Skip to main content

Why Does California Have So Many Wildfires?

Kendra Pierre-Louis and John Schwartz The New York Times
There are four key ingredients to the disastrous wildfire seasons in the West, and climate change figures prominently.

The ‘Fragile’ Middle East and the Declining Power of the Petrostates

Patrick Cockburn The Independent
Abu Dhabi’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan (l), US President Donald Trump, and Saudi Arabia’s King Salman bin Abdulaziz.
Historic change is taking place in the Middle East and North Africa, but it has nothing to do with the much-trumpeted “historic” pact between Israel and the UAE. The 50-year misrule of the petrostates is ending and the results could be shattering.

Tapping the Enormous Electoral Potential of Low Income Voters

Frances Madeson Capital & Main
A voter registration booth at a memorial site for George Floyd.
What impact could 34 million poor nonvoters make if they started participating in elections? According to a new report commissioned by the Poor People’s Campaign, it could be massive and warrants the deployment of significant 2020 campaign resources.

Memo to the Left: Winning Votes is Not ‘Selling Out’

Loris Caruso il manifesto
We do not have to choose between “winning” or “bearing witness and representing." There is no contradiction. In order to bear witness and represent, people must put themselves forward as candidates for social and political victory,

Nominative Determinism--A found poem*

Ellaraine Lockie Poetrysuperhighway.com
Nominative determinism, explains poet Ellaraine Lockie about a certain president, is the hypothesis that people gravitate towards areas of work that fit their name.

Martinez-Cuevas: Reckoning with Labor Law’s Racist Roots

Marina Multhaup onlabor
Workers working in the fields.
The Washington Supreme Court is currently deliberating a case that could have major economic effects for our most vulnerable workers while beginning to unravel one long-standing piece of our nation’s white supremacist history.

How Physics Erases the Beginning of the Universe

Ethan Siegel Forbes
It’s one of the most remarkable achievements of science of all: that we can go back billions of years in time and understand when and how our Universe, as we know it, came to be this way.