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Hope in an Environmental Wasteland

03 Tuesday Jul 2012

Posted by xraymike79 in Capitalism, Climate Change, Consumerism, Corporate State, Ecological Overshoot, Environmental Degradation, Inequality, Pollution

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Capitalism, Climate Change, David Hilfiker, Ecological Overshoot, Economic Collapse, Empire, Environmental Collapse, Financial Elite, Gross Inequality, Inverted Totalitarianism, Neoliberal Capitalism, Poverty, The Elite 1%

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David Cameron could be replaced by any number of heads of state. The externalization of costs is intrinsic to capitalism and not something that can be changed without radically altering what we know to be this current economic system. I’ll be on sabbatical for a few weeks, so I won’t be analyzing too much, but Monbiot just put out an essay that deserves some commentary when I get more time.

David Hilfiker is someone I’ve quoted before, but I haven’t revisited his website until recently. I’m glad to find that he’s still producing. His work is licensed under a creative commons, so I’m re-publishing a recent essay of his worth reading:

Hope in an Environmental Wasteland

If we can’t fix something, does it make sense to try?

It’s too late to prevent climate change; it already happening, and much worse is coming. The powerful forces of consumerism, a capitalist economic system, government, the power of the corporations, and the influence of the media create a web that we will not untangle without profound changes in our society. If we can’t actually solve the problems of global warming and climate change, if the results are going to be tragic, where do we find hope? How do we respond? Paradoxically, responses are popping up everywhere. Something new is afoot.

I sometimes teach classes about the environmental crises facing us and the devastation they’ll cause.  One of the basic messages of the course is that preventing climate change is no longer possible.  It’s already here and much more is inevitable.  I explain at the beginning of the course that the forces arrayed against environmental sanity are simply too strong for the usual political or personal fixes to be effective.  And until we understand what we’re up against, we can’t react effectively.  American consumerism, the structure of our government, the nature of our economic system, the power of the corporations, and the dominance of media are a tightly interwoven web that is virtually invulnerable to human attack.  I warn class members that the first two-thirds of our time together will be depressing, but I ask them to hang in there with me until our last sessions when we can begin to talk about what hope might look like.

But they never do hang in there.  By the third or fourth session, each class has, in one way or another, resisted or outright refused to continue examining the web and has insisted on asking, sometimes angrily, what we can do about it.

But to ask “What can we do about it?” usually means “What can we do to fix it?”  When I respond that there’s nothing we can do to fix it, there’s near rebellion within the class.  Where’s the hope, then?  What good does it do to understand it if we can’t fix it?  Why should we do anything at all?

Every class so far has responded this way.  It seems built in, programmed.  You may have similar feelings as you read on.  What’s going on?

The Positive Outlook as Problem

Our country’s historical optimism and positive outlook are blinding us to the painful future that awaits us.  We Americans have an unshakeable faith in progress, in our capacity to overcome obstacles.  “Things’ll turn out,” we remind each other.  “Look at the bright side,” we say.  Even when things clearly won’t work out, even when there is no bright side, it’s rude to say so in mixed company.

This official optimism is thoroughly grounded not only in the Enlightenment thinking that suffuses the West but also in our particular history as a nation.  The colonization of the Americas, the taming of the frontier, and the growth of an affluent middle class all required confidence unwarranted by the chances of success.  But the eventual success reinforced our native optimism.  Until the last fifty years, our experience has been that as a nation we can accomplish whatever we set our minds to.

We’ve been understandably proud of our can-do attitude.  We attribute much of our success to our optimism and willingness to forge on against seemingly insuperable odds.  We have risen above nature, we believe, and are no longer subject to it.  Our intellect and our technology will ultimately solve any problem.  Anything less than a positive outlook is considered “defeatist” or “needlessly depressing.”  We shouldn’t be “quitters.”  Optimism is part of the American creed.  It’s official.

So what’s the matter with that?

The circumstances of our history have changed dramatically and our persistent optimism is obscuring reality, shrouding what’s really happening and diverting us from our real work.  The United States is the only industrialized country, for instance, where there is no national, politically effective response to our environmental future.  The most benign bill to establish a system of cap-and-trade of carbon emissions didn’t stand a chance in Congress.  Of the 65 Republicans who agreed to answer the question (most refused an interview), “only five said they believed a ‘significant amount’ of climate change was due to human activity.”[1]   As we’ll see, there are political and economic reasons for this stance, but it could not dominate the public discussion except for our official optimism that, really, we can manage anything that happens.

Global Climate Change

The environmental challenges we face are overwhelming, any one of which could rise to the top of our list of concerns under the right circumstances:

  • climate change
  • the loss of farmland the size of Nebraska around the world every year
  • the decimation of ocean fisheries from overfishing
  • the loss of biological diversity with an estimated rate of species extinction 1000 times the rate of normal loss
  • the pollution of air and water, the long-term effects of which (cancer, fetal abnormalities, cognitive dysfunction, and so on) often take decades to reveal themselves, and
  • the loss of freshwater, which will almost certainly lead to 21st century resource wars

Any of these is a profound threat to our civilization, but the most immediate and most on our minds is climate change, so I’ll stick with that.

Carbon Emissions, Tipping Points, and Likely Outcomes

Most readers will know a fair amount about global climate change, recognize that it’s primarily the result of carbon dioxide (CO­2) emissions from human activity, and accept the scientific consensus of an ominous future if carbon emissions are not controlled.  To recapitulate briefly, climate change is the result of a drastic rise greenhouse gases—CO­2, methane, nitrous oxide and others—unlike any the Earth has seen in 200,000 years.  Sunlight can pass unchanged through this layer of gases, but the warmth produced when it strikes the Earth can’t pass back out.  So the Earth has warmed an average of 0.7º Celsius (C) or 1.0º Fahrenheit (F) above the baseline that had been consistent for millennia.

What some are just beginning to acknowledge is that the battle to prevent climate change is already lost.  Even some mainstream TV has dropped the conditional.  It’s no longer “possible” or “some-scientists-say” climate change or “if” or “when” climate change occurs.  With rising oceans; frightening changes in disease distribution; the increasing occurrence of record-setting heat waves and droughts; and record floods, hurricanes and tornados; the climate is changing fast.  As environmentalist Bill McKibben writes in his book Eaarth, we live on a new planet … and we won’t get the old one back.

Given the current forty percent increase in the concentration of greenhouse gasses, the unwillingness of major polluters like China and the United States even to consider real changes, and how long it will take to reach sustainable levels of emissions even after major polluters have sincerely committed themselves to radical action, CO­2 emissions won’t even begin to decrease anytime soon, and certainly not before further, even more dangerous, destabilization of the climate.

Reports from the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) warn that if we don’t keep the total temperature rise below 2º C, the risks will be too great to accept.  Unfortunately, because of CO­2’s long half-life in the atmosphere, just the CO­2 we’ve already emitted commits us to a rise of 1.5º C.

One must understand, however, that the IPCC’s estimates and predictions are very conservative.  Their mandate is to carefully present data that is unassailable, but individually many scientists on the panel are more forthcoming and, in general, deeply pessimistic.  For them, the science is bad enough, but the practicalities are worse.  We’ll examine those practicalities below.

The End of the Long Summer

There’s a further dark cloud on the horizon that—in keeping with our innate optimism—has been only minimally publicized.  The last 11,700 years have been a period of unusual climatic stability, labeled by one author “The Long Summer.”[2] Without this stability, many scientists believe, agriculture and the establishment of our civilizations would have been unlikely.  But in the last 120,000 years, no other stable period like this has occurred.  The normal has been wild swings in climate with temperature changes of up to 10º C in as little as fifty years, perhaps fewer.

Scientists aren’t yet sure what has given us the long summer, but, given the much more common instability in our history, they fear that even small temperature changes will tip us out of this fragile balance and into almost unimaginable scenarios.  The details (when and how bad) are unknown but could include: sea level rises of twenty feet or more that inundate Florida and much of the tip of Manhattan; an uninhabitable tropical belt and American Southwest; the loss of the Amazon rainforest; and the deaths of even billions of people from hunger, thirst, and the resultant political instability.

Unfortunately, this is not science fiction.  How could it happen?  One reason we can’t make reliable specific predictions is that “positive feedback loops” are one of the big unknowns that science doesn’t yet understand well.  The loss of albedo (the fraction of the sun’s rays reflected away from the Earth) that causes the Arctic’s melting ice is well known.  Ice reflects most sunlight harmlessly back into space, but the darker, ice-free water absorbs it, warming the sea.  As warming shrinks the ice cap, less ice and more open sea causes further warming, melting the ice cap even faster.  That’s a positive feedback loop, a destructive spiral.

A potentially more ominous example comes from the massive amounts of methane stored in the arctic permafrost, frozen Siberian peat bogs, and vast deposits under ocean beds.  Molecule for molecule methane is twenty times more potent a greenhouse gas than CO­2 although its much smaller concentrations in the atmosphere make it, currently, less important than CO­2.  When the permafrost or peat bogs begin to melt, however, the methane is released, intensifying the greenhouse effect, warming the earth, further melting the permafrost and round we go.  There’s so much methane locked in the permafrost and peat bogs that once serious amounts begin to be released, all bets about climate future are off.  The even greater amounts of methane under ocean beds are very sensitive to the temperature of the water just above them; even a small change could cause large “burps” of methane release, which are believed to have caused dramatic warming and mass extinctions earlier in Earth’s geological history.

There are many other known positive feedback loops:

  • Oceans are a major sink for CO­2, but as they warm they can’t hold as much CO­2.
  • Rain forests sequester huge amounts of CO­2, but as the tropics warm, they dry out and release all that carbon, further warming the Earth.
  • Ocean plankton, small plants responsible for approximately half of the Earth’s photosynthesis,[3] metabolize CO­2, taking the carbon with it when it dies and sinks to the bottom.  Warming seas reduce not only the amount of ocean plankton but also its metabolism, decreasing CO­2 uptake, increasing the concentration in the atmosphere and creating another vicious feedback loop.

The timing of such feedback loops and the resultant sudden rise in temperature can’t yet be predicted, but their likelihood renders the IPCC’s gradual curve hopelessly conservative.  Even more worrisome are the still unknown feedback loops in this complex organism that is Earth.

Such feedback loops will be important in the end of the long summer.  Rising temperatures will almost certainly push the climate off the perch it’s balanced on.  How soon?  According to the geological record, even the current 0.7º C rise has previously been enough to bump the earth off balance.  And once that happens, it’s a whole new ballgame.  The Earth itself becomes the major player—and the illusion of human control of the environment will dissipate quickly.

No amount of optimism can change the reality that we live on a new planet.

Political and Social Realities That Will Make Change Very Difficult

So far what I’ve said will be not be news to anyone who has made it their business to study these matters.  The nation’s response to this frightening reality, however, has been muted.  Some individuals have changed their lifestyles considerably to reduce their carbon footprint; some states have followed the leads of California and New England in passing laws to limit CO­2 emissions.  But the federal government has done virtually nothing.

If we don’t understand the reasons behind this minimal response, we will either continue in our blind optimism or descend into despair.  Even most national environmental groups still talk—publicly at least—about avoiding the coming tragedy if we do such and so: if the people were to push hard enough, if politicians could be convinced, if the media were to wake up, and so on.  But these environmentalists have apparently not been talking to the political or social scientists, for the “ifs” aren’t going to happen.  Few of the writings on climate change (or other environmental crises, for that matter) have taken political and/or economic realities, consumerism, the power of modern media, or the influence of the corporations into account,[4] which is something like ignoring sexual desire when considering overpopulation.

Each of these forces is powerful in itself.  But it is their interaction that creates the impenetrable web that will make escalating climate change inevitable.

A small diversion: As a physician I’m in the habit of being precise with my language, and I’m quite aware that, logically, nothing in the future is inevitable.  But climate change has already happened and given the physics of CO­2 and the time it will take to reduce emissions once the world agrees to reduce them significantly, much more climate change is utterly certain.  But I’m saying something more.  What I mean is that given this web of forces, calamitous climate change is as certain as human predictions get.  There will be no world-wide binding agreement to reduce emissions in the foreseeable future.  Only a literal miracle or a momentous breakdown in the social and economic order soon would be enough to open new possibilities.

Given the precarious position of our economy, the dysfunction of our politics, and the coming environmental realities, of course, such a breakdown is likely eventually, say within 50 years, if not sooner.  But when it eventually happens and the requisite changes are eventually made, it will be too late to prevent widespread suffering.

The danger is that recognition of the inevitability of this catastrophe can lead to despair and inaction.  My purpose is not to snuff out hope but to open our eyes.  Gar Alperovitz has written that within human history change is “as common as grass.”  And we must prepare ourselves for that moment, ready to take advantage of it to limit the coming catastrophe as much as possible.  And until those changes can occur we must find ways of acting that will relieve as much suffering as possible.

Let’s begin to tease the web apart.

Consumerism

Although the majority of Americans recognize the reality of climate change and want governmental action, there has been no sustained popular demand for a change in policy.  Why not?

Most Americans are deeply committed to their material lifestyle.  The unspoken reality is that any effective challenge to climate change will require a radical transformation of that material lifestyle.  Environmentalists and their organizations generally want to avoid this “inconvenient truth,” but the energy for indoor temperatures to our satisfaction, transportation of food, importation of goods from distant lands, personal transportation, manufacturing and much else all guzzle fossil fuels and emit CO­2.  A sustainable level carbon emissions—ie a level that the natural earth could recycle without rises in atmospheric CO­2 levels—would be about two tons of CO­2 for each person in the world per year.  The average American uses 20 tons.  As China, India and other poor countries develop economically, it’s utterly unrealistic—to say nothing of unjust—to expect them to keep to a 2-ton limit unless the Western world reduces its consumption accordingly.

What would 2 tons per year for the average American look like?  It’s difficult to imagine, but for starters it would mean:

  • no air travel (period)
  • mostly local transportation on foot or bicycle (or the not-yet-existent) adequate public transportation
  • vegetarian, if not vegan, diets
  • only locally produced food … even in the winter
  • no air conditioners … even in the South
  • elimination of individual ownership of luxuries (and many other things we consider necessary), for instance, TVs, computers or washing machines
  • reducing the average size of our homes by at least a third, if not a half (or having others share our space)
  • and so on

Virtually no national environmental group acknowledges publically that a truly sustainable lifestyle will require such drastic changes.  In Al Gore’s otherwise excellent and important film, Inconvenient Truth, we are left with the impression that changing to CFL light bulbs, driving a Prius, recycling, and buying carbon offsets would be enough.  Well, no, it won’t be enough.  In this sense those opposing carbon limitations are absolutely right: our “way of life” will have to change.  Polls may show that most Americans are concerned about the environment, but how many will voluntarily vote for such changes until absolutely forced to?

This consumerism is powerfully encouraged by media advertising.  Corporations and the US government are powerful purveyors of consumerism.  Only economic reality (that is, major declines in personal incomes) will force a possible (though not guaranteed) loosening of the vise-like grip of American consumerism.  But consumerism is only one element of the web.

The Capitalist Economic System

Our current economic system has been a direct cause of our environmental crises.  Absent government intervention, capitalism’s fundamental theory precludes a significant reduction in carbon emissions.  Think about these basic assumptions of capitalism:

  • Self-interest should be the primary economic motivator.
  • Monetary profit is the only goal.
  • The value of everything is measured by money.
  • Who gets what is determined by how much money they have.
  • Property is private and—within broad legal limits—owners can do anything they want with their property, regardless of the suffering it may cause others.

I am not exaggerating; these assumptions are recognized in basic economic textbooks.  While individual owners and corporations serving a local area may, and fortunately often do, ignore some of the assumptions for the sake of the wider community, large publicly-held corporations adhere to them rigorously.  But if we examined these assumptions carefully, most of us would find each one immoral as a basis for our behavior.  Who of us, for instance, believes that pure self-interest, defined as monetary profit, should be one’s goal, especially one’s sole goal?

How does capitalism lead inexorably to environmental devastation?  First, the problem of “externalities” is well recognized.  An externality is a cost of producing a product that is foisted onto someone else in order to sell the product at the cheapest price.  Environmental costs, for instance, are usually externalized.  When a coal-fueled electric plant discharges CO­2 into the air, for instance, the company doesn’t pay for the cost of the resulting damage; the rest of us do.  The public thus subsidizes electricity generation from fossil fuels which allows the companies to lower their prices.  If companies had to pay the full cost of their production, however, wind and solar power would be more than competitive, and we’d have much more of it.

Competition will force externalization of environmental costs upon even the CEO who is truly concerned about the environment.  If the company were to buy the expensive equipment necessary to sequester the CO­2, its electricity would be priced out of the market.  It’s not necessarily greed (although it sometimes is); it’s not necessarily an unconcerned management (although it sometimes is).  The problem is built right into capitalism and wouldn’t change significantly if you or I were the CEO.  The morally right decision would too often run a company out of business.

A second, related, built-in characteristic of capitalism is that businesses must grow to survive; growth generally requires higher and higher levels of consumption fueled by powerful advertising that increases consumer desire and the sense that luxury items are actually necessities.  Consumer desire increases, creating growth and the increased consumption of natural resources.

Third, the private nature of property legally inhibits the government from many of the regulations that could limit greenhouse gas emissions.

Adam Smith, the first theorist of capitalism, recognized another problem.  Extremes of inequality are built into free-market capitalism.  Under capitalism, government intervention is required through some kind of redistribution of income, for instance, progressive taxation.  Free-market theorists claim that in material terms the market “lifts all boats.”  Even if this were true, it’s clear that in practice the freer the market, the greater the inequality.  Inequality ultimately destroys democracy because of the power of the wealthy and the powerlessness of the poor.  The wealthy not only have massively disproportionate influence on government, they also control the media, which can obscure what’s actually happening politically.  This demoralizes the population who consequently won’t become active and work to change policy.  This has become especially obvious in the United States over the last thirty years.

The theory of capitalism loudly trumpeted by those in power, constrains government from “interfering in the market,” but that “interference” is, in fact, the only way to control capitalism’s built-in environmental devastation.

Corporations and Their Structure

Their wealth and power give corporations commanding influence over attempts at environmental sanity.  Whole communities can be held hostage to a corporate threat to abandon the area, destroying jobs.  Corporate political contributions and lobbying provide overwhelming influence over politicians.  Their immense size allows them power over the structure of the economy, for instance, over economic agreements among and within countries.

Much of the corporate impact on the environment is exacerbated by the legal structure of the corporation.  Small or local businesses tend to moderate capitalism’s underlying assumptions through loyalty to employees, concern about environmental impact on the local community, and rigorously honest behavior.  But the “owners” of large corporations are many thousands of investors—whether working-class individuals through their retirement funds, wealthy individuals, or other corporations—who have bought stocks for the sole purpose of financial returns.  Management has only one mandate, to maximize profits, which leads to the pure capitalism described above.  Regardless of the environmental consciousness of the management, corporate managers are constrained from any other concern except the best interests of the stockholders, the bottom line.

Since the late 1800s, corporations have, notoriously, had most of the legal rights of individuals.  Outside narrow legal limits, the right to free speech, for instance, allows the most blatantly exploitative advertising, which pushes the conspicuous consumption at the heart of global climate change.  The right to free speech also allows corporations to offer essentially unlimited financial support to advancing a particular political position.  The corporate right to privacy prevents routine public examination of the internal records which could hold them accountable for their practices; such accountability could have prevented the operational “shortcuts” that led to the Gulf oil disaster.  The corporate right to equal protection before the law makes the efforts of West Virginians to prevent mountain-top removal much more difficult.  And so on.  We are so used to these individual rights being afforded to corporations that—except when their most egregious behavior leads to disasters—we hardly think about it.

But corporations are not persons.

  • They are immortal.
  • They are wealthy beyond imagination and collectively have dominance over the economic lives of millions of voters.
  • No live person or group of persons has actual legal responsibility for their actions.  Shareholders cannot be held accountable for even illegal behavior by the corporation.  Corporate managers have no personal responsibility for corporate actions that might hurt, or even kill, others, as long as the action is technically legal.  True, the corporation may go bankrupt, but the worst actual persons can suffer is the loss of their investment.
  • As inanimate “persons” corporations feel no sense of moral responsibility, for instance, to their communities.

The power of corporations has not always been so overwhelming.  Those of us of a certain age can remember

  • when unions were strong enough to successfully stand up to employers,
  • when CEO salaries were “only” forty times their employees;’ not six hundred,
  • when their impact upon democracy was not so detrimental, and
  • when it was possible to get elected without corporate support.

But in the late 1970s—after media became crucial to getting elected and campaign costs skyrocketed—the business community developed new and powerful tactics.  Previously, individual companies or industries had lobbied for their own interests, often at cross-purposes with one another.  But, as documented by Jacob Hacker and Paul Pierson in Winner-Take-All Politics, in the 1970s, several national business associations (such as the Chamber of Commerce and the Business Roundtable) organized their members to act in concert.  Within only two or three years the impact on government had become profound, forcing Democrats—who controlled the presidency and both houses of Congress in the late 1970s—to reduce corporate and capital gains taxes and preventing them from passing labor and consumer-protection legislation.  While there have been important exceptions, virtually no one gets elected and no bill gets passed if the corporations are united and strongly opposed.  And even when they lose the vote in Congress, the corporate lobbying presence at every step of the way assures their influence in writing the details of the laws, writing the regulations, pressuring the regulatory agencies, and assuring their own impact in enforcing the law.  Corporations can lose the election and win the wars.  An obvious example is the failure of even the Democrats—despite vast popular support—to agree on minimal tax increases on the wealthy.

Corporations provide the cheap goods and encourage the consumerist culture of more.  They own the media and are thus powerful influences on the cultural and political beliefs of the consumer.

Media

Progressives will sometimes respond to these concerns by suggesting that, when economic conditions turn bad enough, the middle class will soon start voting for the 99%.  And virtually every progressive essay on either the environment or economic inequality will eventually suggest new legislation or a constitutional amendment that could change things for the better.  And there is no shortage of workable ideas: public financing of campaigns, tax rates as progressive as they were thirty or fifty years ago, a Tobin tax that would put a minuscule tax (perhaps ¼ of one percent) on stock transactions, powerful cap-and-trade legislation, and so on.  The ideas are endless, and they are all good ones that would indeed improve the situation markedly.  What those who suggest these ideas usually ignore or vastly underestimate, however, is the power of advertising and, thus, the media, to influence our thinking.

We are all aware of the power of advertising to keep us addicted to consumerism.  We can be sold things we don’t need, don’t really want, and certainly can’t afford … even if they are collectively destroying us.  As individuals, however, most of us believe that we are immune to the effects of advertising.  But advertisers would not spend over $3 billion a year in the US alone if it were not effective.  A hundred years of psychological research has provided the industry the tools to influence us well underneath our conscious radar.  Even media content that’s not technically advertising is, for the most part, a powerful advertisement for a consumerist lifestyle as we watch the way that the mostly affluent characters in the dramas live.

Also often missed is the ability of a well-funded advertising campaign to sway voters’ preferences and their understanding of an issue.  Polls suggest that less than 5% of people know much about political issues or how politics work.  In our ingnorance, it’s not difficult for the media to use the same techniques used to sell us new cars in order to sell us political opinions and policies.  A good example is the sophisticated advertising campaign against that majority of Americans who, at the beginning of the campaign, supported required caps on carbon emissions.  At the end of the advertising campaign, however, large swaths of the population viewed the bill as damaging to the economy, certain to raise prices, and devastating to employment.  The bill, toothless as it was, didn’t stand a chance against the media.

Other than poorly funded public radio and television, the national media are large corporations themselves, almost always owned by other corporations.  Like most corporations, media claim to be strongly pro-environment.  But their impact on global climate change has been devastating.

Yes, it’s true that American voters could radically change the system to reduce carbon emissions, but they won’t … at least until things get much worse.  Against the propaganda, fear techniques, and commitment to consumerism, the likelihood of a majority of the electorate demanding the very painful change necessary is extraordinarily low.  And when it does finally happen, it will be far too late to prevent truly catastrophic change.

Government

Only government—when it is functioning as government—can mandate limits on carbon emissions or regulate the many other changes necessary.  With a democratic government, a nation’s people decides what the majority wants and creates laws to make it possible.

The government could modify the economic system to force the internalization of environmental costs or alleviate inequality.  It could drastically reduce the political power of corporations  through public financing of campaigns and limitations on corporate lobbying.  Government could control the power of media by breaking up the oligopoly, reinstating the fairness doctrine, mandating balanced coverage of political issues, and requiring a certain percentage of public service programming.  It could eliminate economic subsidies for oil companies or corporate farming.  And it could use its “bully pulpit” to enlist the support of the population in reducing our material consumption.  Needless to say, little of this will happen anytime soon.

