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Can Tech Avert Climate Change?

Brenda Ekwurzel / Peter Frumhoff Union of Concerned Scientists
The scientific body established by a law signed by President Lincoln released two groundbreaking reports today on geoengineering. The reports raise fundamental questions regarding efficacy, safety, economy and governance.

As Public Pensions Shift to Risky Wall Street, Local Politicians Rake in Political Cash

Amy Goodman / Davis Sirota Democracy Now!
Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, who once served as President Obama’s chief of staff, received more than $600,000 in campaign contributions from executives at investment firms that manage Chicago pension funds. The head of a New Jersey board that determines how the state invests its $80 billion pension fund was in direct contact with top political and campaign fundraising aides for New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie during his re-election bid.

Who Won and Who Lost at the Minsk Talks on Ukraine

Alexander Mercouris Russia Insider
Already there is debate about who "won" and who "lost" in the agreement on the crisis in the Ukraine reached in Minsk, the capital of Belarus this week. The big difference between the so-called Minsk II agreement, announced February 12 and the previous agreements is the Europeans are now formally involved. But any progress in implementing the accords will depend on whether the European governments can convince the government in Kiev to abide by the agreements.

Swiss Bank Helped Finance Some of Africa’s Bloodiest Wars

Will Fitzgibbon and Martha M. Hamilton International Consortium of Investigative Journalists
Journalists from 45 countries have unearthed secret bank accounts that reveal the global banking giant HSBC profited from doing business with arms dealers who channeled mortar bombs to child soldiers in Africa, bag men for Third World dictators, traffickers in blood diamonds and other international outlaws. These disclosures shine a light on the intersection of international crime and so-called legitimate business at one of the world’s largest banks.

Water Privatization: “Notoriously At Odds With Democracy”

Victoria Collier CounterPunch
Private U.S. corporations, taking advantage of lucrative opportunities created by the intentionally crippled tax base of local governments, are grabbing public assets and resources, particularly water. But water is not a commodity; it is a human right. And in the U.S., as around the world, the onslaught of corporate privatization is being countered by a powerful backlash to reclaim that precious resource for the public sphere.

Washington’s Prying Eyes and the Latin American Backlash

Kirsten Weld North American Congress on Latin America (NACLA)
Edward Snowden’s 2013 revelations about the NSA’s global surveillance practices sparked outrage around the world, but nowhere more than in Latin America. Now that the dust has settled, we should ask: Did the Latin American response to the NSA disclosures represent a historic break in hemispheric relations? Or was this just business as usual, another insult added to the ongoing injury of U.S. hegemony in the Americas?

The Chapel Hill Murders: Why Muslim Lives Don’t Matter

Nadia El-Zein Tonova and Khaled A. Beydoun AlJazeera America
The aftermath of the murder of the three American students in Chapel Hill reconfirms the truth that Muslim lives matter only when they're villains not victims. But the responsibility extends beyond the media. Government-run programs targeting Muslims as "enemy combatants", "national security risks", and "unassimilable", affix the state seal of approval on the vilification of Muslim Americans, stirring Islamophobia and spurring violence.

Simmering Labor Fight Brings Crippling Delays to West Coast Seaports

Erik Eckholm The New York Times
"...owners said they would suspend the unloading of container and other cargo ships on Thursday, Monday and the weekend because of what they called "a strike with pay." The move followed a similar two-day limit on work last weekend that angered many port workers. They saw it as a ploy to punish them and increase pressure to settle on a new labor contract after nine months of negotiations, which continue with the aid of a federal mediator."

No More Late Nights With Jon Stewart

Emily Nussbaum The New Yorker
The truth is that Stewart was often at his most exciting when he got down in the dirt, instead of remaining decent and high-minded, your twinkly-eyed smartest friend. That kind of digging, of disrespecting authority, was a model for reinventing journalism, not comedy.