Special coverage in the Trump Era

From Public Citizen's Corporate Presidency site: "44 Trump administration officials have close ties to the Koch brothers and their network of political groups, particularly Vice President Mike Pence, White House Legislative Affairs Director Marc Short, EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt and White House budget director Mick Mulvaney."

Dark Money author Jane Mayer on The Dangers of President Pence, New Yorker, Oct. 23 issue on-line

Can Time Inc. Survive the Kochs? November 28, 2017 By
..."This year, among the Kochs’ aims is to spend a projected four hundred million dollars in contributions from themselves and a small group of allied conservative donors they have assembled, to insure Republican victories in the 2018 midterm elections. Ordinarily, political reporters for Time magazine would chronicle this blatant attempt by the Kochs and their allies to buy political influence in the coming election cycle. Will they feel as free to do so now?"...

"Democracy in Chains: The Deep History of the Radical Right’s Stealth Plan for America" see: our site, and George Monbiot's essay on this key book by historian Nancy MacLean.

Full interview with The New Yorker’s Jane Mayer March 29, 2017, Democracy Now! about her article, "The Reclusive Hedge-Fund Tycoon Behind the Trump Presidency: How Robert Mercer Exploited America’s Populist Insurgency."

Democracy Now! Special Broadcast from the Women's March on Washington

The Economics of Happiness -- shorter version

Local Futures offers a free 19-minute abridged version  of its award-winning documentary film The Economics of Happiness. It "brings us voices of hope of in a time of crisis." www.localfutures.org.

What's New?

May 19, 2012

The Sorrow of the Nakba

Joan Nestle blogs: "This is not an ethnic cleansing from the far distant past, this is not a forced expulsion from two centuries ago, the Nakba is lived everyday and we all lose our human way when we do not say its name, when we do nothing to bring the Palestinian people home."

"So many of our present lands have been ripped away from other peoples, from indigenous peoples who failed the invaders' notion of humanity. In my first country of America, most native Americans struggle to survive hopelessness so severe the United Nations has taken up their cause and yet no national politician includes their exile from hope on his or her agenda and in my second country, Australia, while the needs of Aboriginal people are discussed almost every day in the newspapers and the national culture honors the Aboriginal concept of dream time, deep daily deprivation of  basic living securities haunts the inner cities and the bush where Aboriginal elders try to hold the past and the present together. These expulsions from land happened so long ago, many say, that we are not responsible for these overwhelming losses. But still it is possible to study these histories of loss in school and say the words, European invasion or manifest destiny, without breaking a national law, without being arrested, without being seen as a traitor to the only allowed historical narrative.  Other countries, such as Turkey, forbid the discussion of ethnic cleansings carried out by the national state, as if mass collective suffering was a wisp of bad air in the national rooms. And then there is Israel and its forbidding of the word "Nakba," its refusal to recogonize in any way that its creation was bought on the back of another people, that this solution to the crimes of the Holocaust was to create another people's mass suffering that goes on and on."
Read full article here

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