Perhaps the most dangerous and successful tactic of the far right over the last forty years has been to convince most of us—liberals and conservatives alike—that the federal government is incompetent at its best and malevolent at its worst.  Considering the government a negative force, voters have been willing either to “starve the beast” by supporting tax cuts and reducing government impact or to withdraw from the democratic process completely.  As the government becomes weaker, of course, it becomes less capable of providing services effectively, which makes voters even less willing to invest in it, a vicious circle of emasculation.  As government loses its public support, however, the corporations and the 1% remain by far the strongest kids on the block.

Like the corporations, government is also firmly committed to economic growth fueled by consumerism.  George W Bush’s notorious comment after 9/11, “Go shopping,” is emblematic.  What the public learns is that “growth” (ie material growth) is necessary to the American way of life … which is true if increasing material wealth is essential to the American way of life.

The government’s unwillingness to face climate change is typified by President George HW Bush’s statement twenty years ago at the first Earth Summit: “The American way of life is not negotiable.”

Unfortunately, the founders of our country deliberately and explicitly designed the Constitution to prevent radical change.  The presidential system (rather than a parliament led by a prime minister) and the two separate houses of Congress (one of which is elected to two-year terms, the other to staggered six-year terms) means that the president often belongs to a different party from the legislature and/or that the legislature itself is divided.  Since the consent of both houses of Congress and the president is almost always necessary, controversial change is seriously hampered.  An amendment to the Constitution requires two-thirds vote of each house of Congress, plus ratification by 75% of state legislatures.  The filibuster—while not established by the Constitution—is a matter of Senate rules.  This requirement of a supermajority can hamstring the Senate … as it has, most notably since the last presidential election.

This governmental structure makes blocking change much easier than creating change.  With its power to block legislation, the minority can control and paralyze government, as the Republican Party is now doing.  While government has the technical capacity to make the needed changes, in fact, it is virtually impotent in the face of the wealthy and the corporations.

The “impossibility” of making change with the usual means

So, that’s the web of forces blocking the way to environmental sanity.  The political histories of DDT and tobacco teach us that it can take decades after a scientific consensus is reached to create adequate regulation.  And those political struggles were before the corporations developed their extraordinary power.  Each strand in the web is supported by each of the others, making any one element virtually impervious to change from below.  I’ve taken these many paragraphs outlining these forces because I really do mean that change is not possible within the current social, economic, and political structure of our country.  Despite our native optimism, many of us know this: voting, political organizing, running pro-environment candidates, lobbying, recycling campaigns, running for office, or anything else we have imagined have not fundamentally challenged these dominant forces and won’t until other powerful forces confront them.

I’m sure I sound like an utter cynic or nihilist.  But I’m not emphasizing the inevitability of tragedy out of cynicism, perverseness or sensationalism.  Nor do I have a secret roadmap to a solution that I’m about to reveal.  Rather, I think we need to consciously face up to what most of us at some level really know.  Only this will allow meaningful hope and appropriate response.

How Do We Respond to the Coming Tragedy?

Despair, grief, even cynicism and apathy are normal responses to the coming tragedy.  We must not push them aside but recognize their reality and allow ourselves to grieve.  And we must help each other navigate through these painful waters.

But we must also remember that what’s coming makes it even more important to find hope within our grief and act with courage and decisiveness.  We can’t make it all better, but we have been given the opportunity to participate in what is perhaps the greatest human struggle in recorded history.  We are witness to a time in history like no other, and we can make a difference. Helen Keller once said, “I rejoice to live in such a splendidly disturbing time.” [5]

What can we do?  One response is to continue our work to reduce carbon emissions even in the face of the lost opportunity to prevent climate change.  One of the great tasks before us is to alleviate as much as possible the human suffering that is coming.  Because there will be so much pain, even our seemingly small response—reducing our own consumption, educating others about the realities of what we face, working for (even minimal) political change, or forcing an oil company to slow down (or even back down from) some planned expansion—anything that slows the process down even minutely will still have profound impact on this greatest of all challenges.

Another important task will be to mitigate the impact of the climate change that will occur.  Two obvious examples are the Dutch strengthening of their dikes and the prior preparations to relocate residents of South Pacific islands that will soon be inundated.  One impact of climate change will be a disruption in the economy.  Such disruptions always impact the poor most heavily so any work for justice is also an important response to climate change.  Creating structures that will give the best chances for survival in a post-carbon world (local sustainability, learning basic skills, farming and farmers markets, for example) will be important.

Until recently many environmentalists have resisted such work for mitigation for fear of relaxing societal pressure to reduce carbon emissions.  It’s a legitimate point, but since complete prevention is no longer an option, mitigation must be part of any response we make.

Such responses may feel puny and insufficient to us who are used to fixing things.  We will need each other’s help to work through those feelings of despair and hopelessness.

Localization

As one important kind of reaction, the localization movement is particularly important.  Even small responses by individual citizens, small cities, or regions with common interests are crucial to the survival of our civilization.  In any ecological niche, diversity and complexity give the needed resilience against threats.  But the modern obsession with efficiency has destroyed much of that complexity.  In her book The End of the Long Summer, Dianne Dumanoski points out that “the electronics industry has relied on specialized semiconductor chips made by [only] two companies who manufacture them in the same industrial park” in Taiwan.[6] A small earthquake or terrorist strike could wipe them out.

But local initiatives to create, grow or manufacture what is absolutely needed in the immediate area mean that many separate locations within the world are supplying necessities, offering a functional diversity that, like any ecology, offers stability in the face of multiple threats.  Protest against local environmental damage can provide an opportunity for social and political change that tends to unite the community.  Democracy, too, can be localized through the intimacy of town meetings or individual meetings with elected officials who are more likely to be neighbors than bureaucrats.  Jobs that are localized, that is, tied to local needs—in hospitals, schools, garbage collection, and so on—can’t be exported abroad.

This localizing of power, production and social connection is well underway.  In his book Blessed Unrest, Paul Hawken describes his lecturing on environmental issues in the mid-1990s.  He noticed that, at the end of his talks, people would often come up, describe their (mostly) local environmental or political projects, and hand him their business cards.  Soon he had thousands of cards.  Wondering what this meant, he started researching such small groups around the world.  He estimates that there may be over a million such groups from the massive Sierra Club to individual young people selling local produce in the farmers’ market.  If we Include not only the social justice groups, indigenous rights groups and those with no official standing that Hawken recognizes but also the many direct-service nonprofits, there are millions around the world.  Hawken points out that the first group formally created to meet the needs of others was the Society for Abolition of the Slave Trade organized in England in 1787.  Now they are countless.  And their explosive growth continues, spreading inexorably.

These are not, Hawken stresses, an organized movement, with any kind of central leadership.  Their goals are often quite different from one another, sometimes working at cross-purposes.  They come into existence and may disappear.  But they’re part of a spiritual awakening that’s happening around the globe.

The Earth’s Immune System

Hawken likens this loose network to the human immune system, which has usually been characterized in top-down military images, but, in fact … there’s nobody in charge.  There are different parts to the immune system that actually work independently, and within each of those parts there are millions of individual elements that do their job with considerable independence.  The immune system is only minimally coordinated and comprises diverse, disordered and imprecise entities … and yet without it we’d die in a matter of days.

Like the immune system, these countless organizations in this global web may have little individual power to cure the earth’s sickness, and there’s no guarantee of any individual’s or group’s positive impact.  You might think that—given the vast and powerful forces aligned against them—their uncoordinated efforts would have only minor impact.  But Hawken’s work suggests that the whole may be much greater than the sum of its parts.

The city of Cleveland, for instance, is experimenting with worker-owned cooperatives that supply laundry to hospitals and educational institutions, creating local jobs that pay reasonable wages and are not going to move away.  Hawken has long lists of other examples, for instance, small local banks that have sprung up to meet the financial needs of the community (and have been relatively immune from the 2008 crash, largely because their loans were made on a personal basis); they are a good example of functional redundancy.  Volunteer organizations form free clinics, social service organizations, or foot patrols to protect the neighborhood.  Credit unions and other co-ops (with about 120 million members across the country), 10,000 worker-owned firms, and community- or customer-owned businesses have all begun to change the face of capitalism.

These millions of organizations may be something like an ant colony.  No single ant grasps the big picture or needs to direct the group’s effort, but following a few simple innate principles, the shortest route to the food is located, the anthill is built.  Perhaps these few simple principles of the global movement are care for the Earth, care for one another, and care for future generations.

Hawken subtitles his book How the Largest Movement in the World Came into Being and Why No One Saw It Coming.

Its grass-roots origins, minimal ideology and loose coordination give this movement a resilience that no top-down organization could ever have; you can’t kill it by co-opting the leadership … because there isn’t any overall leadership.  Its use of modern communications technology give the whole a power never before available to dispersed groups.  The “movement” constantly grows and renews itself; one organization may disappear because of whatever, but others take its place.  Those that are small with few resources by necessity use their resources efficiently and work with profound dedication.  They are familiar with local conditions.  They go with whatever works rather than ideology, so they tend to be far less polarizing than national politics.  Unlike most larger organizations, they’re much more able to switch their activity in response to the actual conditions on the ground.  They can make mistakes, even disappear, without seriously undermining the whole.

The current international order won’t last forever; it never does.  As Alperovitz writes, the details are never clear in advance, but fundamental political, economic, and social change is routine in world history.  The upheavals of the last decade are only the foreshocks.  And we’re right in the middle of that now.  What will happen when the current order falters?  Could it be that a new order has been developing, unnoticed, right under our nose?  The Polish union Solidarity had its political uprising, but after that was crushed, it continued organizing, providing needed services that the government couldn’t handle, developing a powerful base.  It became almost a shadow government, so that, when the Polish government collapsed in the 1980s, Solidarity was there to pick up the pieces.

Hope

Do I think that these organizations are going to save the environment?  No, I don’t.  Do I think that they will topple the current order, bring about justice, and restore human rights?  Possibly, but not anytime soon.

Then what about hope?  If the future is so bleak, where does one find hope?  My response is: Hope for what?  What do you want to be able to hope for?  Hope that we’ll prevent climate change?  Hope that our lifestyle will survive?  Hope that our grandchildren will inherit the same Earth we’ve known?  I don’t know where to find that kind of hope except in illusion.

But if we hope to ameliorate the worst of climate change, if we hope to prepare ourselves so that the damage is minimized, or if we hope to create new structures that provide for local communities, then there is reason for hope.  If, at a personal level, we hope for fulfilling and deeply meaningful work; if we hope for joy in participating with others for the general good; if we hope for community; in fact, if we hope for any of the most important things in life, then there’s hope and a lot of it.

Let me offer one possible scenario.  The collapse, whether it comes now or in fifty years, will be painful, one we probably can’t imagine now … not just from the environment but from financial instability, inequality, resource wars and so on.  In the rubble of all that, some new order will have to develop.  It could be fascist totalitarianism, but it could also be the fundamental rebuilding we are hoping for.  After the economic collapse of the Great Depression, Franklin Roosevelt picked up ideas and small projects that had been lying around and working on a small scale.  He expanded them into national programs.  As our future new order is built, it may also be the ideas lying around, the already existent small structures we’ve created that will be picked up.  And they could form the basis for a new society.  For that, it’s reasonable to hope.

Given the uncertainty of the future, we can’t know what’s going to be picked up and what will disappear.  But we do know that loving others, having compassion for our neighbor, prioritizing the poor, caring for the Earth, and following our deepest yearnings are both needed now and must be the hallmarks of the new society that will survive.  Anything based on those values is worth doing.

So we follow the leadings we’re given: OccupyingOurLocalCommunity, personal recycling, getting arrested to stop the XL pipeline, putting pressure on politicians to stop mountaintop removal, teaching adult education, fostering community-supported agriculture, growing our own food, supporting large national organizations, working for a constitutional amendment, lobbying political representatives, running for office, and on and on.  It may be that we continue to do the very same things we’re doing now.  Those things that are not going to change the immediate future may well be part of the coming new order.  If our understanding of reality deepens and is not blinded by optimism, we are less susceptible to being blown away by our failure to fix the crisis or the criticism that what we’re doing won’t make any difference.  Perhaps our preparation will ameliorate the future crisis and lessen much suffering.  Perhaps our preparations will be taken up as building blocks for a new society.  We live under fewer illusions.  We cannot hope to get the same Earth back, but we can hope to soften what’s coming.  We can find hope in the process, in the community, in our work together.  These are hopes we can count on.

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Capitalism is Not Compatible with a Healthy Ecosystem

30 Saturday Jun 2012

Posted by xraymike79 in Capitalism, Consumerism, Corporate State, Ecological Overshoot, Environmental Degradation

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Capitalism, Consumerism, Corporatocracy, Economic Collapse, Economic Growth, Environmental Collapse, Financial Elite, Gross Inequality, Neoliberal Capitalism, The Elite 1%


 
I’ll be going on sabbatical for a while, so I’ll leave you with a further discussion of the failings of Capitalism. Any talk of growth is simply another version of the capitalist system. In order to ensure the survival of our species, we must break from that paradigm. It’s as simple as that. Below are excerpts of an essay which hits on the major problems of our current economic system. I’ll post again when I can, but the next two weeks will be sporadic.

Harmony and Ecological Civilization: Beyond the Capitalist Alienation of Nature…

… Harmony in the world—among its people and between humans and the rest of the ecosystems—is not possible in the context of capitalism. Capitalism, a system that has been in existence for some 500 years (merchant capitalism for approximately 250 years and industrial capitalism for about 250 years)—a relatively short time in the 150,000 year history of anatomically modern humans—has shown that it fosters interpersonal relations and metabolic interactions with the earth that are detrimental to achieving a harmonious existence. This is a result of capitalism’s basic characteristics and the relationships it creates as it normally functions. The purpose of capitalism is not to satisfy human needs and preserve the environment. There is only one purpose and driving force—ultimately responsible for both its dynamic periods and its crises and long periods of slow growth (stagnation)—and that is the accumulation of capital without end. The capitalist system has a number of basic characteristics and also fosters specific human characteristics and relationships. Here are ten key aspects of capitalism:

  • It has to grow (or else it is in crisis) and its very logic and motivating force impels growth.
  • It has no other driving force than the accumulation of ever greater amounts of capital.
  • Through the creation of so-called “externalities” (or side effects) it wreaks damage on humans as well as the ecosystem and the life support systems needed by humanity and other species. In Paul Sweezy’s words: “As far as the natural environment is concerned, capitalism perceives it not as something to be cherished and enjoyed but as a means to the paramount ends of profit-making and still more capital accumulation.”1
  • It promotes the use of nonrenewable resources without regard to the needs of future generations, as if there was no end to them, and abuses even renewable resources such as ocean fisheries and forests.
  • It creates vast inequality in income, wealth, and power both within and between countries. Not only class, but race, gender, and other inequalities are built into its laws of motion.
  • It requires and produces a reserve army of labor—people precariously connected to the economy, most kept in poverty or near poverty—so that labor is available during economic upswings and workers can easily be fired when not needed by businesses.
  • It promotes national economic and political competition and imperialism, leading to wars for domination and access to resources.
  • It fosters and rewards those particular human traits that are useful for thriving or even just existing in such a possessive-individualist society—selfishness, individualism, competition, greed, exploitation of others, consumerism—while not allowing the full expression of those human characteristics needed for a harmonious society (cooperation, sharing, empathy, and altruism).
  • It leads to the breakdown of human health since people operate in a hierarchical society, with many working under dangerous and physically debilitating conditions or in jobs that are repetitive and boring—while subject to job loss or fear of losing their job. (There are many adverse long-term health effects following the loss of one’s job.)2
  • It leads to the breakdown of healthy communities as people become more solitary in outlook and behavior and indigenous culture is replaced by the dominant national or international capitalist culture and outlook. People become dedicated to obtaining more for themselves and their families and depending less on reciprocal relationships with others.

The growth imperative of capitalism deserves special attention because it is one of the major stumbling blocks with respect to harmony between humans and the environment. Accumulation without end means using ever greater quantities of resources—without end—even as we find ways to use resources more efficiently. An economy growing at the very meager rate of 1 percent a year will double in about seventy-two years, but one growing at 2 percent a year, still a low rate, will double in size in thirty-six years. And when growing at 3 and 4 percent, economies will double in twenty-four and eighteen years respectively. China recently has seen recorded growth rates of up to 10 percent, meaning economic output doubles at a rate of approximately every seven years! Yet, we are already using up resources far too fast from the one planet we have—depleting the stocks of nonrenewable resources rapidly and misusing and overusing resources that are theoretically “renewable.” If the world’s economy doubles within the next twenty to thirty years this can only hasten the descent into ecological, and probably societal, chaos and destruction.

Thus capitalism promotes the processes, relationships, and outcomes that are precisely the opposite of those needed for an ecologically sound, just, harmonious society.

…

Rational and useful alternative solutions to any problem depend upon a realistic analysis and diagnosis as to what is causing it to occur. When such analysis is lacking substance the proposed “solutions” will most likely be useless. For example, there are people fixated on nonrenewable resource depletion that is caused, in their opinion, by “overpopulation.” Thus, they propose, as the one and only “solution,” a rapid “degrowth” of the world’s population. Programs that provide contraceptives to women in poor countries are therefore offered as an important tool to solving the global ecological problem. However, those concerned with there being too many people generally do not discuss the economic system that is so destructive to the environment and people or the critical moral and practical issue of the vast inequalities created by capitalism. Even the way that capitalism itself requires population growth as part of its overall expansion is ignored.

Thus, a critical aspect almost always missing from discussions by those concerned with population as it affects resource use and pollution is that the overwhelming majority of the earth’s environmental problems are caused by the wealthy and their lifestyles—and by a system of capital accumulation that predominantly serves their interests. The World Bank staff estimates that the wealthiest 10 percent of humanity are responsible for approximately 60 percent of all resource use and therefore 60 percent of the pollution (most probably an underestimate). Commentators fixated on nonrenewable resources and pollution as the overriding issues cannot see that one of their main “solutions”—promoting birth control in poor countries—gets nowhere near to even beginning to address the real problem. It should go without saying that poor people should have access to medical services, including those involving family planning. This should be considered a basic human right. The rights of women in this respect are one of the key indicators of democratic and human development. But how can people fixated on the mere population numbers ignore the fact that it is the world’s affluent classes that account for the great bulk of those problems—whether one is looking at resource use, consumption, waste, or environmental pollution—that are considered so important to the survival of society and even humanity?

In addition to the vast quantity of resources used and pollution caused by wealthy individuals, governments are also responsible. The U.S. military is one of the world’s prime users of resources—from oil to copper, zinc, tin, and rare earths. The military is also is the single largest consumer of energy in the United States.5

While capitalism creates many of the features and relationships discussed above, we must keep in mind that long before capitalism existed there were negative societal aspects such as warfare, exploitation of people and resources, and ecological damage. However, capitalism solidifies and makes these problems systemic while at the same time creating other negative aspects.

Living in Harmony with the Planet

It is certain that there is no way to reach a truly harmonious civilization with an economic system in which decisions are made by private individuals based on how much capital will be accumulated as well as personal greed and consumerism. In such a society “[s]ocial relations became but reflections of the dominating force of society’s capitalist economics.”6Hierarchical class structures are solidified—with workers (blue and white collar), small business owners (this includes farmers and craftspeople working on their own or in small units), and owners and managers of large businesses. The relationship of a worker to a business manager or owner reflects differences of wealth and power in the workplace and in the world outside. And the worker and the boss have differing interests. The boss is trying to maximize profits while the worker is trying to get more income and better working conditions. Because of the motive force of capitalism and the procedures, practices, and approaches embedded in its DNA, there is no way to reform or modify the system to accomplish the goals of sustainability, harmony, or ecological civilization. Capitalism, in its very essence, is anti-sustainability, anti-harmony, and anti-ecology. For Marx capitalism generated an “irreparable rift” in the metabolism of nature and society, requiring the “restoration” of this basic metabolism essential to life—a restoration that necessitated a more harmonious social order beyond capitalism.7

No one can predict the details of any future civilization. But, to be ecological and socially sustainable—basic requirements for harmonious society—an economy will need to have the sole purpose of satisfying basic human material and nonmaterial needs (which, of course, includes a healthy ecosystem) for all people. As with many pre-capitalist societies, economics will need to be submerged within human relationships and must be under control of the people…

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Ponzi Schemes and Pitchforks

29 Friday Jun 2012

Posted by xraymike79 in Climate Change, Consumerism, Corporate State, Ecological Overshoot, Environmental Degradation, Peak Oil

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Australia, Colorado River, Consumerism, Ecological Overshoot, Economic Growth, Environmental Collapse, Financial Elite, Gina Rinehart, Gross Inequality, Inverted Totalitarianism, Las vegas, Libertarianism, Neoliberal Capitalism, Peak Oil, Peak Water, Poverty, The Elite 1%

I mentioned in my last post “Things are Heating Up for Heads on a Pike” that Las Vegas is building another straw below the existing water intake pipes which are in danger of going dry due to a sinking water line in the Colorado River and Lake Mead. Since Vegas gets 90% of its drinking water from the river, its evaporation and depletion puts in jeopardy not only that city but also the 38 million people in the Southwest dependent on the river. If you read the article I linked to, then you’ll know Vegas has been plagued by all sorts of problems like cave-ins and floodings in the construction of this new, longer straw to suck out what remains of a river in critical condition from severe drought and over-usage, both of which are exacerbated by global warming:

The Lake Mead surface level has dropped about 100 feet in elevation since the lake was full in 2000, bureau spokeswoman Rose Davis said. It is about half-full today — displaying a distinctive white mineral “bathtub ring” between the low and high water lines. – source

———————

…water authority General Manager Pat Mulroy has described the third intake project as a race against time. The problem is there is nothing very speedy about construction on this scale.

The finished, 20-foot diameter intake pipe will allow the authority to draw up to 1.2 billion gallons of water a day from Lake Mead even if the surface drops another 90 feet.

It also will give the authority access to the deepest part of the lake, where the coolest, cleanest water is found. – source

The German-buit machine used to dig this new water intake looks like something out of a science fiction movie, over 600 feet long and costing $25 million:

The $25 million tunnel boring machine was designed and built in Germany specifically for the third intake project.

“It’s the BMW of TBMs,” McDonald joked.

The machine crossed the globe on a container ship. It took 61 tractor-trailers to deliver it in pieces from the Port of Long Beach, Calif., to the job site at Lake Mead.

Fully assembled, the machine is the length of two football fields and weighs more than three Boeing 747 jetliners. The cutter head, a ridged platter 231/2 feet tall and studded with disks made from a special alloy, weighs 150 tons all by itself. – source

This project doesn’t come cheap at a cost of $800 million dollars. Now I find it rather humorous when the Vegas customers get their new water bills, causing them to fly off the handle and grab a pitch fork:

A couple of weeks ago, the Las Vegas Valley Water District got an earful from customers about a steep rate hike on businesses.

On Thursday, it was the Southern Nevada Water Authority’s turn.

A handful of angry business owners and residents attacked the rate increase during the authority board’s monthly meeting, and many more people have called and sent letters about their ballooning bills.

The barrage of complaints and concerns prompted Clark County Commissioner Steve Sisolak to issue an unusual apology of sorts: He didn’t understand what he was voting for when he voted for the rate hike earlier this year.

“I was under a totally different impression when we passed this increase,” Sisolak said.

He said he had no idea that the new infrastructure surcharge he helped approve would boost the monthly bills for some businesses, churches and nonprofits by 200 percent or more. He thought most people would have to pay a flat monthly increase of about $5.

If he didn’t know then, he certainly does now…

…Sisolak and others are trying to speed up a planned review of the charge, which was originally supposed to be done as part of a larger planning process over the next year and half by a new citizens committee being assembled.

Sisolak said some water customers may not be able to wait that long.

“What I’m hearing from the business community is they’re not going to make it 18 to 20 months,” he said.

McAnallen said something needs to be done. The business owners he is talking to can scarcely afford the current surcharge, which is slated to last for the next three years. If no other solution is found by 2016, the charge will have to be doubled to cover the authority’s debt load, he said.

Authority officials have acknowledged that the surcharge affects businesses more than residents, but they said the new fee is necessary to pay down roughly $2.5 billion in construction debt and finish funding an $800 million intake being built to keep water flowing to the valley even if Lake Mead continues to shrink.

