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MI5 and the Hobsbawm File

Frances Stonor Saunders London Review of Books
The British security service, MI5, its war on communism, and its file on Eric Hobsbawm, 'one of the pre-eminent British historians of the 20th century.'

The Scene of the Crime

Seymour M. Hersh The New Yorker
A reporter’s journey to My Lai and the secrets of the past.

Students Occupy Swarthmore College in Fossil Fuel Divestment Protest

Suzanne Goldenberg The Guardian
Nearly two-thirds of Swarthmore’s 1,500 students signed a petition last December calling on the university to exit coal, oil and gas holdings. The Swarthmore Mountain Justice campaign is calling for an immediate freeze on new fossil fuel investments, followed by a staged withdrawal over five years.

Solidarity Not Fear: World Social Forum Opens in Tunisia

Sarah Lazare Common Dreams
Under the slogan, "Together to pursue the revolution of rights and dignity," over 4,000 organizations from 120 countries are attending the international gathering, which takes place from March 24 to 28. Groups range a wide breadth of nations and causes, from the global peasant movement La Via Campesina to the Tunisian Association of Democratic Women to the international feminist action movement World March of Women.

Seven Questions for Benjamin Schwarz

Jeremy Beer The American Conservative
In an interview with Benjamin Schwarz, the editor of The American Conservative, and an ex Rand Corporation consultant, in which he is critical of the US hegemonic role in world affairs from a conservative, not a "right" point of view. So interesting that he uses Marx to describe the actions of US Foreign Policy to dominate the world for what we call neo-liberal economic domination.

US Accuses Israel of Spying on Nuclear Talks with Iran

Julian Borger, Mairav Zonszein, Sabrina Siddiquiin The Guardian
“It is one thing for the US and Israel to spy on each other. It is another thing for Israel to steal US secrets and play them back to US legislators to undermine US diplomacy,” the Wall Street Journal quoted a senior US official as saying.

Volkswagen in Tennessee: Productivity’s Price

Chris Brooks Labor Notes
Company documents show VW’s management method is modeled on “lean production,” the philosophy created at Toyota, then popularized across the auto industry and beyond. In fact, VW is trying to out-Toyota Toyota. The German company aims to overtake its Japanese competitor and become the world’s most profitable automobile manufacturer by 2018. So the Chattanooga plant provides a window into the state of the art of brutal productivity-maximizing management schemes.

Film Review: "Taxi" – A Ridealong Career Selfie From Banned Iranian Director, Jafar Panahi, Takes Top Prize at Berlin

Peter Bradshaw The Guardian
“Taxi” is Iranian director Jafar Panahi’s third film since he was arrested in 2010 and charged with making anti-government propaganda. He was barred from making films for 20 years, from leaving the country and from speaking to the foreign media. He got around some of these restrictions this time by filming inside a taxi driving through the streets of Tehran, producing a beautifully humane fable. "Taxi" took the top prize at the Berlin Film Festival.

Adjuncts Struggle to Unionize at a Liberal College

Michelle M. Tokarczyk Working-Class Perspectives
Adjuncts make up about 70% of the American professoriate. Adjuncts usually make $20,000–$25,000 a year, often by teaching courses at various institutions each semester. They have no job security, and frequently receive no health or retirement benefits. But they have begun fighting to improve their lot. SEIU is organizing in several states.