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What Americans Thought of Jewish Refugees on the Eve of World War II

Ishaan Tharoor The Washington Post
1938-five years after Hitler came to power, after the beginning of the "Final Solution", Jewish refugees were denied entry into the United States. Then it was anti-Semitism and fear of European radicals and communists; today it is anti-Muslim hysteria. Then the U.S. closed its' eyes to the Holocaust; today GOP governors and congressmen are closing the borders while over 250,000 have died in Syria, there are over 3 million refugees and 6.5 million are internally displaced

Doris Lessing's MI5 File: Was She a Threat to the State?

Lara Feigel The Guardian
The security services set out to ensnare Lessing. But they weren't sure where she lived, why she went to Communist party meetings or even whether her nickname was Tigger or Trigger. M15 spied on Doris Lessing for 20 years, declassified documents reveal. Lara Feigel interrogates the secret archives.

We Are In Pitiless Times

Vijay Prashad Open Democracy
After Paris, macho language about “pitiless war” defines the contours of leadership. Little else is on offer. It is red meat to our emotions.

Win the War? No, Put an End To It

Jean-Pierre Piérot L'Humanité
The chaos in the Middle-east which has led to hundreds of thousands of refugees fleeing ISIL’s barbarous rule is the result of fifteen years of Western interventionism. How can France ever take a convincing stand against ISIL while claiming to be the main ally, and provider of fighter planes, to the Gulf monarchies. The real question, to which French diplomacy has so far given no convincing answer, is not how to win the war but how to put an end to it.

For the Sake of Another

Ashley Karllin Los Angeles Review of Books
Is contemporary altruism the new activism? Or is it what writer Teju Cole once called an iteration of a "White Savior Industrial Complex"? Ashley Karlin takes up these complicated questions in this review of Altruism: The Power of Compassion to Change Yourself and the World, by scientist-turned-Buddhist philosopher Matthieu Ricard. The answers, she suggests, may have as much to do with questions of power as with the desire to do good.

Chicago Votes to Welcome Refugees, Challenges Governor's Authority

Organized Communities Organized Communities
On Wednesday, the Chicago City Council voted on a resolution to reaffirm the City's "status as a sanctuary city, and its commitment to remain a place of sanctuary and refuge for refugees from all around the world."

Equity, Growth and Community

Chris Benner and Manuel Pastor LAANE
Equity, Growth and Community, a new book by Chris Benner and Manuel Pastor

Paradise Burned: How Climate Change Is Scorching California

Gary Cohn Capital and Main
California is facing the gravest threat to its natural beauty on record but many of us view the state’s expanded fire season as a cyclical anomaly – a belief sometimes spread by the mainstream media. To climate and environmental scientists, a new kind of fire and the expanded fire season are evidence that global warming is creating a new and vastly expanded fire danger to the West.

TEDxHavana Speech 2015 by Tom Hayden

Tom Hayden Democracy
Speech broadcast Saturday, Nov. 14, to the TEDxHavana conference on the Cuba-United States normalization process. More than two thousand attended.