Such projects used to be paid for with the spoils of growth, namely connection charges from new homes and commercial buildings. When growth stopped, so did the water authority’s primary source of construction money.

It’s not just business owners who are complaining about the surcharge.

While the average single-family home saw its bill go up by about $5, some older homes with larger lots and water lines took a bigger hit.

Lifelong Las Vegas resident Mary Joy Alderman lives in a 60-year-old downtown home that sits on an acre of land served by a 1-inch water meter. She said her bill just jumped to about $36 though she has slashed her monthly water use to around 1,000 gallons – less than a tenth of what the average home consumes – and doesn’t water her landscaping at all…

Did you read that:

“Such projects used to be paid for with the spoils of growth, namely connection charges from new homes and commercial buildings. When growth stopped, so did the water authority’s primary source of construction money.”

Now this falls in line with the analysis that suburbia is one giant Ponzi scheme, as argued here.

Now I want to go back and talk also about one of those heads that belongs on a pike. One of the major problems facing industrial civilization and mankind is the failure to be honest with ourselves. And that problem is compounded when you are not given the facts of your predicament. The captains of industry who benefit from business-as-usual like to keep the public in the dark and brain-washed about free-market capitalism, a dogma that has brought the planet to its knees and the continued existence of the Homo-Sapien species into question. Gina Rinehart, the richest woman in the world, is a case in point:

Addressing a libertarian think-tank in Perth last July, the British climate change sceptic Christopher Monckton urged Australians to create a home-grown version of Rupert Murdoch’s Fox News. The “super-rich”, he said, should invest in the media, install like-minded commentators and give the country “a proper dose of free-market thinking.

Lord Monckton’s visit was part-funded by one of his biggest Australian fans, Gina Rinehart, the multi-billionaire iron ore magnate. A year on, Ms Rinehart – the country’s wealthiest individual – is on the verge of becoming its newest media mogul, a prospect that is sending a chill through newsrooms, boardrooms and the corridors of government…

…Rinehart never gives interviews. But her values – pro-free market, cheap foreign labour and tax concessions for mining, and anti-government regulation, red tape and climate change science – are well known…

“She regards journalists as either socialists or communists,” says Paul Barry, an investigative journalist and author. “Not only does she know nothing about the media business, but she doesn’t understand or sympathise with the media.

“I think she would be considerably worse than Rupert Murdoch as a proprietor, not least because she’s coming into a newspaper [group] with an entirely opposite stance to the one she would like it to take.”

This lady’s mindset sounds almost cartoonish in its prejudice and ideological bent. Firstly, she can’t possibly understand what freedom of the press means other that the dictate of ‘freedom to buy the press’ and convert it into a mouthpiece for her wealth-extraction agenda. Secondly, Mrs Rinehart and her ilk don’t acknowledge the reality that capitalism cannot exist without the ability to pollute freely and externalize as much costs as possible onto the environment and communities in which she does not reside. But as I said in Tuesday’s post, the über wealthy will not be spared from escalating climate chaos. Thirdly, capitalism cannot exist without cheap and plentiful fossil fuels of which we are starting to scrape the bottom of the barrel as evidenced by more extreme and environmentally destructive measures such as tar sands, deep-sea drilling and gas fracking. Fourthly, capitalism depends on infinite growth to survive, as explained here. Euan Mearns talked about the death of capitalism recently at the 2012 ASPO meeting. Jeremy Grantham also sees the problems with capitalism coming down to debt, politics, environmental damage, and inhumanity.

Capitalism ultimately leads to barbarism and heads on a pike for those not willing to face harsh certainties.

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Clawing at the Edges of a Bottomless Pit

27 Wednesday Jun 2012

Posted by xraymike79 in Climate Change, Consumerism, Ecological Overshoot, Environmental Degradation, Peak Oil, Pollution

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Climate Change, Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Corporate State, Economic Collapse, Fracking, Mass Media Propaganda, Neoliberal Capitalism, Peak Water, The Elite 1%, the Sky is Pink, Toxic Groundwater

I’ve been at this blogging for about six weeks now, reading and researching industrial civilization’s demise. The more one goes back and looks at the wholesale destruction we have done and continue to do to this planet, and in turn ourselves, the more you come to realize how blind and foolish we have been. Entire ecosystems have been wiped off the face of the earth and whole environmental systems altered beyond their normal evolution. In place of forests, jungles, and deserts, we have constructed vast tracts of monoculture industrial farming, endless vistas of cookie cutter suburbia, thousands upon thousands of miles of asphalt roads, parking lots, and concrete paths, and cathedral-like malls for the citizenry to partake in the consumption of goods made by someone we’ll never meet and shipped from lands we may never visit.

What underpinned the creation of this entire edifice of modern man in less than two centuries? The power to transform the earth in our image came from cheap, energy-dense fossil fuel, i.e. oil. So highly dense in energy is oil that just one barrel of it equates to the labor of one man working forty hours a week for twelve years. Was all of this frenetic, ant-like labor worth it if, at the end of the day, we find that all of that effort to be for nought, cleared away by an escalating, civilization-ending climate chaos? It seems that we went to a party and drank so much of the intoxicating drinks offered to us that we ended up killing ourselves from the overdose and subsequent poisoning. For those sitting at the top of the capitalist hierarchy, do they not fully understand that a world thrown out of balance will not spare the elite sitting behind their barb-wire walled and guarded mansions? Is the desperate clawing at low EROEI fossil fuel sources worth the expense of further, unmitigated environmental destruction just to eke out a few more decades of what is inevitably a self-destructive system? What will we be left with but a completely poisoned and pillaged planet with no resources left to construct an alternative that might replace the current bankrupt system.

Right now we are in the intoxication phase, blind to the self-imposed eradication that comprises our present course in energy policy. So blind are the elite that they are willing to lie and propagandize in order to make sure the plans go forth. Having poisoned the biosphere, oceans, and land, the only place left seems to be deep beneath the ground beyond everyone’s sight where the remaining life-giving reservoirs of water rest.

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America: The Mafia State (It’s no exaggeration)

25 Monday Jun 2012

Posted by xraymike79 in Corporate State, Inequality, Wall Street Fraud

≈ 1 Comment

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Banking Oligarchy, Bill Moyers, Corporate State, Corporatocracy, Financial Elite, Gas Fracking, Gross Inequality, Matt Taibbi, Neoliberal Capitalism, Poverty, Regulatory Capture, Richard Wolff, The Elite 1%, To-Big-To-Fail Banks, unwashed public, Wall Street Fraud, William Tabb, Yves Smith

This is a stellar interview with Matt Taibbi and Yves Smith worth watching from start to finish. They cover a lot of ground in a short time including the shredding of the social fabric by Wall Street malfeasance and the fact that your grandmother’s life is more endangered by a high-finance businessman in a suit and tie rather than the local purse snatcher on the street corner. Remember when Lloyd Blankfein admitted that some of their financial instruments were of no benefit to society?


 
Excerpt on the comparisons with Wall Street and the Mafia Dons:

BILL MOYERS: You’re describing a corrupt financial and political system. And both of you in recent writings, your current article in “Rolling Stone,” which is devastating on the scam that the “Wall Street learned from the Mafia,” and a recent column you wrote about the mafia state, you’re both using that metaphor to apply to our financial and political system. When I read your pieces, you’re not playing with words there. You mean it.

YVES SMITH: Yeah.

BILL MOYERS: Why do you mean it?

YVES SMITH: Well, the mafia, when it gets to be big enough, first thing it has services that people feel they need if they’re in a difficult situation. So, for example, loan sharking. If you really need money, they do have the money. And people enter into these loan shark deals even though they know it’s going to be very difficult to pay 20 percent or more interest and they’ll have their legs broken if they don’t pay back.

And the banks actually behave very much in that manner when they find people who really need money. So you see this with credit cards, you know, that, or, and with mortgages. That if you hit– it’s not this if you hit any tripwire, that, you know, become in arrears, the banks basically act in this very extortionate manner and don’t cut any breaks.

MATT TAIBBI: And I think that there’s also this, they are the mafia because of their vast criminality in Wall Street now is that it’s bribery, theft, fraud, bid rigging, price fixing, gambling, loan sharking. All of these things, it’s all organized.

I mean, the story I just wrote about, which was about the systematic rigging of municipal bond auctions, which affected every community in every state in the country and all of the major banks were involved, including Chase.

They were rigging the auctions that were designed to create a fair rate of return on the investments that towns were getting on their– the money they borrowed for municipal bonds. And this is not like something that the mafia does. This is what the mafia does. The mafia has historically, it’s one of their staple businesses, is bid rigging for construction or garbage or, you know, street cleaning services, whatever it is.

They’re doing exactly the same thing. The only thing that’s different is there’s no violence involved. But what their method of control is that they’re ubiquitous. They have this incredible political power that the mafia never had.

YVES SMITH: And they also have what amounts to an oligopoly. I mean, for many of these services, you have a great deal of difficulty going beyond the five biggest banks, you know? This is– it’s the consequence of too big to fail is that when, you know, some of the smaller players, again, you know, like– JPMorgan buying Bear Stearns.

In the crisis, when the smaller players got sick, they were merged into the bigger players. So now if you want– for a lot of these services, there aren’t that many players for you to go to. You really have no choice in– other than to deal with the big banks.

BILL MOYERS: Congress is paid to be informed and to hold these guys accountable. Why don’t they ask the kind of questions you’re dealing with here?

MATT TAIBBI: People refuse to look at these banks and think of them as organized crime organizations.

They in their eyes, organized crime is always either the Italian mafia or the Irish mafia. This isn’t what it looks like. But that is who they are. And I think that they’re treated with a kind of deference and respect, because traditionally that’s not who they were. They were these icons of finance who helped build this country.

But that’s not who they are anymore. And I think, it’s hard for people to wrap their heads around that and treat them the way they should be treated.

YVES SMITH: Well, I think people don’t want to think that there’s something wrong with leaders. And CEOs are leaders of the business community. If you really believe that CEOs of businesses that are really fundamental to the economy are corrupt, you have to think of a very serious restructuring of the business and financial system.

And even if people kind of intellectually might be willing to contemplate that, they don’t really want to go to what the implications are. So it’s much easier for them to block out that thought.

Critical to remember is that the key cause of the short-term, predatory behavior discussed above is what is called the ‘financialization’ of capitalism over the last several decades. In other words, the productive aspect of the economy, such as manufacturing and research and development, were replaced by manipulation of the economy with financial instruments and creating wealth-extracting bubbles. An example of a corporation becoming financialized is GE:

Since over half of GE’s revenue is derived from financial services, it is arguably a financial company with a manufacturing arm.

Examples of financial bubbles in our economy are the dot-com bubble, the commodities bubble, the housing bubble, the student loan debt bubble, the credit card debt bubble, or even more recently the gas fracking bubble:

…Chesapeake and its lesser competitors resemble a Ponzi scheme, overhyping the promise of shale gas in an effort to recoup their huge investments in leases and drilling. When the wells don’t pay off, the firms wind up scrambling to mask their financial troubles with convoluted off-book accounting methods. “This is an industry that is caught in the grip of magical thinking,” Berman says. “In fact, when you look at the level of debt some of these companies are carrying, and the questionable value of their gas reserves, there is a lot in common with the subprime mortgage market just before it melted down.” Like generations of energy kingpins before him, it would seem, McClendon’s primary goal is not to solve America’s energy problems, but to build a pipeline directly from your wallet into his.

The numbers vary slightly on the internet as to the finance industry’s take of the total profits of the economy, but the overall trend has been an ever-increasing slice of the economic pie. Just before the financial meltdown of 2008, finance accounted for more than a third of total profit in the economy and it has come roaring back since then. The Free Market Economy has evolved from a supposed model of efficient use of capital for the benefit of production to the efficient funneling upwards of capital to the elite 1%. And of course there is the revolving door between the government and finance industry. The graph below shows the growth of the finance industry as a percentage of the total corporate profits since 1948:

American companies are now run by money men who have different priorities than those business leaders of the past. David Bollier explains:

We all know the story of enclosure as it applies to the commons. The lesser-known story is that businesses are enclosing themselves – aggressively cannibalizing their own internal productive capacities in order to maximize short-term profits.

Harvard business guru Clayton Christensen argues in Forbes magazine that business executives are so habituated to seeing the world through a scrim of financial abstractions that they are blindly undercutting their own long-term productive capacities. The problem is so pervasive, says Christensen, that “whole sectors of the economy are dying…”

Financialization could be called the degenerate, end-stage of capitalism where making money from money is the be-all and end-all of corporate decision-making.

Professor Wolff discusses with William Tabb this financialization of the economy in more detail here. Our economy has become a giant Ponzi scheme. This won’t end well.

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Capitalism Cloaked in Corporate Greenwashing

23 Saturday Jun 2012

Posted by xraymike79 in Climate Change, Consumerism, Corporate State, Ecological Overshoot, Environmental Degradation, Neo-Colonialism, Pollution, Wall Street Fraud

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Chris Williams, Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Consumerism, Corporate State, Ecological Overshoot, Economic Growth, Environmental Collapse, Financial Elite, Globalization, Inverted Totalitarianism, John le Carré, Multinational Corporations, Neoliberal Capitalism, Poverty, Rio Earth Summit, The Elite 1%, United Nations, Wall Street Fraud

Corporate Power and Globalization

Corporate Power and Globalization

 …many of our official pronouncements – echoing those of most elite institutions and organizations – proudly and confidently insist that our future lies in “globalization.” Globalization – for lack of a better term – is, in actuality, the building out of a monoculture, a singular culture based upon basic presuppositions of modern political, economic and social theory.

Nature abhors monocultures. Nature abhors them so much that they do not exist in accordance with nature. They would be unknown but for modern man.

A monoculture is a single form of life – or, by extension, a single culture – that exists over a large expanse of space, even globally. Nature abhors monocultures because they are so susceptible to annihilation by one agent of destruction. In plant or animal life, for example, a single virus or bacteria, a single destructive fungus or disease, a single hostile predator or pest would wipe out an entire monoculture without the barest resistance. It is the very nature of nature to avoid monocultures – indeed, it cannot be otherwise since any form of monoculture cannot long exist in nature. Life in the natural realm is manifold and varied, precisely so that some life will weather the inevitable deadly challenges that arise. – Patrick J. Deneen

The following is an excellent essay by Chris Williams, a professor in the Dept of Chemistry & Physical Science, Pace University and author of Ecology and Socialism: Solutions to Capitalist Ecological Crisis (Haymarket Books, 2010). It goes well with my previous post on the corporatized Rio Earth Summit. In the last two decades only four out of ninety United Nation environmental sustainability pledges have been fulfilled, a pretty dismal failure by anyone’s standards. The four were: reducing ozone depletion, removing lead from gasoline, improving access to water supplies and boosting research for marine pollution. The reason for its epic failure is that the whole process of sustainability and scaling back ecologically destructive megatrends have been co-opted by our economic system, i.e. capitalism. The need for continuous growth and expansion into new markets is inherent in capitalism. It has come to define our culture and relationship with nature and our fellow man. As history has clearly shown, capitalism will be the death of us all if we allow this ethic-less system to define ourselves and to continue its rampant, unbridled destruction in the name of ‘development’ and profit.

A Tale of Two Conferences: The Social and Ecological Crises of Capitalism

Sometimes, the calendar of international conferences attended by global elites serves up potent lessons for the rest of us, when they shine a spotlight on the deliberately murky affairs of the people who run the system.  As the 20 most powerful world leaders deliberate on economic issues in Los Cabos, Mexico for the G20 summit, representatives of the rest will be simultaneously converging on Rio de Janeiro to consider how to follow up on the original Earth Summit, 20 years ago this year.

At these seemingly separate gatherings, we in truth observe the two sides of the capitalist coin.  Namely, how can the capitalist elite continue the necessary work of exploiting both humans and the natural world in the service of profit, while cloaking their intentions in the benign language of growth, development and sustainability?  Fine words to cover nefarious ends.  No doubt, as people’s livelihoods and world decay around them as a direct consequence of the system the elite oversee, and in response the flame of revolt is rekindled from Cairo to Athens, political elites in the two locations will reflect on the fact that it’s not getting any easier.  From the other side, critics and commentators of the two conferences are missing an important and significant lesson when they consider them in isolation.

At the original Earth Summit in Rio, it was generally accepted that environmental questions could not be separated from economic ones.  This year, the two conferences, occurring concurrently at different ends of the South American continent, bring to light how this thinking has been undermined.  Furthermore, they indicate with geographical and political precision where the priorities of the global elite lie.  While the most important world leaders hot-foot it to Mexico to discuss global economic development, they send low-level delegates to Brazil to discuss issues they deem less vital; to be exact, planetary ecological crisis.

Indeed, so desperate were the Brazilian organizers of Rio+20 to cajole the British premier to attend, they changed the date of the conference so as to avoid conflicting with the much more important and worthy 60th anniversary celebrations of the Queen of England’s ascension to the throne.  An attempt that proved ultimately and embarrassingly futile, as British Prime Minister, David Cameron, chose to cling to the coattails of President Obama and other G20 leaders in Los Cabos, as they calculate, connive and concoct the further dismemberment and disenfranchisement of communities of workers and peasants around the world.

In a further sad irony, to enhance attendance at Rio, Brazil is providing flights courtesy of the Brazilian air-force to those countries too poor to send delegates.  It’s hard to imagine that the countries who can’t afford to send delegates to an environmental conference will have the financial capacity to take action to preserve biodiversity and a stable climate without international funding and technology transfer.  But the concept or even use of the word “transfer” is exactly what the United States delegation is trying to excise from any document emerging from Rio+20.

In Los Cabos, 20 people wielding enormous economic power gather to ensure that nothing stands in the way of the international accumulation of money by their respective corporations; that capitalist growth continues, uninterrupted by paltry considerations such as democracy.  Scheming and plotting in Los Cabos, the 20 leaders will huddle, concerned that their plans have been exposed by the people of Greece.  As they jet to Mexico, one of the first countries to be devastated by the neoliberal prescription of privatization, deregulation and cuts to social spending, the election results in Greece ring in their ears as a collective rebuke to austerity and unemployment.  In unprecedented numbers, Greeks exercised their democratic rights by voting for a previously obscure and marginal left coalition, SYRIZA and against handing the welfare of their country over to unelected technocrats governing from afar.  A vote, it should be emphasized, carried out in the teeth of apocalyptic warnings of doom from central bank acolytes of the 1%, desperate to stop the people voting ‘the wrong way’.

As for the Global South, capitalist economic development, particularly since its neoliberal mutation, has been a disaster of gigantic proportions as money and natural wealth are siphoned into Western financial institutions.  According to Oxfam, gross capital flows to developing countries fell from $309 billion in 2010 to $170 billion in 2011.  Last year, aid donations from major donors experienced the first decrease in 14 years, dropping by $3.4 billion; overall aid was $16 billion below what the G8 committed to delivering in 2009.  The drop in aid, along with legal and illicit financial transfers out of the developing world, mean that for every dollar received in aid (much of it tied to the purchase of materials from the West), 7-10 dollars go out. In 2009 alone, the developing world saw $903 billion disappear overseas thanks to a rigged system from which the majority cannot benefit.  While 16 of the 20 members of the G20 have seen inequality increase over the last 20 years, as complement to that process, is it any wonder that developing countries seem to be permanently ‘developing’ even as social and ecological conditions there also worsen?

The violent dispossession that characterized the bloody dawn of capitalism captured by Marx in his writings on the enforced removal of peasants in the 1500’s amid the first acts of privatization – the land enclosures, is repeated in contemporary form through land grabs; his writing has a remarkably contemporary ring to it: “Thus were the agricultural people, first forcibly expropriated from the soil, driven from their homes, turned into vagabonds, and then whipped, branded, tortured by laws grotesquely terrible, into the discipline necessary for the wage system.”

In the 20 years since the optimism of the first Earth Summit in Rio, carbon emissions have increased by 50% and, since 1950, while the rest of the world has seen an average increase in temperature of 0.70C, the arctic, due to various positive feedback loops, has experienced double that.  Absent serious action, whereas the world is now on track for 20C of warming, the arctic is on course for a truly calamitous 3-60C.  The June 16th 2012 special edition of The Economist pondered an ice-free arctic with a mixture of trepidation, casual racist indifference and a general leaning toward monetary excitement: “In the long run the unfrozen north could cause devastation.  But, paradoxically, in the meantime, no arctic species will profit from it as much as the one causing it: humans.  Disappearing sea ice may spell the end of the last Eskimo cultures, but hardly anyone lives in an igloo these days anyway.  And the great melt is going to make a lot of people rich.”  Yes, to The Economist, while the change may be “devastating” to ancient and indigenous cultures, along with cold-adapted species, a certain small subset of humans will become rich while ‘making a killing’ – in all senses of the phrase.

We and the land have certainly changed and the continuation planned by the capitalists and their political representatives has unquestionably become impossible, as further capitalist development begins to contradict not just human rights or a sense of social progress, but the thermodynamic laws of the universe, which underpin a stable biosphere, upon which all life ultimately depends.

To quote British journalist George Monbiot on the reasons for the failure of so many environmental conferences, “These summits have failed for the same reason that the banks have failed. Political systems that were supposed to represent everyone now return governments of millionaires, financed by and acting on behalf of billionaires. The past 20 years have been a billionaires’ banquet. At the behest of corporations and the ultra-rich, governments have removed the constraining decencies – the laws and regulations – which prevent one person from destroying another. To expect governments funded and appointed by this class to protect the biosphere and defend the poor is like expecting a lion to live on gazpacho.”

From the other side of the political spectrum, representatives of the US environmental organization, Environmental Defense Fund, writing in a New York Times op-ed concede that “As the Arctic becomes ice-free, we can expect that it will be drilled for oil”.  But, nevertheless, despite two decades of failure, hold out hope that with just a little more effort and market reforms such as cap and trade, 10 years from now we’ll be okay “with determination and the right policies, by the time Rio+30 rolls around, optimism might be the order of the day.”

Now, socialists are often decried as Utopians.  We are told, our ideas may sound good in theory, but humans living equitably with one another in a democratic system based on cooperation, in a society that lives in harmony with the natural world, will simply never work in practice.  Is it more realistic to believe that the same system that got us to this point will extricate us?  The message from the ‘realists’ seems to be that while we may well have covered the arctic in drilling rigs by then, just give it another 10 years and things will be fine.  Going beyond the wrong-headed pronouncements of the EDF, UN Secretary-General, Ban Ki-moon managed a level of fervor that would have put Dr. Pangloss himself to shame, “Increasingly, we understand that, with smart public policies, governments can grow their economies, alleviate poverty, create decent jobs and accelerate social progress in a way that respects the earth’s finite natural resources.”

One has to ask, who are the real Utopians?  To many people around the world, leftwing and explicitly socialist ideas, along with class-based revolt, are re-emerging as real alternatives precisely because our rulers quite clearly have no answer other than an extension of the market into whole new areas.  Meena Raman of the Malaysia-based Third World Network, was unequivocal in her denunciation of the US’s role in derailing climate negotiations in Durban in 2002 and in Rio+20: “Given the US stance, we do not want President Obama or any US leader to come to Rio to bury what was agreed in 1992 in Rio. We cannot expect the US to show any leadership in truly wanting to save the planet and the poor. So it is better for President Obama to stay at home.”

Meanwhile, 105 scientific institutions are urging action at Rio on population and consumption “For too long population and consumption have been left off the table due to political and ethical sensitivities. These are issues that affect developed and developing nations alike, and we must take responsibility for them together,” said Charles Godfray, a fellow of the Royal Society.  Except that population growth is a function of poverty and it is in fact the countries with the largest levels of consumption, such as the United States and Europe, that not only are the historical cause of the ecological crisis, but are helping to drive it to its logical conclusion – a cascading collapse of ecosystems – by advocating continual economic expansion and the generation of poverty through the promotion of financial and trade agreements that accentuate inequality.  Capitalism is like a shark; just as these animals can never stop moving forward for fear of drowning, so capitalism must grow or die.

It’s important to understand why negotiators see the primary way to save the environment is through putting a price on it.  This is the main thrust of the talks and accepted by all negotiating parties inside the conference, representing a major schism with the tens of thousands of protesters attending the Rio+20 People’s Summit who are being forcibly kept out of the deliberations by armed riot police.

