Interview with an ‘Iraqi’ Revolutionary Unless the ruling classes manage to divide the proletariat along religious, ethnic and regional lines, there will most probably be riots, strikes and uprisings in Baghdad, Karkuk, Mosul, Basra, ... 11/6/2024 - 9:45 am | View Link
What a bloody choice: US socialist on the movements and the election Kevin Ovenden interviews Saman Sepehri, an Iranian socialist who has been active in the US radical left for many years, especially involved in social struggle in the Midwest Many socialists and ... 11/3/2024 - 6:48 am | View Link
Yellow Butterflies A man dressed in white with yellow butterflies pinned to his shirt is doing a dramatic reading from Cien años. He has a powerful voice, at odds with the gentleness of Garcia Márquez’s prose, and his ... 11/3/2024 - 4:05 am | View Link
Israel expands strikes against Hezbollah to Lebanon's northern border with Syria Gaza An Israeli strike destroyed a bridge in the upper reaches of northern Lebanon, official media said on Sunday, in an expansion of an air campaign against Hezbollah supply lines from Syria. Lebanon ... 11/3/2024 - 1:22 am | View Link
Israel wants civil war in Lebanon, it won't get it Lebanese people rising up against Hezbollah amidst attacks on their country & genocide in Gaza is a Western fantasy. Netanyahu knows this, writes Seb Shehadi. 10/31/2024 - 5:18 am | View Link
The elites of the anti-vaccine, “medical freedom” world saw the presidential election unfold at a hotel watch party in West Palm Beach, with a giddy, rising sense of what was unfolding.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the nation’s most famous anti-vaccine activist turned presidential candidate turned Trump booster, turned up at the event before heading to Mar a Lago; at the hotel, he sat alongside Del Bigtree, his campaign’s communications manager and the founder of Informed Consent Action Network, another major anti-vax group.
Since Donald Trump won reelection, President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris have both done what the now-president-elect and his fellow Republicans refused to do in 2020: publicly accept loss and advocate for a peaceful transition of power.
In a Thursday morning speech outside the White House, Biden told Americans, “We accept the choice the country made.”
“I’ve said many times,” he continued, “you can’t love your country only when you win.
In the coming days, you will hear every imaginable take on why Americans voted to put Donald Trump back in office.
Pundits will say toxic masculinity was to blame—and men feeling usurped by women. They’ll say it was the Christian nationalism movement. A surprising shift in Latino voting patterns. Sexism. Racism.
In January, former President Donald Trump will reclaim the White House after years of vowing to unleash an unprecedented overhaul of the immigration system in the United States. With mass deportation as a central promise of his campaign, Trump will undoubtedly build on the sweeping crackdown that marked his first term.
He already has promised to restore the travel prohibition on foreigners from Muslim-majority countries (often called the “Muslim ban”).
By LINLEY SANDERS
WASHINGTON (AP) — Donald Trump won the presidency after holding tight to his core base of voters and slightly expanding his coalition to include several groups that have traditionally been a part of the Democratic base. That finding comes from AP VoteCast, a sweeping survey of more than 120,000 voters nationwide that shows what issues mattered to voters in this election.
Trump picked up a small but significant share of Black and Hispanic voters, and made narrow gains with men and women.
William Garriott
(The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.)
William Garriott, Drake University
(THE CONVERSATION) Nov. 5, 2024, was a tough day for cannabis legalization supporters.
Recreational legalization ballot questions in Florida, North Dakota and South Dakota all failed.
Two medical measures passed in Nebraska but face legal challenges over the validity of the signatures required to get the measures on the ballot.