacobin
Bringing together weak unions and weak social movements isn’t enough. We need a new kind of socialist party.

Does Henry Kissinger Have a Conscience?

Jon Lee Anderson The New Yorker
Last week, the first tranche of those declassified documents was released. The documents revealed that White House and U.S. State Department officials were intimately aware of the Argentine military’s bloody nature, and that some were horrified by what they knew. Others, most notably Henry Kissinger, were not.

Dispatches From the Culture Wars

Portside
White nash fash in Houston; World Social Forum in Montreal; Indian eco power in Cannon Ball; Armed sisters in Rojava; New debtors’ prison

California’s $15 Minimum Wage Earthquake!

Martin J. Bennett Beyond Chron
The California minimum wage earthquake is shaking up state and national politics. There is a powerful lesson from the $15 minimum-wage campaign: only a grassroots movement from below based upon a bold vision for structural reform can change public opinion and pressure government to act.

US Targeted Killing Rules Conflate Legality and Politics

Marjorie Cohn Truthout
Under the guise of increased transparency, the administration has revealed partial information about its targeted killing program. But much remains classified. And what we do know does not comply with the law.

In Ixcanul, Guatemala’s First-Ever Oscar Entry

Nikola Grozdanovic Indie Wire
Jayro Bustamante‘s debut feature “Ixcanul” generates its power from an intimate observance of the quotidian. As such, its titular volcano — the translation of Ixcanul in the Mayan K’iche’ dialect spoken in Guatemala — is the least volcanic thing in it. Steeped in a culture rarely observed on screen and filmed entirely in Kaqchikel, Bustamante’s film explores a clash between reproductive rights and tradition.

Our Revolution is Just Getting Started

Peter Olney and Rand Wilson The Stansbury Forum
Now that the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia has ended with Hillary Clinton as the party’s nominee, Bernie Sanders’ campaign for “political revolution” moves to its next phase.

Mass Surveillance Isn’t Colorblind

Sandra Fulton Foreign Policy in Focus
Government spying is a problem for everyone. But people of color, religious minorities, and political dissidents are far more likely to be victims of unwarranted monitoring.