The argument goes that only by giving natural resources “value” in monetary terms can the environment be protected.  On the one hand, it’s easy to see the further privatization of every molecule of water, every tree and every piece of land as dovetailing beautifully with the desires of the corporations.  Extending the “free” market to new areas for exploitation is a tried and true method to enhance profits.   Those who run the corporations are not slow to catch on and self-advocate: “For companies this is enlightened self interest…Those who can afford water should pay. Water is essentially over exploited because we are not valuing it as an economic good. Introducing methodologies such as escalating tariffs, which some countries have already done, will help in terms of using water intelligently, often for the first time.” So said, Gavin Power, deputy director of the UN Global Compact, which is acting as an umbrella group for 45 of the most powerful CEO’s, from such well-known environmentally conscious concerns as Coca Cola, Glaxo-SmithKline, Nestle, Merck and Bayer, to ensure their voice is heard at Rio+20.

But advocacy for the “valuation” of natural resources occurs not just or even primarily because it coincides with what corporations want.  Many of the people arguing for such quantization of nature genuinely believe it will help preserve biodiversity, slow climate change and reduce the pressure on natural resources.

More fundamentally, the need to place “fair value” on everything is part of the ideological foundation of capitalism.  Within the philosophy of capitalism, if something does not have a price, it cannot have value.  Hence, putting the correct price, otherwise known as internalizing the cost, of a natural good, is to make possible its rational exploitation and simultaneous conservation.  To those mired deep within the labyrinth of a capitalistic value system, there is no contradiction between these two aims: the commodification of nature can be seen both as a way of making money from it, and as a way of saving it, as perfectly expressed by Ban Ki-moon.

The quantification of nature is the rational end-point of capitalism’s philosophical approach to nature and hence a practical approach to ‘saving nature’.  The non-quantifiable, qualitative side of nature, the purely spiritual and awe-inducing beauty of watching a sunrise for example, is not only entirely absent, or under-appreciated, it is essentially unknowable.  Hence, assuming you’re not prepared to advocate regulatory reforms to place limits on the operation of corporations and boundaries beyond which they cannot cross, or you’re not advocating revolution, then extending the market becomes the only option left, consequently the focus at Rio+20 on doing exactly that.

However, for those of us who truly want to see a better world, the extension of its commodification to every single particle of nature cannot be an answer.  Taking our inspiration from the rising struggles of 2011 around the globe, it is imperative that we link up the movements of social resistance, and forge new alliances with organized labor and the disenfranchised of the planet to force regulatory changes onto those who would foist false solutions on us.  Only by linking social and ecological change and fighting on both fronts, autonomous of mainstream political parties, while creating our own independent battle organizations, can we hope to make progress.

Ultimately, however, it is just as vital that fighters for social emancipation, human freedom and ecological sanity, recognize that capitalism represents the annihilation of nature and, thus, humanity.  A system based on cooperation, real democracy, long-term planning, and production for need not profit, i.e., socialism, represents the reconciliation of humanity with nature.  And its achievement will, as Marx pointed out, of necessity be much less violent than the process by which capitalism was born in the first place:

“The transformation of scattered private property, arising from individual labor, into capitalist private property is, naturally, a process, incomparably more protracted, violent, and difficult, than the transformation of capitalistic private property, already practically resting on socialized production, into socialized [common] property.  In the former case, we had the expropriation of the mass of the people by a few usurpers; in the latter, we have the expropriation of a few usurpers by the mass of the people.”

We currently live in an age that has been characterized as the Anthropocene, the Age of Man, by some scientists to take into account how drastically human civilization has altered the biosphere on a geological time scale.  Only by overthrowing capitalism and moving toward a cooperative, planned economy based on democracy and sustainability can we move toward an age characterized, after Epicurus, as the Oikeiotocene – The Age of Conformity to Nature.


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Oil-Drenched Politics and Imperialism

20 Wednesday Jun 2012

Posted by xraymike79 in Corporate State, Empire, Military Industrial Complex, Neo-Colonialism, Peak Oil

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Alastair Campbell, Arms Dealers, Capitalism, CIA, Colin Powell, Corporate State, Corporatocracy, Dick Cheney, Empire, FBI, Financial Elite, George Bush, Halliburton, Homeland Security, Imperialism, Inverted Totalitarianism, KBR, Military Industrial Complex, Neoliberal Capitalism, NSA, Peak Oil, Police State, Privatization of War, Rupert Murdoch, The Elite 1%, Tony Blair, War on Terror

“The Saudis have a saying that acknowledges their luck in being born on top of billions of barrels of oil and the inevitability of its depletion:

“My father rode a camel, I drive a car, my son flies a jet plane, his son will ride a camel.”

Delusional Americans believe they have a right to cheap plentiful oil forever. They refuse to acknowledge that luck has played the major part in their rise to economic power. The American saying will be:

My great grandfather rode a horse, my grandfather drove a Model T, my father drove a Buick, I leased a Cadillac Escalade, my son died in the Middle East fighting for my oil, his son will never be born.” – Jim Quinn

If you needed further proof of the ulterior motives behind the invasion and destruction of Iraq, I give you this post from Farooque Chowdhury’s Diary. [I have embedded links in the article and done some grammatical edits.]

Murdoch’s Iraq War

“Mysteries” of the Iraq War are getting exposed: Rupert Murdoch, the media Moghul, pressed Tony Blair, the British prime minister, to hasten joining the Iraq War. Murdoch did it on behalf of the US Republicans. And, the war took over 100,000 lives.
 
It is not only the interests behind waging the war, but also the principles and interests the bourgeois press uphold, and the secretive and conspiratorial way the bourgeois democracy works, the lies that are fabricated, how the readers are misinformed, and the manipulation of mass psychology that is being divulged.
 
The Guardian, British newspaper and AFP, news agency, reported the facts.
 
The news reports said:
“Rupert Murdoch took part in an ‘over-crude’ attempt by US Republicans to push Tony Blair into action before the invasion of Iraq, the former British prime minister’s ex-media chief claimed [Alastair Campbell…].
“Alastair Campbell said the News Corporation media baron warned Blair in a phone call of the dangers in delaying signing up to the March 19, 2003 invasion, as part of an attempt to speed up Britain joining the military campaign.”
 
Campbell’s assertions were made in The Burden of Power: Countdown to Iraq, diaries from his years at Blair’s side. [Here is his blog]
 
The news reports said:
“Campbell suggested Murdoch made moves to help the right-wing Republican Party of then US president George W. Bush before the March 18 vote in the […] House of Commons on deploying troops to Iraq, which was passed.”
 
Citing Campbell the news reports said:
On March 11, 2003, Blair “took a call from Murdoch who was pressing on timings, saying how News International would support us […]”
 
The reports said:
“‘Both TB [Tony Blair] and I felt it was prompted by Washington, and another example of their over-crude diplomacy. Murdoch was pushing all the Republican buttons, how the longer we waited the harder it got.’
“Campbell said Murdoch’s intervention came ‘out of the blue’.
“‘On one level (Murdoch) was trying to be supportive, saying ‘I know this is a very difficult place, my papers are going to support you on this’. Fine.
“‘But I think Tony did feel that there was something a bit crude about it. It was another very right-wing voice saying to him: ‘Look, isn’t it about time you got on with this?’”
 
The news reports said:
“Gordon Brown agitated so aggressively against Tony Blair – demanding a departure date soon after the 9/11 attacks – that Downing Street concluded in 2002 that the then chancellor was ‘hell-bent on TB’s destruction’.
Murdoch’s “worldwide contacts through the businesses that” he operated should not be missed while going through the news items. However, in his witness statement to the Leveson inquiry Murdoch said: “As for the three telephone calls with the then prime minister, Tony Blair, in 2003, I cannot recall what I discussed with him now, […] or indeed even if I spoke with him at all. I understand that published reports indicate that calls were placed by him to me. What I am sure about is that I would not in any telephone call have conveyed a secret message of support for the war; the NI titles’ position on Iraq was a matter of public record before 11 March 2003.” His famous declaration: “I’ve never asked a prime minister for anything.” He cited “four articles from the Sun and the News of the World which illustrated their ‘pro-war stance’ before 11 March 2003 when the main phone call took place.” The media Moghul’s company termed the assertion that he lobbied Blair over the Iraq War on behalf of the US Republicans as “complete rubbish”. It said: “Furthermore, there isn’t even any evidence in Alastair Campbell’s diaries to support such a ridiculous claim.” It should be mentioned that News International is News Corp.’s British newspaper arm, publishing The Times, The Sun and The Sunday Times. Blair faced a challenge getting his Labour Party lawmakers to back UK’s involvement. Many of them rebelled. (“Murdoch pushed Blair on Iraq: ex-media chief” and “Rupert Murdoch pressured Tony Blair over Iraq, says Alastair Campbell”, June 16, 2012)
 
Already known is the Bush – Blair 2003 Iraq memo or Manning memo, a secret memo of a meeting between Bush and Blair. The historic meeting took place on January 31, 2003 in the White House. The memo, written by David Manning, Blair’s chief foreign adviser, showed that the US had already decided on the invasion of Iraq at that point. Manning participated at the meeting. The memo showed Bush and Blair made a secret deal to carry out the invasion regardless of whether WMD were discovered by UN inspectors. The fact contradicts statements Blair made to the British parliament that Saddam Hussein would be given a final chance to disarm. Existence of the memo was made by Philippe Sands in his book Lawless World. The New York Times collected the memo and confirmed its authenticity.
 
Then, there is the Colin Powell case. While arguing for invading Iraq Powel claimed that Saddam was hiding a secret biological weapons program. Powell dramatically and confidently held up a vial he said could contain anthrax during his presentation of the Iraq case at the UN in 2003. But, later, the claim proved bogus.
 
Powel relied on information provided by an Iraqi defector. The defector was code-named “Curveball”. CBS News identified Rafid Ahmed Alwan al-Janabi as “Curveball”. Rafid made the false claims to German intelligence officials. The US used the claim that ultimately turned out to be a lie. But the Empire used the false information to start the war. The UN inspectors found no evidence of a biological weapons program, which was claimed.
 
In interviews with The Guardian, Rafid told the way he sought asylum in Germany and wanted to see an end to Saddam’s regime. “They gave me this chance. I had the chance to fabricate something to topple the regime. I and my sons are proud of that […]”

Man whose WMD lies led to 100000 deaths confesses all (4-1-2012)

Defector tells how US officials ‘sexed up’ his fictions to make the case for 2003 invasion.
 
The “story” of falsehood and fabrication doesn’t end there.
Citing Britain’s The Independent, Thomas Ferguson, Senior Fellow at the Roosevelt Institute and Professor of Political Science at the University of Massachusetts, Boston, wrote: The Independent news report “buries forever all claims that the US, the UK, and other governments did not have oil on their minds as they prepared to invade Iraq.” He referred to a book that drew on more than a thousand secret government documents. These show meetings between the UK government and British oil companies in the run up to the war. “These demonstrate that all the denials in London and Washington that policymakers were not concerned about oil as they invaded were as false as the famous cover story about weapons of mass destruction.” These also show that all the governments were negotiating over rights to oil long before the invasion and that they were working closely with their companies. Dick Cheney’s Energy Task Force was reviewing documents on Iraqi oil well before the attack on 9/11. (“Oil-Soaked Politics: Secret U.K. Docs on Iraq”)
 
So, the profit issue emerges. The Iraq war brought profit to all interested: weaponeer, supplier, infrastructureer, defense contractor, mercenary companies, and a section of media and politicians.
 
According to MSN Money(link to Cheney and his war profits), Halliburton’s KBR, Inc. division made $17.2 bn in the desert war in the 2003-2006 period, which was one-fifth of KBR’s total revenue for the 2006 fiscal year. Halliburton was involved with construction and maintenance of military bases, oil field repairs, and infrastructure rebuilding projects in the country.
Veritas Capital Fund/DynCorp, the private equity fund, gathered $1.44 bn through its DynCorp subsidiary by imparting training to new Iraqi police forces. The company is termed by many as a ‘state within a state’.
Through repair, maintenance, etc. work in Iraqi oil fields the Washington Group International gathered $931 mn in the period 2003-2006. Through the work of munitions disposal the Environmental Chemical got $878 mn by the end of fiscal 2006. The Aegis of the UK made $430 mn. (“25 Most Vicious Iraq War Profiteers”)
 
And, after the Bush Blair, Murdoch, Halliburton war business, where stood Iraq?
 
Thomas E. Ricks, Washington Post Pentagon correspondent quoted Mohammed Abdullah, an Iraqi in his Fiasco: The American Military Adventure in Iraq: “They said they came to liberate us. Liberate us from what? They came and said they would free us. Free us from what? We have traditions, morals, and customs. We are Arabs. We’re different from the West. Baghdad is the mother of Arab culture, and they want to wipe out our culture, absolutely.”
 
Iraq now stands devastated, a bold sign of Naked Imperialism (title of a book by John Bellamy Foster). Parts of life in the land have been wiped out. Does imperialism have the power to restore what has been lost in Iraq? It’s incapable. Imperialism’s devastating power lacks power to create and nourish life and nature. Iraq is one of the monuments of destruction imperialism has constructed in many parts of the world.
 

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King Romney and the Oligarchy Versus the Cannon Fodder Peasantry

17 Sunday Jun 2012

Posted by xraymike79 in Corporate State, Empire, Inequality, Military Industrial Complex

≈ 1 Comment

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Corporate Neo-Colonialism, Corporate State, Corporatocracy, Empire, Financial Elite, Military Industrial Complex, Mitt Romney, Neoliberal Capitalism, Obama, Poverty, Privatization of War, Regulatory Capture, Social Unrest, The Elite 1%, unwashed public, War for Profit

I haven’t done any bashing truth-telling on Mitt Romney yet, so now would be a good time since it looks like King Romney is closing the gap in war chest funds. As Matt Taibbi pointed out earlier this year, “the candidate who raises the most money wins an astonishing 94% of the time in America.” And Romney appears to be the golden boy for our financial oligarchs. According to the experts in such matters of our staged elections, Romney has the backing of the 1%:

..Romney will certainly have the advantage as Wall Street tycoons and conservative billionaires line up to contribute. One billionaire, casino magnate Sheldon Adelson, was reportedly ready to make “limitless” contributions, more than $100 million, to Romney to defeat the president….

“…Romney and his allies are certain to hold the financial upper hand, not least because the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision in 2010 allowed for a flood of corporate cash. The unspoken hope in Chicago is that superior strategy and a shrewd use of technology can make up for Obama’s diminished stature and more formidable opponent.”

Now as I explained in my post ‘Obama: Figurehead for the Corporatocracy‘, the job of the President is more of a PR position for who really runs the country, i.e. the corporatocracy. If you look at Obama’s record, he is indistinguishable from his predecessor in all issues that matter to the common person. For instance, contrary to Obama’s pre-election populist rhetoric, he has escalated America’s militarism such as in drone and cyber warfare, and he has widened even further the wealth gap. Having previously signed trade agreements with South Korea, Panama and Colombia, Obama continues to sell out the American worker to multinational corporations as revealed in a recently leaked document of a trade agreement called the Trans-Pacific Strategic Economic Partnership (also known as the Trans-Pacific Partnership, or TPP). Like all trade agreements before, this one is no different in the way that it was created, i.e. solely by corporate lobbyists, leaving the American public completely shut out. Compare that with what Obama said in 2008:

We can’t keep passing unfair trade deals like NAFTA that put special interests over workers’ interests…

Rest assured, King Romney will continue the dismantling of America and its Third Worldization in favor of the parasitic financial sector and transnational corporations. He says this TPP tade agreement should be passed through as soon as possible:

  • Reinstate the president’s Trade Promotion Authority
  • Complete negotiations for the Trans-Pacific Partnership
  • Pursue new trade agreements with nations committed to free enterprise and open markets
  • Create the Reagan Economic Zone

King Romney will also continue to support the military-industrial-complex and America’s war economy, painting himself as a pro-military, self-sacrificing patriotic citizen. But as Cenk Uygur notes, the truth is somewhere 180 degrees from what is painted for mass consumption:


 
Now after the 2012 political circus concludes, we will have had twelve years of rule by a president with no military service, and with another 4 more years to come. War is not for the privileged wealthy, but for the children of the impoverished 99% in America’s hinterland.

About 1 in 5 current members of Congress is a veteran, but less than 1% of their offspring are. – David Freed

Jack Nelson-Pallmeyer, author and Associate Professor of Justice and Peace Studies at the University of St. Thomas, clarifies for us the ugly reality behind the wars sold to us today:

Hidden in these tragic figures[cost and lives lost] is war’s dirty secret.  As historian and former U.S. Army Colonel Andrew Bacevich clearly states, “War is a source of enormous wealth and power [that delivers] profit, power, and privilege to a long list of beneficiaries.”[2] These beneficiaries find it expedient and surprisingly easy to sell war and militarized priorities to a reluctant public using deception, fear, and patriotism.

The politicos no longer represent us, only themselves and the elite monied interests. So no matter who wins this election, expect more of the same from our corporate overlords.

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The Ethos of Capitalism: The Straitjacket of Our Demise

13 Wednesday Jun 2012

Posted by xraymike79 in Climate Change, Consumerism, Corporate State, Empire, Inequality

≈ 1 Comment

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Capitalism, Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Corporate State, Corporatocracy, Ecological Overshoot, Economic Collapse, Economic Growth, Environmental Collapse, Financial Elite, Gil Smart, Gross Inequality, Inverted Totalitarianism, Leonardo Boff, Neoliberal Capitalism, Peak Debt, Peak Oil, Peak Water, Poverty, Social Unrest, The Elite 1%

A recurrent theme in the reality based community is the continued assertion that infinite growth cannot happen on a finite planet. This simple statement seems to be quite self-evident to those announcing it, yet the powers that be cannot seem to be able to wrap their head around it. We live in a society awash with advertisements that seek to sell you something at some price. Capitalism commodifies everything and its ethos of mandatorily attaching some arbitrary, imagined worth to all things has permeated every aspect of our lives, our ethics, and our value system. We are a society that projects a cost/price analysis on everything, including relationships with fellow humans. According to ‘Save the Children’ charity chief executive, Justin Forsyth, half a billion children over the next 15 years will suffer long-term mental and physical harm due to stunted growth by malnutrition. Surely if we valued the future life of our grandchildren more than profit, then we would not allow such a thing to happen. If our own children’s future is not valued enough to save them from our greed and shortsightedness, then why would the environment be treated any differently, despite its importance to the survival of every living thing on the planet. The scientist James Lovelock once said that Green is the color of mold and corruption. If we cannot separate the needs of capitalism from the needs of our planet, then every last bit of resources and life-sustaining gift from the earth will be chopped up into tradable, sellable units and thrown into the gaping jaws of the free market. Philosopher Leonardo Boff notes:

The fundamental defect in the UN’s document for Rio+20 is the total absence of a new vision or new cosmology that would create the hope of the «future that we want», the motto of the great gathering. As such, it belies a promising future.

To those who drafted it, the future depends on the economy. There is little value in the adjectives they attach to it: sustainable or green. The green economy in particular constitutes a great assault on the last bastion of nature: transforming into merchandise and putting a price on everything that is common, natural, vital and indispensable to life, such water, the soil, fertility, jungles, genes, etcetera. That which pertains to life is sacred and must not be passed to the sphere of business. Instead, it becomes part of the market place, under the categorical imperative: take all you want, make business with everything, especially with nature and with her goods and services.

This is the supreme egocentrism and arrogance of the human being, or, as it is also called, anthropocentrism. Human beings see the Earth as a warehouse of resources only for them, without realizing that we are not the only ones who inhabit the Earth, nor do we own her; we do not feel that we are part of nature, but outside and above her, as her «lords and masters». We forget, however, that there exists a whole visible community of life (5% of the biosphere) and quadrillions of quadrillions of invisible microorganisms (95%) that guarantee the vitality and fecundity of the Earth. They all belong to the Earth/condominium and have the right to live and coexist with us. Without interdependent relationships with them, we could not even exist. The Rio+20 document does not take any of this into account. We can then safely say that with that document there is no salvation. It opens a path towards the abyss…

This straitjacket of capitalism will not release its grip on civilization until the needs of this ever-consuming, ever-growing, ever-alienating economic system kills its host. Gil Smart gives insight into this dead-end thinking taking us all over the cliff in his short writing called Faith of our fantasies:

…we face a coming era of constrained resources. Fiscal resources; energy; environmental resources. Continual growth, the type we have conditioned to believe as natural and inevitable, is neither.

I read Megan McArdle’s stuff in the Atlantic, where recently she opined about Europe’s changing demographics (i.e. fewer births, more oldsters) and how this makes robust growth more difficult. She got a letter in return from someone questioning the premise – saying that perpetual growth isn’t possible. This was her response:

Whether or not continuous economic growth is possible, or desirable, the fact remains that modern economies are predicated on the assumption that it will happen. Both individuals and governments have planned for a future in which incomes steadily rise, allowing people to enjoy lengthy retirements, advanced health care, independent living, and of course, repayment of the massive debts that almost everyone has accumulated over the past few decades.
If that growth doesn’t materialize, the shock will be enormous. Generational battles over things like pensions have occurred in the context of rising incomes; they will become bitter indeed if young and old are fighting over a shrinking economic pie. The most brutal shock will of course be over debt. If incomes fall, debt will become an ever larger burden. But if countries default, they will merely shift the shock to someone else — too often, to pensioners at home or abroad.
However laudable Europe’s demographic decline may be from an environmental point of view, it will be an economic disaster for many who expected a stable, prosperous future.

Get it? This is the idea on which we’ve staked our future. And if the idea’s wrong?

Well. I guess that means you’re up shite creek, then.

If we plow blindly down this path, infused with the faith that what we want is what will actually happen – we’re doomed. But not charging down this path requires a fundamental restructuring of the way we think – not bloody likely in this society. Or maybe any society.

Well, Mr. Smart, along with a restructuring of our way of thinking will also be required a restructuring of society. And the elite who sit atop our current social hierarchy of capitalism, benefiting the most from its exploitation and theft, will not let go of the power they hold until it’s ripped from their cold, dead hands, whether by an angry mob or the wrath of an abused and ravaged Mother Earth.

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How Far Gone Are We? …. We’re living in a FantasyLand, Completely Detached from Reality

10 Sunday Jun 2012

Posted by xraymike79 in Consumerism, Corporate State, Empire, Wall Street Fraud

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Aldous Huxley, Bill Moyer, Capitalism, Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Corporate State, Corporatocracy, Economic Collapse, Empire, Financial Elite, George Orwell, Gross Inequality, Inverted Totalitarianism, Marty Kaplan, Mass Media, Neil Postman, Neoliberal Capitalism, Oligarchy, Regulatory Capture, The Elite 1%, TV, Wall Street Fraud


 
The above montage of clips from the satirical movie ‘The Distinguished Gentleman‘, in which Freshman Congressman (and con man) Thomas Jefferson Johnson (Eddie Murphy) is schooled in the ways of Washington by legendary lobbyist Terry Corrigan (Kevin McCarthy), is as true today as it was back when that movie was made more than twenty years ago, so says Marty Kaplan. The following excerpts from the transcript of Bill Moyer’s latest report – Big Money, Big Media, Big Trouble – tells the sorry and sordid tale of our political economy/society. This Moyer’s interview with Kaplan, a true insider to our political and media complex, is quite extraordinary. He affirms what the general populace is unable to comprehend… that we live in a society in which the news media and government institutions are entirely owned by the corporate oligarchs. The government regulators are owned by the very companies they are charged with over-seeing by way of Wall Street’s army of lobbyists and the revolving door that exists between government and private sector positions. Actual news to inform the public on the state of affairs and issues affecting them is virtually nonexistent on the media airwaves.

…what’s really driving it, if you think of this as a symptom and not a cause, I think what’s really driving it is the absolute demonization of any kind of idea of public interest as embodied by government. And at the same time, a kind of corporate triumphalism, in which the corporations, the oligarchs, the plutocrats, running this country want to hold onto absolute power absolutely. And it’s an irritant to them to have the accountability that news once used to play.

…the notion of spectator democracy has, I think, extended to include the need to divert the country from the master narrative, which is the influence and importance and imperviousness to accountability of large corporations and the increasing impotence of the public through its agency, the government, to do anything about it. So the more diversion and the more entertainment, the less news, the less you focus on that story, the better off it is.

