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Film Review: The Brilliance of 'Birth of a Nation"

Eric Kohn Iniiewire
After premiering to prolonged standing ovations and plenty of critical acclaim, the slave revolt drama, Birth of a Nation, set off the fiercest bidding war Sundance has ever seen. Fox Searchlight has come out on top, landing the drama in a record-breaking $17.5 million deal, the biggest purchase in Sundance history.

Global Sweatshops, Solidarity and the Bangladesh Breakthrough

Eric Dirnbach Public Seminar
After decades of campaigns, the global movement against sweatshops had a few modest (but important) victories. However, a recent breakthrough in Bangladesh in encouraging, and may show the way for making more dramatic changes in the garment industry.

The Five Lamest Excuses for Hillary Clinton’s Vote to Invade Iraq

Stephen Zunes Foreign Policy in Focus
There’s no question that the United States is long overdue to elect a woman head of state. But electing Hillary Clinton — or anyone else who supported the invasion of Iraq — would be sending a dangerous message that reckless global militarism needn’t prevent someone from becoming president, even as the nominee of the more liberal of the two major parties.

#FreeMarissa: One Year Later

Free Marissa Now Mobilization Campaign
The Free Marissa Now Mobilization Campaign shares a special message from Marissa herself one year after she was released from prison.

Cabbies Block Roads as France Hit by Multiple Strikes

Gina Doggett AFP
French taxi drivers blocked key roads and hundreds of flights were cancelled as air traffic controllers joined civil servants, hospital staff and teachers for a "Black Tuesday" of strikes.

Reclaiming MLK’s Unspeakable Nightmare: The Progression Of Racism In America

IBRAM KENDI African American Intellectual History Society
January 25, 2016 We must reclaim King’s nightmare—and place it forever more beside the dream along the banner of King’s memory. We must reclaim the nightmare as a symbol of the progression of racism—a progression that liberals tend to downplay and conservatives tend to dismiss outright.

Labour Goes South

Justin Miller The American Prospect
Can the movement rebuild itself below the Mason-Dixon line, and change Southern politics in the process?