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Race Is About More Than Discrimination

Bill Fletcher Jr. Monthly Review
Organized labor must adopt a different framework that starts with the difficult discussion about U.S. history . . . to lay the foundation for a different domestic and international strategy for workers’ rights and justice.

The Dignity of Labor

William P. Jones Dissent Magazine
Despite the outpouring of praise for essential workers during the COVID-19 pandemic, their own interests continue to come second to the broader public’s need for cheap and reliable labor.

Living and Working in the Time of the Pandemic in Pakistan

Maria Arshad Arcus Center for Social Justice Leadership
People in Pakistan desperately hope and long for a return to normality, but as the writer Arundhati Roy already noted: nothing could be worse than a return to the normality because that normality was unjust to its core.

Unprepared to Reopen Safely Colleges Are Prepared to Blame Their Students

Julia Marcus & Jessica Gold The Atlantic
Paul Quinn College, a small, historically black college in Dallas, Texas.
Despite serious public-health concerns, many college campuses are slated to reopen for in-person instruction this fall. Students will get infected, and universities will rebuke them for it; campuses will close, and students will be blamed for it.

How to Avoid Reproduction

Molly Martin The Stansbury Forum
Republicans’ answer to the prospect of socialized medicine is, for a growing number of Americans, no healthcare at all. And the attacks on women’s reproductive care continue.