And the self-serving triviality of corporate-run ‘news’ media has become a self-reinforcing mechanism whereby stats are being kept of what is the most popular story which then gets kicked up to the top and influences what that corporate news channel reports on in the future. It’s all driven by ratings and profit rather than educating and informing people on facts and real issues. So Neil Postman was right… We are being entertained to death, literally. This nihilism plays right into the hands of those controlling the levers of power who would not benefit from a well-informed, well-eduated public. The vast majority of public discourse has been reduced to an echo chamber of the crap (divisive ‘wedge issues’, celebrity gossip, sensationalist stories, corporate propaganda, consumerist materialism, valorization of the predatory skills of the modern competitive capitalist, etc.) that fills the corporate-controlled airwaves.

…

BILL MOYERS: You wrote The Distinguished Gentleman 20 years ago. Could you write it today?

MARTY KAPLAN: Oh God, it still is the same. All you have to do is add a couple of zeros to the amount of money. And the same laws still apply. It is fabulous and miserable at the same time.

BILL MOYERS: Was Washington then, and is it now, the biggest con game going?

MARTY KAPLAN: It is the biggest con game going. And the stakes are enormous. And the effort to regulate them is hopeless, because the very people who are in charge of regulating them are the same people who are wholly-owned subsidiaries of the lobbies that run them.

BILL MOYERS: I have it on very good authority that a prominent Washington senator recently told a group of lobbyists in Washington, a room full of lobbyists, that they are the lifeblood of the city. And I thought, “Kaplan has to do a vampire movie now.” Right?

MARTY KAPLAN: Exactly. The connection between the legislators and the lobbyists is so intimate that it’s not even embarrassing for a senator to say that in front of a room. The culture is so hermetically sealed from the rest of the country that it doesn’t occur to them that there is something deeply outrageous and offensive and corrosive of democracy to admit that the money side of politics and the elected side of politics belong to each other.

BILL MOYERS: You wrestle with this, you and your colleagues at the Norman Lear Center, and all the time, on how, on what the system is doing to us. So let me ask you, “How did this happen in America? How did our political system become the problem instead of the answer?”

MARTY KAPLAN: Part of it is the nexus of media, money, and special interest politics. The citizens have given the airwaves to the station. We own the electromagnetic spectrum and for free we give out licenses to television stations. Those stations, in turn, use that spectrum to get enormous amounts of money from special interests and from members of Congress in order to send these ads back to us to influence us. So we lose it in both ways. The other day, the president of CBS, Les Moonves, was reported by “Bloomberg” to have said “Super PACs may be bad for America, but they’re … good for CBS.” I mean, there it is. This is a windfall every election season, which seems not to even stop ever, for the broadcast industry. So not only are they raking it in, they’re also creating a toxic environment for civic discourse. People don’t hear about issues. They hear these negative charges, which only turn them off more. The more negative stuff you hear, the less interested you are in going out to vote. And so they’re being turned off, the stations are raking it in, and the people who are chortling all the way to Washington and the bank are the ones who get to keep their hands on the levers of power. So one of the big reasons that things are at the pass they are is that the founders never could have anticipated that a small group of people, a financial enterprise and the technology could create this environment in which facts, truth, accountability, that stuff just isn’t entertaining. So because it’s not entertaining, because the stations think it’s ratings poison, they don’t cover it on the news.

BILL MOYERS: They don’t cover the news.

MARTY KAPLAN: They don’t cover politics and government in the sense of issues. They’re happy, occasionally to cover horse race and scandal and personality and crime and that aspect of politics. But if you look at a typical half hour of news, local news, because local news is one of the most important sources of news for Americans about campaigns. A lot—

BILL MOYERS: You and your colleagues have done a lot of research on local news.

MARTY KAPLAN: Yes, we’ve been studying it now since 1998. And each year it gets more depressing and it’s hard to believe. We, not long ago, did a study of the Los Angeles media market. We looked at every station airing news and every news broadcast they aired round the clock. And we put together a composite half hour of news. And if you ask, “How much in that half hour was about transportation, education law enforcement, ordinances, tax policy?” everything involving locals, from city to county. The answer is, in a half hour, 22 seconds.

BILL MOYERS: Twenty-two seconds devoted to what one would think are the serious issues of democracy, right?

MARTY KAPLAN: Yes. Whereas, in fact, there are three minutes about crime, and two and a half minutes about the ugliest dog contest, and two minutes about entertainment. There’s plenty of room for stuff that the stations believe will keep people from changing the dial.

BILL MOYERS: What is the irony to me is that these very same stations that are giving 22 seconds out of a half hour to serious news, are raking— and not covering politics, are raking in money from the ads that the politicians and their contributors are spending on those same papers.

MARTY KAPLAN: Yes, they’re earning hundreds of thousands and millions of dollars from the ads that they are being paid to run. And not even risking running a minute of news, which might actually check on the accuracy of an ad. Truth watches, they’re almost invisible now.

BILL MOYERS: So they will tell you, however, that they’re in the entertainment business. That they’re in the business to amuse the public, to entertain the public. And if they do these serious stories about the schools or about the highways or about this or that, the public tunes out. That the clicks begin to register as—

MARTY KAPLAN: It’s one of the great lies about broadcasting now. There are consultants who go all around the country and they tell the general managers and the news directors, “It is only at your peril that you cover this stuff.” But one of the things that we do is, the Lear Center gives out the Walter Cronkite award for excellence in television political journalism every two years. And we get amazing entries from all over the country of stations large and small of reporters under these horrendous odds doing brilliant pieces and series of pieces, which prove that you can not only do these pieces on a limited budget, but you can still be the market leader.

…

MARTY KAPLAN: Well, what’s really driving it, if you think of this as a symptom and not a cause, I think what’s really driving it is the absolute demonization of any kind of idea of public interest as embodied by government. And at the same time, a kind of corporate triumphalism, in which the corporations, the oligarchs, the plutocrats, running this country want to hold onto absolute power absolutely. And it’s an irritant to them to have the accountability that news once used to play.

BILL MOYERS: What do you mean by that? News challenges their assumptions, challenges their power?

MARTY KAPLAN: It used to be that the news programs that aired, believe it or not, had news on them. They had investigative stories.

But then somewhere in the 1980s, when 60 Minutes started making a profit, CBS put the news division inside the entertainment division. And then everyone followed suit. So ever since then, news has been a branch of entertainment and, infotainment, at best.

But there was a time in which the press, the print press, news on television and radio were speaking truth to power, people paid attention, and it made a difference. The— I don’t think the Watergate trials would have happened, the Senate hearings, had there not been the kind of commitment from the news to cover the news rather than cutting away to Aruba and a kidnapping.

BILL MOYERS: What is the basic consequence of taking the news out of the journalism box and putting it over into the entertainment box?

MARTY KAPLAN: People are left on their own to fend for themselves. And the problem is that there’s not that much information out there, if you’re an ordinary citizen, that comes to you. You can ferret it out. But it oughtn’t be like that in a democracy. Education and journalism were supposed to, according to our founders, inform our public and to make democracy work.

You can’t do it unless we’re smart. And so the consequence is that we’re not smart. And you can see it in one study after another. Some Americans think that climate change is a hoax cooked up by scientists, that there’s no consensus about it. This kind of view could not survive in a news environment, which said, “This is true and that’s false.” Instead we have an environment in which you have special interest groups manipulating their way onto shows and playing the system, gaming the notion that he said she said is basically the way in which politics is now covered.

It’s all about combat. If every political issue is the combat between two polarized sides, then you get great television because people are throwing food at each other. And you have an audience that hasn’t a clue, at the end of the story, which is why you’ll hear, “Well, we’ll have to leave it there.” Well, thank you very much. Leave it there.

BILL MOYERS: You have talked and written about “the straightjacket of objectivity.” Right? What is that?

MARTY KAPLAN: Well, the problem with telling the truth is that in this postmodern world, there’s not supposed to be something as truth anymore. So all you can do if you are a journalist is to say, “Some people say.” Maybe you can report a poll. Maybe you can quote somebody. But objectivity is only this phony notion of balance, rather than fact-checking.

There are some gallant and valiant efforts, like PolitiFact and Flackcheck.org that are trying to hold ads and news reports accountable. But by and large, that’s not what you’re getting. Instead the real straightjacket is entertainment. That’s what all these sources are being forced to be. Walter Lippmann in the 1920s had a concept called “spectator democracy” in which he said that the public was a herd that needed steering by the elites. Now he thought that people just didn’t have the capacity to understand all these complicated issues and had to delegate it to experts of various kinds.

But since then, the notion of spectator democracy has, I think, extended to include the need to divert the country from the master narrative, which is the influence and importance and imperviousness to accountability of large corporations and the increasing impotence of the public through its agency, the government, to do anything about it. So the more diversion and the more entertainment, the less news, the less you focus on that story, the better off it is.

BILL MOYERS: Are you saying that the people who run this political media business, the people who fund it, want to divert the public’s attention from their economic power? Is that what you’re saying?

MARTY KAPLAN: Yes.

Let us fight about you know, whether this circus or that circus is better than each other, but please don’t focus on the big change which has happened in this country, which is the absolute triumph of these large, unaccountable corporations.

This is about as dismal and effective a conspiracy, out in plain sight, as there possibly could be. So I don’t say that this is going to be solved or taken care of. What I do say is the first step toward it is at least acknowledging how toxic the situation has become.

…

BILL MOYERS: What you’re saying is that the political square is now a commercial enterprise, owned and operated for the benefit of the brand, CNN, Fox, all of those, right?

MARTY KAPLAN: That’s correct.

BILL MOYERS: How did it happen? How did we sell what belonged to everyone?

MARTY KAPLAN: By believing that what is, is what always has been and what should be. The notion that what goes on is actually made by people, changes through time, represents the deployment of political power. That notion has gone away. We think it’s always been this way. People now watching these CNN and Fox. They think this is how it works. They don’t have a sense of history. The amnesia, which has been cultivated by journalism, by entertainment in this country, helps prevent people from saying, “Wait a minute, that’s the wrong path to be on.”

BILL MOYERS: Amnesia, forgetfulness? You say that they’re cultivating forgetfulness?

MARTY KAPLAN: Absolutely.

…

BILL MOYERS: You made a very important speech not long ago at a media conference in Barcelona. And you tried and did draw the distinction between— you said the battle of the future is between big data and big democracy. In layman’s language, what is that?

MARTY KAPLAN: Big data, the age of big data that we’re supposed to be in, refers to the way in which, as we go on the internet, as we do all these media activities, watching television, which are at the center of our lives, we’re leaving a trail behind. We’re giving bits of ourselves up. And that set of bits is being collected and mined relentlessly.

So every time we buy a product or send an e-mail or vote how many stars to a restaurant, all this stuff creates a profile that companies buy and sell to each other. And that stuff is being used currently not only to market to us, to target ads toward us, but it’s also being used to profile us. There’s something called “web lining.” Which is similar to what used to be called “red lining.” The— that phenomenon, which is now illegal, in which people who were discriminated against because of the neighborhoods they live in. Right now—

BILL MOYERS: Banks drew a red line around impoverished neighborhoods that they would not then serve.

MARTY KAPLAN: Exactly. And so today imagine if you were to permit a private detective to follow you as you went to your drug store and bought a medication to help you with depression or as you made a phone call to a bankruptcy lawyer, because you needed one. Imagine if that kind of information could be put together and used against you to decide that you’re a bad credit risk or that maybe your insurance company should turn you down, because you suffer from this problem.

That kind of information, that kind of digital profiling is something which is emerging as a huge industry. And unless there are controls on it and constraints, as they have to some degree in Europe but not nearly enough even there, we are about to kiss goodbye our ownership of our privacy and also even the ownership financially of our information. We are the people who make Facebook and Twitter worth the billions of dollars that they’re worth, because we are giving up our information to them, which they are then selling and raising capital around.

BILL MOYERS: But in a libertarian era, what are the restraints and constraints against that? Where are they going to come from?

MARTY KAPLAN: Well, right now, the constraints in this country are voluntary. The Obama White House not long ago issued a digital code of conduct, which included privacy. In which they asked companies and companies did step up to it to say, “We’re not going to track people if they don’t want to be tracked.” And other such efforts to get people in control.

But what we do know, the record of just the past couple of months, is that company after company was doing stuff to us that’s astonishing, that we didn’t know about. The ways in which the apps that you use on your smartphones were vacuuming up information about you, your address book and all your pictures.

Stuff that you had no idea you had consented to, which in fact usually you had not, suddenly was all owned by other people, as well. You have not given permission, but that essential part of you is now not yours. That’s the name of the game now. This is baked into the business model of data mining, which is at the heart of so much of the digital economy.

BILL MOYERS: But that’s big data. You talked about big democracy.

MARTY KAPLAN: So at the same time as our data is being mined, there is this movement to protect people using technology to give them the power to say, “I’m not going to opt into this stuff.” We’re still at the beginning of this industry. And there has to be rules of the road. And part of those rules include my attention rights. My rights to control my identity, my privacy, and my ownership of information.”

BILL MOYERS: In your speech in Barcelona, you pointed to two simultaneous covers of TIME Magazine appearing the same week. One for the editions in Europe, Asia, and South Pacific, and it was about the crisis in Europe. The other, which appeared in the American edition, featured a cover about animal friendships. You use these two covers to illustrate the difference between what you call “push journalism” and “pull journalism.” What’s the difference?

MARTY KAPLAN: Push journalism is the old days, which seem no longer to apply in the era of the internet, in which an editor, a gatekeeper, says, “Here’s the package which you need to know.” All of that is ancient history now.

Instead, now, it’s all driven by what the consumer is pulling. And if the consumer says, “I want ice cream all the time.” And whether that ice cream is Lindsay Lohan, or the latest crime story, that’s what’s delivered. And as long as it’s being pulled, that’s what is being provided. So it’s quite possible that in the U.S., the calculation was made that the crisis in Europe and the head of Italy would not be a cover that one could use. But that pet friendships would be the sort of thing that would fly off the newsstand.

BILL MOYERS: So the reader is determining what we get from the publication?

MARTY KAPLAN: On a minute by minute basis, stories that the reader’s interested in immediately go to the top of the home page. There are actually pieces of software that give editorial prominence to stuff that people by voting with their clickers have said is of interest to them. No one is there to intervene and say, “Wait a minute, that story is just too trivial to occupy more than this small spot below the fold.” Instead, the audience’s demand is what drives the placement and the importance of journalistic content.

BILL MOYERS: So George Orwell anticipated a state as big brother, hovering over us, watching us, keeping us under surveillance, taking care of our needs as long as we repaid them with utter loyalty. Aldous Huxley anticipated a Brave New World in which we were amusing ourselves to death. Who’s proving the most successful prophet? Huxley or Orwell?

MARTY KAPLAN: Well, I think Huxley is probably right, as Neil Postman said in—

BILL MOYERS: The sociologist, yes.

MARTY KAPLAN: —in Amusing Ourselves to Death. That there’s no business but show business. And we are all equally guilty, because it’s such fun to be entertained. So you don’t need big brother, because we already have big entertainment.

BILL MOYERS: And the consequences of that?

MARTY KAPLAN: That we are as in Brave New World, always in some kind of stupor. We have continual partial attention to everything and tight critical attention on nothing.

…


According to stats from 2010 for TV viewing by adult Americans, we’re glued to the boob tube in our waking hours. This explains why having an intelligent conversation with most Americans is an impossible task. All they can do is regurgitate what has been constantly programmed into their heads.

• The average American watches 35:34 (hours/minutes) of TV per week

• Kids aged 2-11 watch 25:48 (hours/minutes) of TV per week (Q1 2010)

• Adults over 65 watch 48:54 (hours/minutes) of TV per week (Q1 2010)

And according to the latest Nielsen study, TV viewing is on the increase, notwithstanding a tiny drop in the number of households who own a TV:

REPORT: THE INTERNET POSES NO CHALLENGE TO TV — YET …

…despite all the competition from cable TV, videogames, and the Internet, the average household watched 59 hours, 28 minutes of broadcast TV per week during the 2010-2011 season, setting a new record. Lanzano drew particular attention to the competition — or lack of it — from Facebook, noting that while the average person spends about 13 minutes a day on Facebook, they spend 297 minutes watching TV. “No wonder our friends at [General Motors] are making some changes,” he said. [Last month GM announced that it will stop placing ads on Facebook, after determining that they had little impact.]

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  • “Rubio says ‘significant’ progress made in talks with Iran”
  • Harvard Limits A Grades
  • Really? Back to Other Ways of Knowing?
  • A Conservative Wet Dream: Replacing Teachers with AIs
  • What Do We Know About AI’s Effect On Critical Thinking?
  • If You are a Fan of Capitalism …
  • We Were Better off with Trump Tweeting from the Crapper
  • It Is Clear, Jesus Won’t Protect Trump
  • Open Mouth, Extract Foot

RSS Cliff Schecter

  • Family mourn ‘Hamas leader’ killed in Israeli attack
  • Mogadishu gathers for Eid with prayers, family meals and outings
  • Muslims worldwide celebrate Eid al-Adha, the Festival of Sacrifice
  • Why is Israel attacking Lebanon’s Nabatieh, the major southern city?
  • Bangladesh seeks IMF aid: How badly has Iran war hit its economy?
  • What is the Lobito Corridor, cited by US Africa envoy as model for ties?
  • Rescue teams celebrate as survivors found in Laos cave
  • Who is Moise Kouame, the youngest French Open match winner since 1991?
  • The Baltics urgently need a de-escalation mechanism; Belarus can help
  • Nigeria’s Eid Crisis: When a ram becomes a luxury

RSS Climate and Capitalism

  • Pollution from land use change kills thousands in SE Asia
  • Marxist theory and the global environmental crisis
  • ‘Huge transformation’ shrinks Antarctic sea ice to record lows
  • Ecosocialist Bookshelf: May 2026
  • Faster meat processing: A disaster for workers and the environment
  • Earth in 2050: A stark vision of environmental decline
  • Rush for ‘green energy’ minerals harms the world’s most vulnerable
  • Ecosocialist Bookshelf: April 2026
  • Metabolic Rifts: ‘Engaging with science to understand history and the world’
  • Video: ‘Metabolic Rifts: Capitalism’s Assault on the Earth System’

RSS Climate Central

  • The looming threat for Maine’s iconic potato industry
  • Ellis Island, lighthouses among historic NJ sites flooding as seas rise
  • Still rare in Iowa, electric car powers Des Moines family’s home during blackouts
  • Storied Maine ski resort bets future on reining in high costs of warmer winters
  • Hardly any past Winter Olympic host cities will have the snow to host in 60 years
  • Data may be Colorado’s best bet to mitigate increasing wildfire risk on the Front Range
  • How sea level rise is affecting your commute to and around Atlantic City
  • ‘A moral imperative’: Monastic sisters in rural Midwest make faith-based case for climate action
  • As flooding amplifies along the East Coast, Buddhist and Jewish faith leaders join the climate fight
  • ‘Preach now or mourn in the future’: How Key West faith leaders are confronting climate change

RSS Climate Change: The Next Generation

  • Tamino's latest on the September 2024 temperature anomaly
  • Unofficial Temperature Records on July 9, 2023
  • Historic Greenland ice sheet rainfall unraveled
  • Flip Flop: Why Variations in Earth's Magnetic Field Aren't Causing Today's Climate Change
  • Let's call climate change deniers what they really are: CLIMATE LIARS!
  • Amy Westerfelt: The Reason COVID-19 and Climate Seem So Similar: Disinformation
  • Bill McKibben's response to Michael Moore's Planet of the Humans
  • WaPo: The Congo rain forest is losing ability to absorb carbon dioxide. That’s bad for climate change
  • Mark Carney of the Bank of England unveils climate stress test
  • Tropical forests may be heating Earth by 2035

RSS Climate Citizen

  • UN Oceans Conference: Australia commits to 30% highly protected marine areas by 2030, signs on to High Seas Biodiversity Treaty, Blue NDC Challenge
  • Prime Minister Albanese says global warming a factor in Tropical Cyclone Alfred and its extreme weather impacts
  • Younger people disproportionately represented in climate heat-related mortality trend according to Mexico study
  • Guest Post: Trusted partner to the Pacific, or giant fossil fuel exporter? This week, Australia chose the latter
  • INC5: Negotiations for Global Plastics Treaty 5th meeting in Busan, South Korea
  • Climate Progress in Australia's 2024 Annual Climate Statement delivered by Chris Bowen
  • Victoria releases latest (2022) Greenhouse gas emissions report showing year on year 4.3 megatonnes increase
  • Guest Post: After nearly 10 years of debate, COP29’s carbon trading deal is seriously flawed
  • Australia at COP29 Climate Diary
  • Fossil of the Day awards at COP29 in Baku, Azerbaijan

RSS Climate Code Red

  • “Don’t mention the climate!”
  • Any sane foreign policy would put climate risks, not China, at centre stage
  • Energy security is now inseparable from national security. Australia has options, but they’re being neglected

RSS Climate Connections

  • Climate Connections Update
  • CIC’s environmental and social justice photography contest open for entries
  • FBI Harassing Activists in Pacific Northwest
  • Global Justice Ecology Project Executive Director Anne Peterman on the GE American Chestnut
  • GE Trees for Conservation? What are you Nuts?
  • Zapatistas Host Festival of Resistance and Rebellion
  • GMO Chestnuts Draw Scrutiny this Holiday
  • Photo Essay: The Pillaging of Paraguay

RSS Climate Denial Crock of the Week

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RSS Climate Progress

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RSS Climate Snapshot

  • "Carbon tsunami" lead by Enbridge Northern Gateway takes aim at BC
  • BC's tar sands? Thirteen proposed LNG projects equivalent to 13 times current BC emissions
  • Car Carbon series: cool new animation, plus the jaw-dropping impact it left out
  • Climate change fuels both California's record drought and "polar vortex" storms
  • Obama's Keystone XL delay forces Harper into the "choose first" hot seat
  • Four charts reveal gigantic climate impact from proposed Kinder Morgan mega-pipeline
  • Climate fail. Surging fossil fuels are leaving renewable energy far, far behind.
  • Twenty one ways America would destroy a safe climate -- and one way they won't: US govt. report
  • Fracking in America kills off clean energy, leading to higher emissions: EIA report
  • BP calls for global carbon price to avoid the "worst impacts of climate change"

RSS ClimateSight

  • Increasing melting of West Antarctic ice shelves may be unavoidable – new research
  • Let’s hear more from the women who leave academia (Part 2)
  • Let’s hear more from the women who leave academia.
  • Talking, typing, and the social model of disability
  • We need your help! Share your views on climate change with us.
  • Ice sheet melting: it’s not just about sea level rise
  • How I became a scientist
  • How does the Weddell Polynya affect Antarctic ice shelves?
  • Climate change and compassion fatigue
  • The silver lining of fake news

RSS Club Orlov

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RSS ClusterFuck Nation

  • For the Honored Dead
  • The Coup Abides
  • The Too-Long Goodbye
  • Resource Scramble
  • KunstlerCast 443 — Attorney Bobbie Anne Cox on the Tribulations of New York State under the Woke Witch Hochul
  • The Earth Moves Just a Bit
  • California Death Trip
  • May 2026 | Eyesore
  • All's Not So Quiet on Any Front
  • Indictment-O-Rama

RSS Cocktailhag – FDL

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RSS Colin Tudge

  • Let's not bet the farm | Colin Tudge
  • Why the world needs a renaissance of small farming | Colin Tudge
  • Are modern British children suffering from 'nature deficit disorder'? | Colin Tudge and Aleks Krotoski
  • Let the country, not the City, drive the UK economy | Colin Tudge
  • Farming needs Adam Smith's invisible hand, not finance capitalism | Colin Tudge
  • Survivors by Richard Fortey - review
  • Why woodlands are wonderful
  • Fossil Ida's great big family | Colin Tudge

RSS Common Dreams: News

  • 'A Dramatic Abdication': Trump Admin to Send US Citizens With Ebola Exposure to Kenya
  • Ben-Gvir Says Israel ‘Will Not Allow’ Trump to Make a Peace Deal With Iran as IDF Kills Dozens in Lebanon
  • 'How the Corruption Works': Trump Boosts Prediction Markets as His Family Profits
  • 2,315 Meters Under the Sea, Greenpeace Stages Deepest Protest in World History
  • GOP Lawmaker Distances Himself From Trump Slush Fund After Angry Pushback at Town Hall
  • Trump Loyalist Ken Paxton—Dubbed 'Most Corrupt Politician in America'—Wins Texas Senate Primary
  • Vermont Applauded for Banning Parkinson's-Linked Neurotoxic Herbicide Paraquat
  • Global Sumud Flotilla Urges Probe of US Complicity in Members' Abduction and Torture by Israel
  • As US Drivers Suffer High Gas Prices, Big Oil Celebrates and Plans Big Payouts for Shareholders
  • Mamdani Announces Plan to Build 200K New Affordable Homes

RSS Consortium News

  • Vijay Prashad: An Interval of Time
  • Challenging Western Supremacy
  • WATCH: Target Cuba
  • Rape, Assault & Abuse Reflect Israeli Goverment Values
  • PATRICK LAWRENCE: The Cokehead of Kiev, Exposed
  • WATCH: McGovern, Ritter Play Putin & Gerasimov
  • Michael Brenner: Hegemony?
  • Caitlin Johnstone: American Democracy?
  • Jonathan Cook: Western Democracy?
  • WATCH: The World This Week — ‘Chaos of the Old Order’

RSS Consumer Energy Report

  • How Bulk Diesel Fuel Delivery Reduces Downtime for Industrial Operations
  • Death of the Florescent Shop Light – Energy Efficiency
  • Methanol VS Ethanol – Technical Merits and Political Favoritism
  • Bill Nye the Science Guy – Social Primate and Nuclear Energy
  • World’s Smallest Gasoline Engine – Technology Breakthrough
  • How Much Oil Does the World Produce? – Production Facts and Figures
  • World Sets New Oil Production and Consumption Records
  • What Makes Up the Cost of a Gallon of Gasoline? – Gas Price
  • Road Trip – Thoughts on the Satsop Nuclear Power Station
  • What Happened at Choren? – History & Events

RSS Corp Watch

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RSS CorrenteWire

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RSS CorrenteWire – Quick Hits

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RSS Counter Currents

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RSS CounterPunch

  • Less Freedom, More Money: Tony Blair’s Vaccine Passport
  • The U.S. Dares to Criticize Israel
  • Gaza – Betrayed In Thought and Deed
  • Boeing Workers Take a Stand & Take the Heat
  • Bank Corruption Down Under
  • Europe’s Deadly Transition From Social Democracy to Oligarchy
  • There Hasn’t Been a Day in My Life When I Haven’t Learned Something
  • Stop Meddling in Pakistan!
  • Options in America: Kill Yourself or Have a Baby
  • Pakistan Stares Into the Abyss

RSS Crooked Timber

  • Sunday photoblogging: Pézenas
  • Pet Haidt
  • Occasional paper: St. Anthony’s Turnip
  • Sunday photoblogging: Canigou with cherries (2)
  • The text is not the product
  • From The People’s Bank to the Banker’s Bank
  • Sunday photoblogging: Pézenas, maison consulaire
  • Sunday photoblogging: Canigou and cherry trees
  • Occasional paper: Blue Angels, Devil Hands
  • Sunday photoblogging: l’Abbaye de Valmagne

RSS Crooks and Liars

  • Kevin Hassett Laughs About People Using Credit Cards To Survive
  • Rep. Tom Massie: Blanche And Patel Have 'Perjured Themselves
  • Plans Reveal Trump's Name ''' At Upgraded Penn Station
  • Ken Paxton Crushes Cornyn To Become Senate GOP Nominee
  • Democratic AGs Turned Away From JD Vance's Anti-Fraud Roundtable
  • South Carolina Senate Shuts Down Trump's Preferred State Map
  • Federal Judges Block Alabama GOP's 'Intentionally Discriminatory' Redistricting Again
  • Mike’s Blog Round-Up
  • Top AI Clips: Trump Dumped, Hegseth Lego & Randy Rainbow!
  • Heel! Stay! Sit! Heel!

