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Chief U.S. Ally in War on ISIS Conducts 61st Beheading of 2014

Al Akhbar Mint Press
Saudi Arabia, a chief U.S. ally in the “War on ISIS,” conducted 61 beheadings in 2014. Rape, murder, armed robbery, drug trafficking, and apostasy are all punishable by death under Saudi Arabia's strict version of Islamic Sharia Law. Christof Heyns, the UN Special Rapporteur on executions has called for a moratorium on the death penalty in Saudi Arabia, charging the trials are "grossly unfair," often relying on confessions obtained through torture.

UPS To Stop Kicking Pregnant Women Out Of Their Jobs

Bryce Covert ThinkProgress
In response to a lawsuit filed by one of its female former employees, UPS announced it had "voluntarily decided" to provide light duty work as an accommodation to its pregnant employees, much as it does for workers with on-the-job injuries, disabilities, and other work restrictions. The announced change in policy was submitted in a brief filed in a Supreme Court case brought by a pregnant UPS employee who was denied light duty and placed on unpaid leave.

Can We Defend Our Pensions Without Challenging Financialized Capitalism?

Kevin Skerrett Socialist Project
Can privately invested pension funds be disconnected from destructive financial patterns and deployed in socially positive ways? Can neoliberal capitalism be forced to provide decent pensions to all workers? Can a predatory private financial system be reformed?

The Mediterranean is Europe's Migrant Graveyard

Matt Carr Inter Press Service
More than 3,000 migrants have drowned attempting to cross the Mediterranean this year, more than any previous year. The European Union (EU) is ignoring the tragedy unfolding on its southern maritime borders and its impact on the so-called border countries of Greece, Spain, Italy, and Malta. The EU's "woeful response" has transformed the Mediterranean into a “survival test for refugees and migrants," and thousands are paying with their lives.

America's Broken Promise to the Women of Afghanistan

Ann Jones TomDispatch
The liberation of Afghanistan women was one of the Bush Administration's prime selling points for the U.S. invasion in 2001. But for more than a decade the U.S. has repeatedly sided with the most ultraconservative undemocratic forces in Afghanistan to the detriment of the rights of Afghan women. Today, after 13 years of war, and 13 years of U.S. promises, the women of Afghanistan "have been shut out, shut down, and silenced by fear."

The ISIS Quagmire

Fred Kaplan Slate
America’s campaign against ISIS has already lost its way.

Hints of Progress in the Ebola Fight

Dina Fine Maron Scientific American
The number of Ebola cases appear to be dropping in Liberia—but what will it take to stamp out the disease?

Jim Crow Returns

Greg Palast Al Jazeera
Millions of minority voters are threatened by an electoral purge