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The New Politics of Disablement: The Contribution of Mike Oliver
| March 11, 2019
Michael Oliver (3 February 1945 to 2 March 2019) was a British academic, author, and disability rights activist. He was Emeritus Professor of Disability Studies at the University of Greenwich. … Keep reading »
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Digital Games: A Canary in the Coal Mine of Capital
| March 10, 2019
Not everyone plays digital games, but with the rise of casual, mobile-based gaming, we all know someone who does. With global sales revenues that far exceed global Hollywood’s annual box … Watch video »
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Exterminators-in-Chief: Trudeau, Bolsonaro, et al, and Informed Consent
| March 8, 2019
I read the Canadian news today: “Pipeline expansion should be approved: regulator.” Regulators ignorantly, negligently, criminally, and in contempt of life, yet again gave the go-ahead to money over incontestable science. Liberal democratic Canada is in league with Brazil’s military dictatorship and the Lima Group. Keep reading »
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A More Dangerous World: The Nuclear Arms Race, the INF Treaty and Canada
| March 7, 2019
On October 20, 2018, President Donald Trump announced that the United States would withdraw from the bilateral Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF) with Russia. The INF was signed by former U.S. President Ronald Reagan and former USSR President Mikhail Gorbachev in December 1987. Keep reading »
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Benjamin Netanyahu’s Other Charges: Crimes Against Humanity in Gaza
| March 6, 2019
Benjamin Netanyahu’s bad day Thursday got off to the worst possible start: before the Israeli general prosecutor Avichai Mandelblit officially called for the indictment of the Israeli Prime Minister for … Keep reading »
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Trudeau Doctrine
| March 5, 2019
Many Canadians are familiar with the Monroe Doctrine. First issued in 1823, it warned European powers against renewed colonization of the Western Hemisphere. Presented as anti-imperialist, the Monroe Doctrine was … Keep reading »
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For a Fighting Ecological Trade-Unionism
| March 4, 2019
How can we reconcile social struggle and environmental struggle? This question poses problems for trade unionists. To avoid a climate catastrophe, it would be necessary to reduce economic activity, to suppress useless or harmful production, to give up a substantial part of the means of transport. Keep reading »
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The Machinery of Images and the (Post-)Modern War
| March 3, 2019
On 14 February, 20-year-old Adil Ahmed Dar rammed a vehicle fill of explosives into a bus full of reserve police force personnel in Indian Occupied Kashmir. The attack killed over … Keep reading »
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The War on AMLO
| March 1, 2019
The Mexican and international right are united in their efforts to delegitimatize the AMLO presidency. Keep reading »
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Opportunities for the Montreal Urban Left
| February 28, 2019
Opportunities exist for an organized urban left one year into the Projet Montréal administration’s mandate. That was the key message of a recent event organized by the Montreal Urban Left, … Keep reading »
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An Inevitable Division: The Politics and Consequences of the Labour Split
| February 27, 2019
It’s the changing nature of class and capital that’s caused this split – and should shape the Left’s response to it. But discussing class meaningfully is the last media taboo. Keep reading »
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The Left and the U.S. Democratic Party w/ Adam Hilton
| February 26, 2019
Interview with Adam Hilton about the openings and obstacles for the left in engaging the terrain of the Democratic Party to advance a progressive agenda and embed a socialist movement in American politics. Listen to audio »
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