RSS Cryptome

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RSS Culture Change

  • Low Cost Polluting: The Real American Dream?
  • We Did It: Sailing Cargo in the Aegean
  • Cure for Depending on 90K Oil Spewing Cargo Ships: Sail Power Makes Inroads, Now in Mediterranean
  • The Trump Presidency: Celebration of the Little Boy, and Mass Awakening
  • Stepping Back from Trump's Election: Critique of underlying US Culture in a List - 25 Limitations
  • Dirty Fossil Fuel ‘Business-As-Usual’ Tactics Spew Out of the IMO at COP22
  • The Unconnected and Unrewarded in the New Divisive Dichotomy: Being Either Online Or Not
  • The Ameliorators: a possible coalition of progressives on (e.g.) NAFTA
  • It's the 21st, and this is what a growing movement is doing
  • Pro-Climate Actions - a community flier and poster

RSS Dahr Jamail

  • Dr. Blake Livingood Sold Supplements Containing Lead and Cancer-Causing Toxins
  • Kyle Loftis Passes Away as Cause of Death Remains Unknown
  • UPS Pays $45M to Investors After Hiding a $500M Goodwill Impairment on UPS Freight
  • Foot Locker Pays $148K to SEC After Making 148 Employees Waive Their Whistleblower Award Rights
  • Anthony and Michael Pellegrino of Goldstone Financial Group Sold $37M in Fraud Notes to Clients
  • James Daughtry Sold His Advisory Clients to Jared Eakes and Ignored Red Flags of a $2.6M Fraud
  • Oskar Elmgart and Raymond Leibman Traded Matterport Options on a Family Member’s Merger Tips
  • Joseph Geromini of Group K Diagnostics Stole $200K in Investor Funds and Got 6 Months Prison
  • Gautam Adani and Sagar Adani Pay $18M to Settle SEC Charges Over $265M India Bribery Scheme
  • Robert Newell of Black Hawk Funding Stole $668K from Cannabis Fund Investors and Paid $1.59M

RSS Daily Kos Comics

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RSS Damn the Matrix

  • SURPLUS ENERGY loops
  • Art Berman getting all philosophical
  • Meet Dr David Unwin
  • Tim Morgan at his best…
  • The Far Right and Inequality
  • American un-critical thinking
  • Orders of Magnitude
  • Pre-traumatic Stress
  • Winter of Discontent
  • The Turning of the Fagus…

RSS Dan Hagen

  • Not Your Job
  • One of My Favorite Poems
  • The Warmonger and the Sparrow
  • No Regret, No Anxiety
  • Things Big and Little
  • Calm Your Space
  • Whom to Please
  • Clear the Mind
  • On a Street Corner, Alive
  • Where and When Are We?

RSS Dangerous Intersection

  • Dissolving Sheep
  • Our Failing Institutions
  • Today’s Predominant Political Category Error
  • The Economics of Sports Betting and State Lotteries
  • Depends Who Said It

RSS Dark Ages America

  • Shifting to Substack
  • Postscript: A Passion for Cruelty: A Nation Spinning Out of Control
  • Karma Comes to America
  • And So, We Come to the End
  • The Origins of Sadism
  • Soul-Changers
  • 481
  • Calling All Texans: Major Event Coming Your Way
  • 479
  • Displacing Your Rage

RSS David Bollier

  • Jeremy Lent’s ‘Ecocivilization’ – A Bold Vision for System Change
  • Now Available -- Audiobook and Digital Versions of ‘Think Like a Commoner, Second Edition'
  • Benjamin Mako Hill on the Social Dynamics of Online Collaboration
  • Federico Savini on Degrowth and Its Future
  • Stéphanie Leyronas: France’s Bold Experiment in Commons-based Development
  • Lewis Hyde on Gift Economies and Cultural Commons
  • Relationalized Finance: Bridging the Chasm
  • Toward Socio-ecological Markets
  • Toward a New Theory of Value (and Meaning): Living Systems as Generative
  • Commoning as Relational Provisioning & Governance

RSS David Cay Johnston (Link – National Memo)

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RSS David Cay Johnston (Link – Tax Analysts)

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RSS David Harvey

  • A League of Socialist Cities: David Harvey interviewed by Novara Media
  • Press Roundup from Mexico City
  • Keynote Lecture at the Faculty of Philosophy and Letters, National Autonomous University of Mexico
  • Book Talk for The Story of Capital at the Faculty of Philosophy and Letters, National Autonomous University of Mexico
  • LSE Review of Books: David Harvey on Marx in the age of finance capital
  • Interview: Cosmonaut Magazine podcast
  • The Story of Capital: Book Launch with David Harvey in Conversation with Adam Tooze
  • Book launch of The Story of Capital on March 30th in NYC with discussant Adam Tooze
  • Publication Day for The Story of Capital
  • The New Statesman: Marxism can still change the world

RSS David Hilfiker

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RSS David McNally

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RSS David Roberts

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RSS Death by Car: Capitalism’s Drive to Carmageddon

  • 놓치지 말아야 할 고급 중고차 구입 팁 5가지 체크리스트
  • 레트로 중고차의 매력, 2026년 활용법 총정리!
  • 왜 요즘 중고차를 사는 게 좋을까? 2026년 중고차 모델 5가지 체크리스트
  • 자동차 전문가가 추천하는 사고 싶은 중고차 모델 조사하기 리스트 2026년 필수 체크리스트
  • 처음 알게 된 중고차의 초기 투자로서의 장점 5가지 체크리스트
  • 요즘 핫한 학생이 추천하는 중고차 모델 리스트 2026 체크리스트
  • 취미로 중고차 수집을 시작할 때 필요한 사전 지식 2026년 가이드
  • 중고차로 인한 비용 절감 효과: 2026년 절약하는 5가지 방법
  • 요즘 인기가 높은 중고차, 직장인 선택 비결 5가지 총정리
  • 친환경 중고차 구입 방법에 숨겨진 혜택들, 2026년 절약 가이드

RSS Decline of the Empire

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RSS Deep Green Resistence News Service

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RSS Deepak Tripathi’s Diary

  • Netanyahu’s “Forever War” on Gaza: What Made it Unsustainable
  • The Fall of Syria’s Bashar al-Assad: What it Means
  • United Kingdom Heading for General Election
  • Assertions of Sovereignty: Dimensions of Domestic and Foreign Policy
  • After Brexit: The State of the United Kingdom

RSS Democratic Underground

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RSS Democratic Underground – Breaking News

  • Canada to order military plane fleet from Sweden in shift from US suppliers
  • Judge sides with WA in dispute over $4M grant canceled during DOGE era
  • Trump Calls Joe Biden 'Crooked Politician' After He Sues DOJ Over Tapes
  • Alabama asks Supreme Court to allow use of congressional map helping GOP, despite racial bias ruling
  • Almost 500,000 Russian soldiers killed in Ukraine war, GCHQ says
  • Your AI agent can now trade for you on Robinhood. And buy stuff with your credit card too
  • Israel orders evacuation of Lebanese city as conflict with Hezbollah escalates
  • US will need years to replenish stockpiles of advanced weapons used in Iran war, new analysis finds
  • Newark mayor urges governor to 'empower' AG to 'immediately investigate Delaney Hall'
  • US draws up plans to halt immigration, customs processing at 'sanctuary city' airports

RSS Democratic Underground – Good Reads

  • Where to Watch FRONTLINE's Documentary on Trump's Inner Circle & His Waging of War
  • For far-right extremists, the rise of a new enemy: women
  • Trump Exhaustion Syndrome is infecting the world
  • Stephen Colbert gets the last laugh on CBS
  • The Borowitz Report: Zelenskyy Offers to Lend Trump Cards
  • Trump moves Cabinet meeting from Camp David to White House due to weather
  • Trump redistricting push suffers twin setbacks
  • 'House Democrats launch new anti-corruption caucus targeting Trump-era ethics concerns'
  • High-Level British Spy Warns of Expanding Russia Threat
  • What to Know About the Trump Administration's Proposal for Government-Wide NDAs

RSS Democracy Now

  • "How Oligarchs Dominate Our Democracies": Northwestern Prof. Jeffrey Winters on Book "The Blind Spot"
  • Capitol Police Officers Sue Trump over Slush Fund for Jan. 6 Rioters & Other Allies
  • "They Are Not Alone Inside": Protests Outside Newark ICE Jail Support Hunger-Striking Detainees
  • Headlines for May 27, 2026
  • "He Was in Agony": Tennessee Issues 1-Year Stay for Tony Carruthers After Botched Execution Attempt
  • "Designed to Break You": Gaza Flotilla Activists Faced Violence, Sexual Abuse in Israeli Detention
  • U.S. Bombs Iran Despite Peace Talks; Israel Strikes Lebanon to "Force Trump's Hand": Negar Mortazavi
  • Headlines for May 26, 2026
  • Democracy Now! Marks 30 Years with Angela Davis, Bruce Springsteen, Patti Smith, Michael Stipe & More
  • "AI Resist List": Karen Hao on Data Center Resistance, Tech Billionaires, "Empire of AI" & More

RSS Derrick Jensen

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RSS Desdemona Despair

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RSS Desertification

  • UNCCD Press ReleaseG7 declaration recognizes land degradation and drought as global security risks  
  • Prevention Vital Against Desertification
  • Native Vegetation Configuration Improves Stability of Restored Desertified Grasslands in Northern China
  • how-saudi-arabia-is-using-wastewater-to-build-a-green-corridor-in-the-desert
  • Much of humanity may face hot-dry extremes five times more often by end-century
  • Engineers installed 7 million solar panels in the desert and they began sustaining themselves, turning the landscape into vibrant green
  • Algiers conference to tackle Africa desertification
  • Smart tech empowers desertification control in Inner Mongolia
  • Anti-Desertification: The battle to breathe life into Inner Mongolia’s harsh land
  • 2 years on: China’s ‘desert wheat farms’ show the seeds of success

RSS deSmog Blog

  • Exclusive: Undercover Investigation Reveals Europe-Wide Motorcycle Emissions ‘Scam’
  • TikTok’s Climate Pledges Collide with Sponsorship of Climate Deniers
  • ‘Economic Reconciliation’ Means Faster Approval Times for Fossil Fuel and Mining Projects
  • Industry-Linked Studies Disproportionately Advocate Meat Consumption
  • The Pathways Alliance Carbon Capture Project Was Always a Boondoggle 
  • Climate Denier Group Pushes States to Embrace Coal Power for Data Centers
  • Reform ‘Advisor’ Launches Climate Denial Group in Poland
  • ‘Be a PleniDude’: How an Italian Oil Giant Conquered TikTok
  • Q & A: The Climate Crisis as a Crisis of Modern Men
  • How Will Reform Rule Affect Local Climate Policy?

RSS Digbys Blog

  • Untitled
  • They can save the world by @BloggersRUs
  • Just drifting: R.I.P. Buck Henry By Dennis Hartley
  • It looks like he wants to take Iraq's oil money
  • Untitled
  • Let's not forget who worked with Suleimani's IRGC
  • You can't win if you don't show up to play by @BloggersRUs
  • Friday Night Soother
  • I'm just going to leave this here.
  • Who wants to be the next Andy McCabe?

RSS Disinfo – Ecology

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RSS Dispatches from the Underclass

  • “They’re Demonic” – Israel Runs the Gaza Playbook in Lebanon (w/ Rania Khalek)
  • Rania Khalek DESTROYS Piers Morgan As Israel Attacks Lebanon
  • Israel Invades Lebanon Again: The Greater Israel Project That Keeps Failing
  • Iran Is Playing the Long Game to Exhaust the U.S. — So Far It’s Working | Vali Nasr
  • Israel Brings ‘Gaza Doctrine’ to Lebanon: Rania Khalek Reports From Beirut
  • This Isn’t Going the Way Trump Thought. Vali Nasr on Iran’s War Strategy
  • Trump Kills Khamenei — Iran Hits Back | Regime Change War Day 2
  • Iran, Venezuela, Palestine: The Collapse of International Law | Craig Mokhiber
  • ‘There’s Been No Betrayal Here’ | Exclusive w/ Venezuela’s Ex-Foreign Minister
  • Why Israel Has No Future in the Middle East | Nakba Survivor Dr. Ghada Karmi

RSS Dissent Magazine

  • Resurrecting the Bund
  • Which Way, Western Marxism?
  • George Scialabba’s Lessons in Solidarity
  • Fire Sale
  • Off Track
  • The Left Needs Ideas
  • AI Is Theft
  • What to Eugene Debs Was the Fourth of July?
  • Rot and Reform
  • The Dialectic of Destruction

RSS Dissident Voice

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RSS Do the Math

  • Two Murphys, Part 5
  • Two Murphys, Part 4
  • Two Murphys, Part 3
  • Two Murphys, Part 2
  • Two Murphys, Part 1
  • Levels of Faith
  • Dumb Geniuses
  • Earth Abides
  • Empty Records
  • Dream Presentation

RSS Dollars & Sense Blog

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RSS Doug Stanhope

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RSS Douglas Rushkoff

  • Foreward to The New Inquisition
  • Program Or Be Programmed: 11 Commands for the AI Future
  • Substack
  • Nonbinary: A Memoir – Afterward
  • Artificial Creativity
  • Douglas Rushkoff: Silicon Valley’s elite prize data over reality, and it’s hurting us all
  • Breaking from the Pace of the Net
  • The Model Isn’t The Territory, Either
  • ‘We will coup whoever we want!’: the unbearable hubris of Musk and the billionaire tech bros
  • Team Human ep. 248: I Will Not Be Autotuned – Live from All Tech Is Human’s Responsible Tech Mixer

RSS Dr. Paul Craig Roberts

  • Putin Has Turned Russia Into a Paper Tiger
  • Free Speech Is Collapsing Across America
  • Cuban Foreign Minister Wonders How Washington Can See Tiny Cuba as a Threat to a large nuclear superpower
  • Another Honest Voice Leaves the Trump Regime
  • How the Israel Lobby Purges Congress of Dissenters
  • Trump and Christian Zionists Have Lost the Moral High Ground
  • Will Trump Kidnap Israel’s President Herzog for Violating Trump’s Israeli Sedition Edict?
  • PCR and Nima Discuss Whether Trump Can End His Subservience to Israel
  • On Target PCR and Larry Sparano Discuss the Justice Department’s Gift of Special Rights to Israel and to Trump and Family
  • Gaza flotilla activists accuse Israel of rape and torture

RSS Dredd Blog

  • What Happened to Chargaff's Rules? - 4
  • Watching The Arctic Die - 8
  • The Question Is: How Much Acceleration Is Involved In SLR? - 15
  • The Question Is: How Much Acceleration Is Involved In SLR? - 14
  • APNDX Golden Gauges
  • APNDX GAUGES A-D
  • APNDX GAUGES E - H
  • APNDX GAUGES I - L
  • APNDX GAUGES M-P
  • APNDX GAUGES Q-S

RSS Ear to the Ground – Truth Dig

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RSS Early Warning

  • New York Not Close to Exiting Lockdown
  • Is New York Containing Covid?
  • New York vs Italy
  • NYC Update - 46.5% increase Sunday over Saturday.
  • We Are About to Lose New York City to Covid
  • Containing Covid-19 (Or Not)
  • Covid-19 update
  • Covid-19 Infection Rates
  • Global Carbon Sink Holding Up So Far
  • The Wake-Up Call from David Buckel

RSS Earth First

  • “UNC Dildo-Boy” accosts homophobic preacher, releases anti-technology declaration
  • Subpoena caps bad week for fossil fuel
  • Less Than 60 Hours Left to Support Indigenous Land Defenders!
  • Shh! That Zookeeper Is a Total *&^%#!
  • Marcellus Shale Earth First! Aerial Blockade Celebrates 2 Weeks
  • Sabotaging the Badger Cull
  • Occupied Abenaki Lands Desecrated by 9/11 Memorial Protesters Intervene to Address U.S. Imperialism & Genocide
  • The Earth First! Newswire Has Moved
  • Massive Mine Proposed at Oak Flat, Sacred Tribal Land
  • Wharton Coal Prep Plant Spill Turns Boone County, WV River White

RSS Earth Observatory: Image of the Day, Natural Hazards, and News

  • DDTRB: Durability, Damage Tolerance & Reliability Branch
  • Research
  • Moon Joy June FAQ
  • La NASA anunciará la tripulación de Artemis III e informará sobre el progreso de la misión
  • Students Build Moon Robots for NASA’s 2026 Lunabotics Challenge
  • NASA-European Sea Level Mission Homes in on El Niño
  • Webinar 6/17: Discover, Access, and Task Commercial Data with NASA’s Satellite Data Explorer
  • NASA’s Webb Reveals Black Hole That Formed Before Its Galaxy
  • NASA’s SpaceX Crew-13
  • Cosmonauts Begin Spacewalk for Scientific Hardware Work

RSS Earth Observatory: Image of the Day

  • DDTRB: Durability, Damage Tolerance & Reliability Branch
  • Research
  • Moon Joy June FAQ
  • La NASA anunciará la tripulación de Artemis III e informará sobre el progreso de la misión
  • Students Build Moon Robots for NASA’s 2026 Lunabotics Challenge
  • NASA-European Sea Level Mission Homes in on El Niño
  • Webinar 6/17: Discover, Access, and Task Commercial Data with NASA’s Satellite Data Explorer
  • NASA’s Webb Reveals Black Hole That Formed Before Its Galaxy
  • NASA’s SpaceX Crew-13
  • Cosmonauts Begin Spacewalk for Scientific Hardware Work

RSS Earth Observatory: Natural Hazards

  • DDTRB: Durability, Damage Tolerance & Reliability Branch
  • Research
  • Moon Joy June FAQ
  • La NASA anunciará la tripulación de Artemis III e informará sobre el progreso de la misión
  • Students Build Moon Robots for NASA’s 2026 Lunabotics Challenge
  • NASA-European Sea Level Mission Homes in on El Niño
  • Webinar 6/17: Discover, Access, and Task Commercial Data with NASA’s Satellite Data Explorer
  • NASA’s Webb Reveals Black Hole That Formed Before Its Galaxy
  • NASA’s SpaceX Crew-13
  • Cosmonauts Begin Spacewalk for Scientific Hardware Work

RSS Earth Policy Institute Blog

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RSS Ecocide Alert

  • Introducing Write: a new way to post, built for writers
  • WordPress 7.0 Has Arrived: Here’s Everything You Need to Know
  • Meet WordCamp Agent: A Preview of the WordPress Memory Layer
  • Turn Your Blog Posts Into Podcast Episodes
  • WordPress.com Changelog: Launch a Podcast and Update Your Friends
  • Blueprints Gallery Is Now Available in WordPress Studio
  • Inside WordPress.com’s Security Response to the Essential Plugin Attack
  • Achievement Unlocked: Your WordPress.com Milestones Now Have a Home
  • Your Podcast Belongs With Your Blog and Newsletter
  • Easy Site Editor – Now in Beta

RSS Ecohuman World

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RSS Eco-Shock News

  • Radio Ecoshock: Acute Climate Trouble Starts Now
  • Radio Ecoshock: El Nino wildfires & Amazon tipping
  • Radio Ecoshock: Climate: Hunger World
  • Radio Ecoshock: War To World: Climate Hits Harder
  • Radio Ecoshock: Life After the Crash II
  • Radio Ecoshock: When Summer Comes in Winter
  • Radio Ecoshock: High Heat, Long Future
  • Radio Ecoshock: While you were thinking of something else…your planet burns
  • Radio Ecoshock: The Awful Bright Side of War?
  • Radio Ecoshock: War Against the Atmosphere – Iran

RSS Ecological Headstand

  • Dilke, Chapman, and Dahlberg Pop-ups
  • For the Abolition of the Wages System!
  • The Incredible Shrinking Blog
  • Keynes "hadn't got round to it"
  • Napoleon Solow and the Phantom Mechanism
  • Mathiness, Growth and Increasing Returns
  • Viral Gyro Spiral
  • Untitled
  • Untitled
  • Never Mind the Bollocks. Here's the Gyro.

RSS Ecological Sociology

  • Commons Enabling Infrastucture
  • A Short History of Progress: Book Review
  • Foucault, Power, Truth and Ecology
  • Democratizing Capital at Scale: Cooperative Enterprise and Beyond
  • Stanford: Climate Change Ten Times Faster than Previous 65 Million Years
  • Beyond Market and State: The Renaissance of the Commons
  • What Then Must We Do? The Next American Revolution
  • John Thackery: Limits to Resilience
  • Timothy Mitchell: Carbon Democracy
  • The Informal Economy Blog

RSS Ecologise

  • Deep Warming
  • My Continent Is Not Your Climate Laboratory
  • Why this Maharashtra village is fighting for the long forgotten Gramdan Act?
  • Ignored health risks, bungled pilot projects, bonanza for Dutch firm: Modi Govt. forces fortified rice on poor
  • Protests against Ratnagiri Refinery: Skeletons in the Development Closet
  • What will be the history of India without the history of its plant life?
  • We are ‘greening’ ourselves to extinction
  • [WATCH] We are living in a deluded world: Interview with Iain McGilchrist
  • The Avocados of Wrath
  • How Mr Miyawaki Broke My Heart

RSS Economic Hardship Reporting Project

  • Hollywood, Gaza, and the Invisible Blacklist
  • Some Minneapolis Donors Have Moved On. The Immigrants Waiting for Help Haven’t
  • In Northern California’s Maternity Desert, a Humboldt Midwife Offers Intimate Births
  • I Work in Hollywood. Everyone Who Used to Make TV Is Now Secretly Training AI
  • Why So Few Babies? We Might Have Overlooked the Biggest Reason of All
  • Brian Goldstone Wins the Pulitzer Prize!
  • Minneapolis Grapples with the Impact of Trump’s Largest Immigration Crackdown Yet
  • EHRP-Supported Documentary “Wood Street” Keeps Winning!
  • EHRP Fellow Elliott Woods Wins MOLLY Prize for Investigative Journalism
  • Welcome to the Insecurity-Industrial Complex

RSS Economic Undertow

  • Ending The War In Ukraine By Attacking Russian Railroads
  • The Good, the Bad and the Takfiri (Repost from 2014)
  • Z Marks the Spot
  • The Death of Economics
  • Cars and More Cars …
  • Repost From 2015: Pied Piper of Dumb Money
  • The Arc of the Moral Universe
  • Meet the New Year, Same as the Old Year
  • David Graeber Dead …
  • Frieden In Unserer Zeit, Peace In Our Time

RSS EcoWorldView

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RSS Empire Burlesque

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RSS Empirical Magazine

  • From the Empirical Archives: Genius or Folly?
  • From the Empirical Archives: Nights Such as These
  • From the Empirical Archives: Second Time Foster Child
  • From the Empirical Archives: A Moment with Mary Nash-Pyott
  • From the Empirical Archives: In the Shade of a Cave
  • From the Empirical Archives: In Search of a Good Teacher
  • From the Empirical Archives: The Circle and the Pyramid
  • From the Empirical Archives: Why Human Rights Matter
  • From the Empirical Archives: Arizona
  • From the Empirical Archives: The Offer by Jennifer Hanno

RSS EmptyWheel

  • Ken Paxton Was Going to Win Anyway
  • More Grand Jury Shenanigans in Illinois
  • Trump Encourages Political Violence
  • Fridays with Nicole Sandler
  • “Unhinged from Reality:” Donald J. Trump Caged the Q-Shaman
  • Trump’s Bend Might Break Offense
  • How the Broadview 6 (-2) Case Collapsed
  • The Returns of 1776: “Just Pay Your Taxes So I Can Enjoy Your Money”
  • Former AUSA Accused of Being Marginally as Criminal as Trump Is
  • Trump’s Personal Attorney Todd Blanche Attempts to Pardon His Boss

RSS End of More

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RSS Energy Balance

  • "For Our Children's Earth: Building the Soil, Sustaining the Future." A talk given at Braziers Park College.
  • "Becoming Nature Positive" & "Transition Town Reading: What If a Better World Were Possible?" Film double bill, Tuesday June 9th (2026), 7 pm, Reading Biscuit Factory.
  • "Fires & Fascism", film screening plus Q&A with the film director, Dr Peter Knapp. Wednesday 27th May 7.30pm, Reading International Solidarity Centre.
  • "The Little Things That Run the World": Film screening + Panel Discussion, with Transition Town Reading, 6.00 pm on Tuesday, June 16th (2026).
  • “What If a Better World Were Possible?" A film made by Transition Town Reading.
  • Why are Fuel Prices so High?
  • Strait of Hormuz Chokehold Released for Now, but Global Supply Chains Remain at Risk.
  • "The Energy and Climate Conundrum," talk by Prof. Chris Rhodes, on April 28th (2026), 7-9 pm, Zero Degrees Reading.
  • Is the Hormuz Chokehold a Foretaste of Peak Oil?
  • “The Empathy Project.”

RSS Environment & Food Justice

  • National Association for Chicana and Chicano Studies Statement on the Climate Crisis
  • La Lucha por La Sierra | Scion of Texas Oil Barons Seeks to Overturn Historic Use Rights to the Sangre de Cristo Land Grant
  • Biopiracy in Mexico | Foundation stealing wild beehives in Yucatán
  • Deep Seeds at the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues | April 2018
  • Exclusive Update - Monsanto in Mexico | Corporate impunity and the beekeeper struggle against transgenic soybeans
  • Student Blogs | Race, Gender, and Settler Colonial Violence
  • Notas de Campaña | Por una Tortilla 100 ciento Nixtamalizada
  • Campaign Notes | For 100 Percent Nixtamalized nonGMO Tortillas | Part One
  • Maize: Our Identity, Our Food | Photo Exhibit of Indigenous Corn Farmers Featured at UN Headquarters
  • Protecting the Sacred in Corn | Seed Sovereignty Documents | Berenice Sánchez Intervention on the Protection of Indigenous Agroecosystems presented to the UNPFII-2018 | 1 of 2

RSS Envisionation Blog

  • New Genn Podcast: Prof. Chad Briggs on Cognitive Warfare and Climate Chaos
  • Antarctica’s Warning Sign: Inside the Collapse of Hektoria Glacier
  • Why Do Politicians Keep Pushing North Sea Drilling When It Won’t Lower Your Bills? Intercview with Ed Matthew, E3G Think Tank
  • Last Resort: Could Geoengineering Save the AMOC from Collapse?
  • Have The UK Green’s Abandoned Climate For Far-Left Populism?
  • Why We Need A Climate Solvency Plan – Sir David King
  • New Research: Climate Change is Accelerating – It’s Getting Hotter Faster!
  • El Niño 2026: The Strong Heat Spike That Could Break Global Temperature Records – Interview with Dr Jennifer Francis
  • Following the money: Is the Blair Institute’s North Sea oil and gas pivot good for Britain?
  • Beyond the Threshold: Overshoot, Irreversibility and the Vanishing 1.5ºC Window

RSS Extraenvironmentalist Blog and Podcasts

  • [ Episode #47 // Power Transition ]
  • [ Episode #46 // Recovering Environmentalists ]
  • [ Episode #45 // Opening Money ]
  • [ Episode #39 // Debunking Economics ]
  • [ Episode #16 // Powering the Dream ]
  • [ Episode #15.2 // Brotherhood of the Screaming Abyss // Part II ]
  • [ Episode #15.1 // Brotherhood of the Screaming Abyss // Part I ]
  • [ Episode #14 // Discovering Dirt ]
  • [ Episode #10 // Brilliant ]
  • [ Episode #9 // Economics of Happiness ]

RSS ExtraEnvironmentalist’s Videos

  • [ Rick Wolff // A Cure for Capitalism ]
  • [ Firefly Gathering ]
  • [ John Kraus // Knife Sharpener ]
  • [ Jimmy McMillan // Rent is Too Damn High ]
  • [ Nate Hagens // From Wall St. to Ecological Economics // Part 1 ]
  • [ Dennis McKenna // Tools for a Culture of Healing ]
  • [ Montreal Degrowth Conference // Mini-Doc ]
  • [ Charles Eisenstein // Living Without Economic Growth ]
  • [ James Howard Kunstler // American Dream on Hiatus ]
  • [ Peter Victor // Ecological Economics]

RSS ExtraGeographic

  • Why Coventry council is using Palantir AI
  • CMAT at Glastonbury 2025. Over the barriers, into the crowd
  • We live and we die, we know not why / But I’ll be with you when the deal goes down
  • How to stop dogs barking
  • Review: What did you do yesterday? podcast
  • Gracie Abrams is resonating
  • Paul Heaton at Glastonbury 2024. Join the caravan of love
  • All Gregs on Desert Island Discs have to select The Wonder Stuff
  • Jimmy Buffett, Tropical Rock and the deadheads with credit cards
  • Trapped in the David Letterman Late Show archive

RSS Facts for Working People

  • Michael Roberts. Edmund Phelps: free markets and inflation expectations
  • The London Far Right Rally. On Immigrants, Identity, and Who the Real Enemy Is
  • The US Ruling Class is a Little Overconfident. And That's Going to Cost Them
  • The Bengal Famine and the Legacy of Colonialism
  • Michael Roberts: The Thucydides trap and the decline of US imperialism
  • Ken Klippenstein: Iran War vs. Epstein Files
  • The Closing Word: On Merit, Class, and the Myth of the Level Playing Field
  • Capitalism and the State. Is it Really All Trump's Fault?
  • Seymour Hersh: ISRAEL’S PATH NOT TAKEN
  • Opinion: Trump in China, the Summit” with no real agenda and no concrete agreements ends.

RSS Fair: Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting

  • Media Twist Opposition to Land Theft Into Hatred of a Religion
  • Slashing Climate, Weather and Ocean Research to Pay for 32 Hours of Iran War
  • NYT on Met Gala: If You Don’t Like It, Shut Up
  • The Regressive Ideologies Behind the ‘Baby Bust’ Panic
  • Climate Coverage Plunges, Though Crisis More Dire Than Ever
  • US’s Erosion of the Right to Cartoon Is No Laughing Matter
  • NYT Covers Iran War With No Reporters in Iran
  • Trump’s FTC Wages a War on Media Criticism
  • Pete Hegseth’s War on Journalists (and Iran Too)
  • Three Massive Funds Control a Chunk of Most Media: Maybe that's why you might not have heard of them

RSS Fairewinds

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RSS Fairfax Climate Watch

  • Monini: terminato il concorso “Coltiviamo il futuro: seminiamo idee per un mondo migliore”
  • Dal dato all’azione: come Agentic AI e Augmented Analytics stanno trasformando il decision-making nel Pharma
  • Fontanafredda ospita la prima edizione della “Giornata della sostenibilità”: nasce il Manifesto della sostenibilità di filiera.
  • SICUREZZA INFORMATICA: IN ITALIA NEL PRIMO TRIMESTRE 2026 ATTACCHI CYBER IN AUMENTO MA INCIDENTI IN CALO
  • Energia: ENEA per un parco edilizio a zero emissioni
  • Weltix nomina Gianni Orlandi Senior Manager Equity Compensation e accelera sul mercato italiano dei piani ESOP
  • 3BMETEO: “caldo record su mezza Europa, sull’Italia il picco mercoledì, poi qualche forte temporale”
  • Passaporto digitale, Relicyc e The Nest Company insieme per rivoluzionare il mondo del riciclo pallet con un modello di economia circolare closed loop.
  • IPERAMMORTAMENTO: ANITEC-ASSINFORM ACCOGLIE L’APERTURA DEL GOVERNO E L’APPELLO DEL PRESIDENTE ORSINI SU SOFTWARE E CLOUD
  • LEROY MERLIN INAUGURA AD ARESE UN NUOVO CONCEPT DI NEGOZIO

RSS Farooque Chowdhury’s Diary

  • Road rage faces student spirit
  • Fires within the Arctic Circle
  • A Facebook post on quota mobilisation
  • Marx in Bangladesh
  • Drug money and ambulance
  • The disinformation campaign on Venezuela
  • Bangladesh Liberation War Exposed A Neocolonial State’s Failure
  • DIGNITY OF TEACHERS AND AN ADMISSION TEST : THE EDUCATION MARKET EXHIBITS ……….
  • The Ambiguity: The Case Of Democracy
  • Blackmailing Bankers Now Stage A Coup In Greece

RSS Feasta

  • The Cost of Growth: Film screening and discussion in Dublin, June 24
  • Webinar: Securing our Food Sovereignty
  • Rethinking Systems: Growing Local Strength for People and Planet
  • Finding steady ground in a time of crisis
  • Governing For The Future: Institutions And Practices
  • Oil Windfall Profits Tax & Dividend
  • Podcast: the Role of Creativity in Health
  • Feasta Annual Report 2025
  • Report from MERGE Policymaker Roundtable on Sustainable and Inclusive Wellbeing, Jan 22 2026
  • COP-30 Delegate Reports

RSS FireDogLake

  • David vs. Goliath: Consumer Watchdog Gets Their Day in Court With Googl
  • What I Care About Is the Social Safety Net
  • Obama Meets With Labor, Progressive Groups Today
  • What the Marijuana Legalization Polling in 2012 Says About Its Prospects Moving Forward
  • Petraeus Affair Shows Dominant Power of Government Surveillance State
  • Pelosi to Speak to House Democrats Amid Rumors That She Will Step Down From Leadership
  • United Parcel Service to Boy Scouts of America – no funds for your anti-gay org
  • For the Long-Term Unemployed, It Is A Fiscal Cliff
  • Love In The House Of Spy
  • Fatster’s Roundup

RSS Fish Out of Water

  • A Miraculous Rebirth in the Gulf of Mexico
  • Ice Detention of Legal Irish Man Married to U.S. Citizen Creates Major International Incident
  • Stretched Polar Vortex set to Split in Two likely leading to Severe Tornado outbreaks in March
  • Pray for Jamaica then send money: Hurricane Melissa’s 185mph winds coming ashore.
  • Key satellite data for Hurricane intensification forecasts and sea ice extent terminated by Trump
  • Particularly Dangerous Situation for Memphis Region: Tornado outbreak updated
  • Tornado outbreak this weekend from Plains to Carolinas enhanced by Stratospheric Warming Updated
  • Harris winning North Carolina & Georgia – NY Times – strong early voting for Kamala
  • PWB: The Community Cats of old San Juan Puerto Rico
  • Aurora Borealis in North Carolina

RSS Foreign Confidential

  • Film History: the French New Wave
  • Nine Beautiful Places to Visit in Slovenia
  • Top 10 European Islands to Visit
  • Little Europe: the Amazing Microstates
  • Chinese Virologist, MD, PhD, Says Coronavirus Made in Wuhan Lab
  • Rebels and Spies: the [GREAT] Graphic Novels of Vittorio Giardino
  • Deep in Red China ...
  • Preview Video Comic Strip Hero Battles Totalitarian China
  • Dystopian Graphic Novel Depicts China as Nazi-Like Occupier of USA
  • Coming Soon to Your Digital Device: Dack Dixon, Special Agent

RSS FracTracker

  • From Coal Plant to AI Campus: FracTracker Documents Construction at Homer City
  • Campaign Update: Progress on FracTracker’s Community Air Monitoring Projects
  • An update on Southwest Detroit Industrial Impacts: The Zug Island Ruling
  • Introducing the New FracTracker U.S. Data Centers Tracker Dashboard
  • FracTracker’s New Data Tool Visualizes Shell’s Pollution, Violations, and Malfunctions Ahead of Permit Public Hearing (copy)
  • FracTracker’s New Data Tool Visualizes Shell’s Pollution, Violations, and Malfunctions Ahead of Permit Public Hearing
  • Howell Township Data Center Win: $1B Project Withdrawn After Community Meeting on Energy and Infrastructure Impacts
  • Comment Opposing the Southeast Supply Enhancement Project (SSEP) – Clean Water Act Section 404 Permit Application (SAW-2024-01961)
  • Docket No. PHMSA-2025-0050: Comment Opposing LNG by Rail Transport
  • Threats of Permitting New Liquefied Natural Gas Terminals in the Pacific Northwest

RSS George Monbiot (Alternet)

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RSS George Monbiot (Official Home Page)

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RSS Get Real List: Chris Nelder

  • Moving on…
  • My new gig
  • Announcing the Energy Transition Show
  • Guest appearance on The Energy Gang podcast
  • My most recent project: NPV+
  • Taking over the grid
  • The straight dope on oil prices
  • New report casts doubt on fracking’s future
  • Stranded asset risks are larger than anyone thinks
  • Cleantech is sexy again

RSS Gil Smart

  • With Gil Smart on guns, the NRA
  • Gil Smart right on development
  • Right on, Gil Smart
  • Gil Smart makes sense
  • Insightful is Gil Smart
  • Gil Smart wrong on gun ownership
  • Gil Smart goes off the deep end
  • Gil Smart: What's the future of work in America?
  • Gil Smart: What’s causing the rise in panhandling?
  • Invasion of Gil snatchers?

RSS Glen Ford – Black Agenda Report

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RSS Global Guerrillas

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RSS Global Occupy News

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RSS Global Oneness Project

  • Farewell RSS Feeds

RSS Global Research

  • US-NATO Persistent Targetting of Children. Moscow Has Ordered Massive Retaliatory Strikes
  • The AI Bubble: The Hidden Costs of the Data Center Boom
  • U.S.-NATO “Go Home”: Russia’s Sphere of Influence. Towards “A Russian-Style Monroe Doctrine” in the South Caucasus?
  • Stop Mastering Your Dysfunction, Liberate Your Authentic Self
  • Did Rome Really Fall? Imperial Continuity, Historiographical Blind Spots, and the Ottoman Succession
  • Ukraine’s Secret Al Qaeda Invasion of Africa
  • U.S. Debt Exceeds 100% of GDP, $31.27 Trillion. Interest Rates Continue to Rise
  • Comparative Structure of Political Parties in China and Russia: Turkiye’s Political System “Cannot Produce a Putin”
  • “Moldovan Scenario” for Armenia? Analyzing the Prospects of Yerevan’s Foreign Policy Course
  • US Violates Truce, Bombs Iranian Port Amid Claims Peace Deal Possible ‘within Days’

RSS Global Research CA

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RSS Gonzalo Lira

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RSS Green is the New Red

  • Trump Supporter Promises Legislation to Label Protest as “Economic Terrorism”
  • Violence against environmentalists is now at an all-time high
  • “To Build a Fire”: New Split EP With “Old Lines” and Will Potter
  • “It changes who you are—forever. What you do with that change is what defines who you are.”
  • Exclusive: New Virtual Reality Investigation Goes Inside Factory Farms
  • New Sticker — Animal Rights Activists Must “Join or Die”
  • “Truth and Power” TV series features Will Potter on “eco-terrorism,” ag-gag laws, and investigative journalism
  • This woman rowed straight into a hurricane. And you should too.
  • 6 Lessons From How the FBI and Media Treat Militia Groups
  • Here’s How One Activist Convinced the FBI to Leave Him Alone

RSS Green on Huffington Post

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RSS Greenpeace Blogs

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RSS Greg Palast

  • 9+ million Muslim voters purged in 4 states Trump “SAVE” plan takes a test drive in India
  • Frank Sinatra, Donald Trump and My Partner
  • Mr. Colbert, I’m not laughing anymore
  • Trump, the Pirate of Hormuz
  • Pam Bondi’s Lobbyist Loot Built on Free Market in Human Misery
  • Trump’s Tanker Toll Triumph
  • 1931 is here again. We hope.
  • Iran has won, jamming Trump’s bombs right up his Strait of Hormuz
  • Hormuz BluesBush should show Trump how you seize another nation’s oil
  • How Do We Defeat Voter Suppression?A Tribute to the Spirit of Selma

RSS Gregor Macdonald

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RSS Grinning Planet

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RSS Grist

  • Nike’s recycled World Cup uniforms reveal the limits of ‘circular’ fashion
  • ‘I need Chevron’: The oil company at the center of the California governor’s race
  • The EPA just walked back Hawai‘i’s plan to retire its dinosaur power plants
  • Solar to overtake coal on Texas grid for the first time ever this year
  • Why hybrids — not EVs — are winning over US consumers
  • In a rare show of global unity, countries adopt landmark climate ruling
  • As seas rise, where will Louisiana’s fishers go?
  • Georgia’s PSC elections have become a referendum on energy prices
  • The Iran war is destroying oil demand. Could it also spark a shift to clean energy?
  • Trump’s EPA vows to fight ‘forever chemicals’ by loosening regulations

RSS Growth Busters

  • 97: The Wit and Wisdom of Paul Ehrlich
  • 96: Paul Ehrlich (1932-2026): Behaving Against Our Interests
  • 95: Technology – Fast and Furious Into Overshoot
  • 94: Reporting on Population – Sense and Nonsense
  • 93: Ezra Klein’s Abundance Delusion

RSS Guernica Mag

  • Notes on Going Viral
  • Cupid’s Bow
  • Snow
  • Self-Portrait with Expired Green Card
  • Cherry Coke and Chevron Lights
  • when they tied us to the fence
  • I am unsure if this poem has been properly executed) / I’m Karelian
  • Crow Language / Crow Testament / Crow Gospel
  • Canvases
  • I Was Trying to Photograph a Feeling: Showkat Nanda on Buried Archives, Generational Memory, and Dreaming Against Forgetting in Kashmir

RSS Guy McPherson’s Blog

  • Science Snippets: Studies Warn “Day After Tomorrow” Ocean Current is in Trouble
  • Science Snippets: Warming Ocean Threatens Prochlorococcus
  • Oceans Face Triple Threat: Pollution, Warming Earth, and Biodiversity Loss
  • Science Snippets: Major Report Finds Rising Heat Kills a Person Every Minute
  • McPherson Interviewed by the Homeless Romantic, Chris Jeffries
  • Frequently Wrong, I Continue to Predict
  • A Stick of Dynamite Can Ruin Your Day

RSS Health After Oil

  • Public Health’s Response to Decline: Loyalty to the 1%
  • Health systems, neoliberalism, and the end of growth: The World Health Organization in denial
  • Postcard from the Frontline
  • Power, Identity and Social Change as We Enter Degrowth
  • Health groups put climate first in election poll – Media release 5 August 2013

RSS Hot Topic: Global Warming and the Future of New Zealand

  • Postcards from La La Land #132: time warps and twaddle
  • The final cut: crank paper on NZ temperature record gets its rebuttal – warming continues unabated
  • Anthropogenic climate change is real: pithy post-punk anthem for the Trump generation
  • Why (and how) cheaper solar power, batteries, electric and autonomous vehicles are going to change our world over the next 5 years
  • At last it can be revealed: climate change researcher describes challenge of pulling off worldwide global warming conspiracy

RSS How to Save the World

  • No Conscious Awareness for Me, Thanks
  • The US: No-Go Zone
  • Sometimes It’s Better to Ask a Question
  • Lightness
  • Links of the Month: May 2026
  • What I Should Have Said
  • Outraged Opinions Are Not News
  • AI’s Biggest Beneficiary: Organized Crime
  • The Voices of Collapse Denialism
  • Signs of Collapse: When We Normalize Abnormality

RSS I am Not a Number

  • THE ART OF THE POSSIBLE?
  • Alt-Right conspiracy theories are obviously true… except they are not.
  • The civil war in the LP was NEVER about antisemitism.
  • English patriotism and the left – a political conundrum
  • The new Reclaim Party and the ‘culture wars’ – the incoherence of our two party system and the failure of liberalism
  • An alternative to the Labour Party?

RSS I Cite

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RSS Iamronen

  • AI & Quality
  • 1000 Petals
  • How to draw the Sri Yantra
  • Mushrooms, second encounter
  • Michael Levin | Cell Intelligence in Physiological and Morphological Spaces
  • Religiousness in Yoga Part 17: Nirodha
  • Religiousness in Yoga Part 16: Jñāna, Bhakti, Mantra, Rāja, Kriyā, Karma, Laya, Tantra, Haṭha, Kuṇḍalinī
  • Religiousness in Yoga Part 15: Antarāya, Iśvara-praṇidhāna
  • Religiousness in Yoga Part 14: Bandha
  • Religiousness in Yoga Part 13: Antaraṅga Sādhana, Saṃyama, Kaivalya

RSS Ian Welsh

  • Don’t Believe Weekend “Peace Deal” Leaks
  • Freedom To, Freedom From & Capitalism (Freedom Series #3)
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – May 24, 2026
  • Open Thread
  • The Year of Chaos: 2027
  • Freedom Under Representative Democracy (Freedom Series #2)
  • Are We Free Under Capitalism? (Freedom Series #1)
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – May 17, 2026
  • Open Thread
  • The Haters Guide To Post-Modernism

RSS Idea Explorer

  • Life vs. Artificial Life
  • Can’t Give Up
  • Best Future
  • Limits to Superiority
  • The World Is Dying and We’re Doing This
  • Belief and Reality
  • Value Statement
  • Interactions of Value
  • Interactions
  • Troubleshooting and Understanding

RSS Idea Explorer – Big Pic Explorer

  • Consumption Drop
  • Habitat Loss
  • General Update
  • Responsible Survival
  • Termination
  • Every Day
  • Life and Death
  • Groups
  • Timelines Version 5
  • Multiple Updates

RSS Idea Explorer: Land of Conscience

  • Remember
  • Death Stoppers
  • A Clear Choice
  • Update
  • Projects and Responsibility
  • In Pursuit Of Waste
  • Doubt
  • Remembrance
  • Seeking Miracles
  • Emergence

RSS If You Love This Planet – Helen Caldicott

  • REGISTER TO WATCH: February 19, 2024 7 pm EST webinar Dr. Helen Caldicott and Martin Sheen
  • Steven Starr, Bruce Gagnon and William Hartung at the Dynamics of Possible Nuclear Extinction symposium
  • Dr. Helen Caldicott, Ted Postol, Max Tegmark and Alan Robock at The Dynamics of Possible Nuclear Extinction symposium
  • Dr. Caldicott’s October 2014 speech: The Ukraine Crisis, Is Nuclear Conflict Likely?
  • Dr. Helen Caldicott interviewed by Bob Herbert about her latest book, “Loving This Planet”
  • Best of 2011: Dr. Caldicott’s speech in New Hampshire three weeks after Fukushima
  • Subhankar Banerjee on how corporate resource wars and global warming are decimating native peoples and forests worldwide
  • Marion Pack on the many safety risks at the San Onofre nuclear power plant and how a Fukushima-type meltdown would contaminate Southern California
  • Tom Engelhardt on Washington’s increasing war focus to the exclusion of everything else and its indiscriminate use of drones
  • Holly Barker on the devastating ongoing effects of mid-century U.S. nuclear weapons testing on the Marshall Islands

RSS Indybay Features

  • May Day 2026 Confronts War and Autocracy
  • Juristac is Protected
  • Chevron Outspends All Other Lobbyists in California
  • Mapping California's Factory Farming Industry
  • No Kings, No ICE, No War
  • New Year's Eve Demonstration at California City ICE Detention Facility
  • SF Students Walkout for Massive Anti-ICE Action
  • TPS Hearing Temporarily Stalls Deportations of Haitians
  • ICE Out Everywhere! January 30 National Day Of Action
  • ICE Out of Super Bowl and End the Deportations

RSS Indybay Newswire

  • STREETSIDE: "Books aren't dying!"
  • Summer 2026 National Immigrant Solidarity Network News Alert!
  • Ice Detention Facility Planned for Gilroy, California
  • Energy Shock Ripples Through Global Economy, Pushing Millions Toward Poverty
  • The "Green Voter Guide", published by the Green Party of Alameda County
  • Activists to Protest Marin Grocer United Markets Over Sale of Chickens from Perdue Factory
  • High School Students Expose Lies About OAK Explansion Plans
  • Historic Boycott of REI to Begin on May 15 Across the Country as New Bargaining Details Revealed
  • 76 Flock Cameras Disabled in the East Bay
  • ‘Bad Blues’ Report Names Six House Democrats Deserving of Primary Challenges

RSS Information Clearing House

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RSS Inside Left – The OFFICIAL Anti-Olympics Blog™

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RSS Institute for Public Accuracy

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RSS International Debt Observatory

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RSS io9

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RSS iWatch: Global Muckraking

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RSS Jack Nelson-Pallmeyer Blog

  • Five Things We Need to Know About the “Fiscal Cliff”
  • Wasteful Pentagon Spending and Costly Wars Hurting Minnesota Communities
  • Don’t Forget to Remember: Amnesia about War Costs is Costly
  • Jack Nelson-Pallmeyer Blog # 16:
  • Militarization, MNASAP, Move to Amend, and the Common Good
  • The Three Most Dangerous Words a Soldier Can Hear: “Support Our Troops”
  • Selling War Is Easy: Challenging the Culture of War
  • Tax Day Numbers to Motivate Action for Peace
  • Making Sense of Recent Polls Showing Most Americans Want to End the Afghan War Part Part 1: Why This is Good but not Great News
  • Neil Young, Jackson Browne, and the Insights of Andrew

RSS Jacobin

  • The Long, Grueling Strike at Henry Ford Genesys Hospital
  • Mamdani Can Empower Workers Themselves to Enforce Labor Law
  • Capitalist Markets Won’t Solve Pandemics or the Climate Crisis
  • Japan Is Rearming and Embracing Nationalism
  • How the UAE Built an Empire of Kleptocrats
  • We Rarely See Films as Fresh as I Love Boosters
  • The Pro-Israel Lobby Is Trying to Fly Under the Radar
  • Who Should Take Care of the Children?
  • NYC’s Economic Development Corporation Can Build Public Options
  • Congress Must Investigate War Profiteers Once Again

RSS Jeremy Scahill

  • NYC Mayor Smeared a Grandmother as an “Outside Agitator” to Justify NYPD Assault on Columbia
  • New York Times Brass Moves to Stanch Leaks Over Gaza Coverage
  • Leaked NYT Gaza Memo Tells Journalists to Avoid Words “Genocide,” “Ethnic Cleansing,” and “Occupied Territory”
  • “Man-Made Hell On Earth”: A Canadian Doctor on His Medical Mission to Gaza
  • Kibbutz Be’eri Rejects Story in New York Times October 7 Exposé: “They Were Not Sexually Abused”
  • The Story Behind the New York Times October 7 Exposé
  • With Netanyahu Threatening Rafah Invasion, Biden Prepares to Send Israel More Bombs
  • Israel’s Ruthless Propaganda Campaign to Dehumanize Palestinians
  • ICJ Ruling on Gaza Genocide Is a Historic Victory for the Palestinians That Israel Vows to Defy
  • 21 Israeli Troops Killed While Planting Explosives for a Controlled Demolition in Gaza

RSS Jill Stein

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RSS Joe Bageant

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RSS John Cook Video Uploads

  • The Science of Cranky Uncle Part 3: Fighting Misinformation with Critical Thinking
  • The Science of Cranky Uncle Part 2: Inoculation Theory
  • The Science of Cranky Uncle Part 1: Why We Can't Ignore Misinformation
  • Climate misinformation: Will Happer on CO2 being plant food
  • Climate misinformation: David Legates & Willie Soon on CO2 lag
  • Climate misinformation: Marco Rubio on past climate change
  • Climate misinformation: Rick Perry compares climate denial to Galileo
  • Climate misinformation: John Stossel likens climate science to religion
  • Critical Thinking Cafe 2
  • Wishful Thinking about COVID v3

RSS John Hively

  • Supreme Court Fantasy Stories and Their Constitutional Violations
  • The War Over Global Warming is Class Warfare on Many Fronts
  • How the Billionaires Corporate News Media Have Been Used to Brainwash Us
  • Is President Biden Serious About His Infrastructure Package?
  • President Joe Biden and the False Promises of Immigration Reform and Raising the Federal Minimum Wage to $15
  • The Billionaires Have Programmed Too Many of Us Into Opposing Teams
  • When the Dust Clears…the Rich Have Been Redistributing $2.5 trillion Every Year for the Last Twenty-Five Years
  • The Political Games of the Billionaires and Their Political Representatives
  • SW Washington’s Take on the STATE’S Disparity STUDY
  • Why the Electoral College is Allowed to Exist

RSS John Pilger

  • MARK CURTIS PAYS TRIBUTE TO THE JOURNALISM AND FILM-MAKING OF THE LATE JOHN PILGER
  • “A DEEPLY FELT LOVE FOR ORDINARY PEOPLE” – THE WORLD REMEMBERS JOHN PILGER
  • “HE GAVE A VOICE TO THOSE NOT HEARD” – DARTMOUTH FILMS HONOURS JOHN PILGER
  • WE ARE SPARTACUS. ARE WE? THIS MAY BE THE QUESTION OF OUR AGE.
  • THERE IS A WAR COMING SHROUDED IN PROPAGANDA. IT WILL INVOLVE US. SPEAK UP.
  • THE TRUE BETRAYERS OF JULIAN ASSANGE ARE CLOSE TO HOME
  • SILENCING THE LAMBS. HOW PROPAGANDA WORKS.
  • THE US IS ‘CLOSE TO GETTING ITS HANDS ON JULIAN ASSANGE’
  • WAR IN EUROPE AND THE RISE OF RAW PROPAGANDA
  • THE JUDICIAL KIDNAPPING OF JULIAN ASSANGE

RSS John Perkins

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RSS John W. Whitehead

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RSS John Zerzan: Anarchy Radio

  • Anarchy Radio 05 26 2026
  • Patriarki, Peradaban dan Asal-usul Gender
  • Anarchy Radio 05 12 2026
  • Piracci, M.: Anarquía Verde. Murray Bookchin frente a John Zerzan, Madrid, 2025.
  • Anarchy Radio 04 28 2026
  • Menjelang Kiamat: Kumpulan Catatan Ekologi, Anarkisme & Kritiknya Terhadap Peradaban
  • Anarchy Radio 04 14 2026
  • john-zerzan-against-civilization
  • Anarchy Radio: Addressing the Public Secret - A Short Documentary on John Zerzan at KWVA
  • Anarchy Radio 03 24 2026

RSS Jonathan Turley

  • Doing the Math: UC Faculty Call for the Return to Standardized Testing After Shocking Decline in Skills
  • Let Them Eat Impeachments: Dan Goldman Fights to Keep the Rage — and His Career — Alive
  • This is a ‘Jackie Robinson moment,’ but not the one Hakeem Jeffries thinks it is
  • Cornell Faculty Group Condemns University President Who Was Surrounded by Protesters in Car
  • Ressa at Dartmouth : Anti-Free Speech Figure Calls the State of Free Speech in the U.S. “Horrific”
  • “He was right then. He is right now”: Hakeem Jeffries’ Brother Calls on Citizens to Emulate John Brown
  • A Springtime Stroll Through Salt Lake City
  • House Democrats Unanimously Vote Down Women’s History Museum Over Limit to Biological Women
  • The Spanberger Flea Circus: Virginia Governor Signs Anti-Ice Executive Order Devoid of Meaning
  • A Comey Cake? Former Prosecutor Accused of Stealing Smith Report Files and Hiding Them as Cake Recipes

RSS Karl Grossman

  • I've switched from this site to my website -- www.karlgrossman.com -- for my blog.
  • The End of Police Raids -- at Long Last -- on Gays of Fire Island
  • "Fire Island Was Paradise,Truly Paradise"
  • My First Big Story
  • Disaster Waiting to Happen at Indian Point
  • Zephyr Teachout -- The Most Refreshing Candidate for New York Governor in Decades
  • Science May Be Objective But That Doesn't Mean That All Scientists Are Because of Their Drive to Push Their Institutions and Projects
  • Secret Diablo Canyon Report Revealed
  • Solar Power as an Alternative to Dangerous Nuclear Power in Space
  • The Lyme Disease Epidemic

RSS Karl North Eco-Intelligence

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RSS Kate Ausburn

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RSS Keith Farnish

  • Uprooting Civilization (Part 2)
  • Uprooting Civilization (Part 1)
  • The Problem With…Conspiracy Theories
  • What If…No One Voted?
  • The Problem With…Responsibility
  • An Experiment In Self Liberation
  • Getting Real
  • Finding My Limit
  • What If…We Stopped Using Money
  • Anger Is Good

RSS Knight Science Journalism – MIT

  • The Tracker Now Lives Here …
  • A farewell post: Three reasons why good science writing is worth defending.
  • Globe story on non-invasive prenatal testing offers murky argument.
  • (UPDATED/2*) What Ho? A 2014 List of Lists of best, worst, or otherwisest in 2014
  • Cancer & poverty: When a reporter’s journey becomes part of the story.
  • Malcolm Gladwell faces new charges of using others’ information without attribution.
  • Retraction Watch awarded a two-year, $400,000 grant from the MacArthur Foundation
  • Scientific American reshapes blog network, cuts number of blogs and bloggers in half.
  • The 13 boldest ideas in science: If you wear lipstick and pearls…
  • In the Aftermath of the Holsey Execution: What Courts Say About Drunken Lawyers and Hypothetical Justice.

RSS Kulture Critic

  • In the Folds of the Flesh: Philosophic Reflections on Touch
  • A New World Apocalyptic Eschatology
  • The QAnon Shaman ~ and his Modern Cargo Cult
  • Distraction, Deflection, Diremption
  • A BRAVE ‘NOVEL’ WORLD
  • Myth, Mystery, and Magic: Religious Imagination in Ancient Egypt
  • Patience, A Personal Reflection on Life and Its Impermanence
  • Embodiment, Ecstasy, Emptiness
  • What’s Love Got To Do With It?
  • ‘Putin Did It’ ~ The Russians are Coming

RSS Kunstler Cast

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RSS Kurt Kobb

  • South by Southwest: Water crises hit America
  • Fertilizer, Energy and Liebig's Law of the Minimum
  • Chinese ag theft, pathogen research only point up dangers of GMO crops and monoculture
  • Will the U. S. curtail oil exports as fuel prices rise?
  • The Iran conflict and our Wile E. Coyote moment
  • Taking a break - no post this week
  • Why most economists vastly underestimate the economic damage of the Iran conflict
  • Martin Act to the rescue: Insider trading on Trump reversals in the legal crosshairs
  • Iran to Trump: If you destroy us, you destroy yourself
  • Is the complacency in global financial markets warranted?

RSS Lack of Environment

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RSS Law and Disorder

  • Law and Disorder May 25, 2026
  • Law and Disorder May 18, 2026
  • Law and Disorder May 11, 2026
  • Law and Disorder May 4, 2026
  • Law and Disorder April 27, 2026
  • Law and Disorder April 20, 2026
  • Law and Disorder April 13, 2026
  • Law and Disorder April 6, 2026
  • Law and Disorder March 30, 2026
  • Law and Disorder March 23, 2026

RSS Le Monde diplomatique – English edition

  • Bolivia: protest and extraction
  • Canada: the ‘best country in the world' under the microscope
  • May: the longer view
  • Afghanistan-Pakistan border tensions
  • Strategic and commercial oil reserves
  • Lebanon: where civilisations met and merged
  • At Palmyra, heritage comes before people
  • Anthropic, Silicon Valley's conscience?
  • Vatican weighs in on AI
  • Is Irish reunification back?

RSS Le Monde diplomatique – Open Page

  • Bolivia: protest and extraction
  • Canada: the ‘best country in the world' under the microscope
  • May: the longer view
  • Afghanistan-Pakistan border tensions
  • Strategic and commercial oil reserves
  • Lebanon: where civilisations met and merged
  • At Palmyra, heritage comes before people
  • Anthropic, Silicon Valley's conscience?
  • Vatican weighs in on AI
  • Is Irish reunification back?

RSS Leaving Babylon

  • Even Iran is laughing at us
  • Reaping what you’ve sown
  • From Belarus with love
  • Self-hastened death
  • Requiem for a truly civilized world
  • Pollan’s psychedelic adventure
  • Intentional immiseration
  • Responding to Orlov’s Virtuous Collapse Sequence
  • Farewell to mainstream medicine
  • Dancing through the elder years

RSS Lee Camp

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RSS Lee Fang

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RSS Leonardo Boff

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RSS Les Leopold

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RSS Life Itself

  • Goodness, mostly
  • Light or Darkness?
  • AI and Chaos Forever
  • One Year of War on Ukraine
  • Confessions of a Petroleum Engineer and Ecologist
  • On Snowflakes, Blogs and Loneliness
  • Why the Year 2022 Stood Out?
  • Bad Karma
  • Hope Dies Last
  • Ascent of the Angry and Stupid

RSS Limited, Inc.

  • Superstition, blessing, and contract: a fantasia on the horror film
  • Olga Tokarczuk uses AI to drive over the bones of her own novels
  • Spending my life reading
  • UGLY STORIES
  • The "I am" and the 'Happen to be" - a cultural semantics
  • A Modest Proposal: Let AI replace CEOs!
  • A translation of Pierre Herbart's story Miraflores
  • The door of the past
  • On Movies
  • The Rise and Fall of Baby in Popular music: some notes

RSS Link TV – Earth Focus

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RSS Low-Tech Magazine

  • Rediscovering the Handcart
  • Low-tech Magazine: The Uncompressed Book Series
  • Winter is Coming: Build a Solar Powered Foot Stove

RSS LRB Blog

  • We want the big skyscrapers
  • Checkmate in Mexico
  • Volleyball on the Beach
  • Max Richter’s ‘Sleep’
  • ‘Hate Marches’

RSS Luis J. Rodriguez

  • The death of a grandson to fentanyl
  • Updates from Luis J. Rodriguez (Mixcoatl Itztlacuiloh)
  • Help Luis J. Rodriguez become California governor
  • Stand Firm on Election Day
  • 50th Anniversary of Chicano Moratorium Against the Vietnam War
  • Trump's War on the United States
  • Covid-19: The Collective initiation from which something new and vital must be born
  • Class warfare playing out on TV
  • Creativity in a Time of Chaos
  • We are the weave and weaver, we are the dream and dreamer

RSS Mabinogogiblog

  • PREVENTION OF WARS IN 2025
  • 33rd Anniversary of the Murder of Bulic Forsyth
  • An Ecological Approach to the “Meaning of Life” Question
  • JANUARY 2026 WEATHER IN BRITAIN AND MAN-MADE CLIMATE CHANGE
  • LIVING BRUE DAY, MARCH 28th GLASTONBURY TOWN HALL
  • RESOLVING THE WAR IN UKRAINE: MOVING THE IMMOVABLE
  • MP LETTER ABOUT TRUMP’s PLAN TO ANNEXE GREENLAND
  • HOW ONE MAN, VASILY ARKHIPOV, STOPPED A NUCLEAR WAR IN THE CUBAN MISSILE CRISIS
  • MP LETTER ABOUT DEFINING TERRORISM AND ENDING THE BUYING OF POLITICIANS
  • Letter to MP about donations to politicians from (foreign) corporations

RSS Manicore – Accueil

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RSS Marginal Revolution

  • Wednesday assorted links
  • Seven ways to avoid losing your job to AI
  • Can liberals be pacifists?
  • *How to Win a Trade War: An Optimistic Guide to an Anxious Global Economy*
  • Quarantine sentences to ponder, that was then this is now edition…
  • Tuesday assorted links
  • A Beautiful Theory Falls to Ugly Data
  • The corporate tax rate really matters
  • What I’ve been reading
  • *Silent Friend*

RSS Mark Biskeborn – Underground Essays

  • Kafkaesque
  • Larry Summers Still Living Large
  • War and Corruption Deficits: Insects and Leviathans
  • Breaking News: Lt. Col. Shaffer Accuses Former CIA Dir. Tenet
  • Movie Review: Zero Dark Thirty
  • Wild Sex, Drugs, Howling in the Desert
  • Bradley Manning—A Case of Class-based Justice System
  • Drones Enable Corporate Power
  • Corporations in the U.S. and in Mexico an Inverted Totalitarianism: Devour, Prey, Seduce
  • Rapture of Charlatans

RSS Mark Fiore

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RSS Mark Lynas

  • FAQ on ‘Clean Energy Shift’ – what it is and why it matters
  • Why is the Marine Stewardship Council giving this Norwegian trawler company ‘license to krill’?
  • To help the climate, we need to get positive about energy
  • As we breach 1.5 °C, we must replace temperature limits with clean-energy targets
  • Why we should protect the high seas from all extraction, forever
  • Hope and memory in Hiroshima: A journey from Mount Fuji to global zero
  • This is how to avoid annihilating ourselves in a nuclear war – NewScientist
  • One Nuclear War Can Ruin the Whole Climate – WSJ
  • New book – Six Minutes to Winter: Nuclear War and How to Avoid It
  • Trump wins – but don’t despair

RSS Martin Wolf

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RSS Matt Bruenig

  • My Fully Automated Labor Law Research Tool Is Finally Here
  • What even is an autonomous AI agent?
  • Technical Details of My LLM-Generated Book
  • Some Thoughts on AI
  • The Midwit Theory of Geoff Shullenberger
  • Desert and Capitalism Again
  • Dissecting My Recent Argument (Are Error Theories Offensive?)
  • The Fertility Question
  • Yglesias on the Politics of NAFTA
  • Three Years of Solar Panels Reduced My Electricity Bill $8,935

RSS Matt Taibbi

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RSS Matt Wuerker

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RSS Max Keiser

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RSS Media Lens

  • Media Myopia As We Hurtle Towards Climate Oblivion
  • ‘Starmageddon’ – The Anti-Polanski Smear Campaign That Ate Itself
  • A Lefty Progressive Goes To The Tank Museum
  • Nuclear Genocide – The Threat And The Ceasefire
  • ‘How On Earth Do You Justify That?’ Laura Kuenssberg’s Selective Empathy
  • ‘Operation Epic Fury’ – Anatomy Of A War Of Aggression
  • ‘The Weak Must Suffer’: The Eternal Fiction Of The ‘International Rules-Based Order’
  • Venezuela – ‘War Is Peace’
  • Blanked – A Tale Of Two Books
  • The Magic Begging Bowl, Part 2 – Self-Inquiry

RSS Media Matters – Environment

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RSS Media Matters – Everything

  • Fox guest on possible troop withdrawal from Afghanistan: "The solution is more blood, sweat, and tears" 
  • Fox host defends Trump: "Just because you use harsh language doesn't mean your intent is to denigrate another race"
  • Fox News is talking more about abortion than the Democratic debates did
  • Fox & Friends touts Trump's "connections to Ohio" without noting they involve housing discrimination
  • The only Black Republican in the House announced he will not seek reelection. Fox News covered it for 20 seconds.
  • Fox's Newt Gingrich complains about Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren: "I don't remember us electing an angry president literally in my lifetime"
  • Fox's Stuart Varney: Electing a Democrat as president will lead to an economic contraction
  • New Bureau of Land Management head complained that federal employees aren’t held “personally responsible for the harm that they do”
  • Sean Hannity says one of his main criticisms of Republicans is that they aren't more like Rush Limbaugh
  • On Fox, Rush Limbaugh complains about efforts to address the climate crisis: "There is no man-made climate change"

RSS Media Roots

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RSS Methane Hydrates

  • Joint New Zealand - German 3D survey reveals massive seabed gas hydrate and methane system
  • Noctilucent clouds: further confirmation of large methane releases
  • Earthquake M6.7 hits Sea of Okhotsk
  • Methanetracker
  • Sea of Okhotsk
  • High daily peak methane readings continue over Antarctica
  • Is Global Warming breaking up the Integrity of the Permafrost?
  • Antarctic methane peaks at 2249 ppb
  • Methane hydrates
  • Message to the Survivors

RSS Michael Hudson

  • When the Empire Becomes the Risk
  • Why This Is Not the 1970s Again
  • America Wanted Submission, China Offered Parity
  • The Crisis Finance Capitalism Can’t Escape
  • Did Xi Really Trade Iran for Taiwan?
  • Swap Lines, Gulf Debt and the Unravelling of Dollar Primacy
  • Wars Are Won by Economics, Not Armies
  • The Return of Guns and Butter as War Spending Surges
  • How Iran Turned Oil Into the Empire’s Weak Point
  • Wall Street’s Exit Plan Is You

RSS Michael Miller – Viewpoint

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RSS Michael Parenti

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RSS Mike Philbin – Free Planet

  • PROJECT PERPETUA: 2026 modern concept car
  • SERIAL KILLER: a new Hertzan Chimera novel for 2026?
  • MADELINE SOTO: missing persons case
  • FLINT: a new Hertzan Chimera novel... coming in 2025
  • STAR CITIZEN - HALF A BILLION DOLLARS - TEN YEARS AND COUNTING
  • ELECTRO-BULLET: reinterpreting a classic...
  • LAST OF THE CATHEDRA available in trade paperback from Amazon.
  • OUR ELECTRIC MOON
  • Best Real-time in-game Physics engine EVER by Dennis Gustafsson
  • AMAZING WARHAMMER 40K ASTARTES SHORTS

RSS Mondoweiss

  • The families of Gaza’s disappeared are still looking for answers
  • The Israeli Knesset just voted to dissolve itself, but this won’t end the Gaza genocide
  • Why did the American Psychiatric Association cancel my Humanitarian Award Lecture on Gaza?
  • ‘Life itself no longer feels the same’: Gaza faces another Eid al-Adha amid genocide
  • On +972 Magazine, Sally Rooney, and the centering of Israelis in an anti-colonial movement
  • On Liberation Day, South Lebanon marks the return of the occupation it once defeated
  • Pax Silica, the Gaza genocide, and the crisis of global capitalism
  • Itamar Ben-Gvir is suddenly the villain of Israeli politics for one reason: he revealed Israel’s true face to the world
  • With signs of a possible Iran deal within reach, pressure is mounting on Trump to return to war
  • It’s the genocide, stupid

RSS Mons Angelorum: Deadly Serious 3

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RSS Mons Angelorum: Waiting for Good Weather

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RSS Mother Jones

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RSS MR Zine

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RSS Musings on Iraq

  • This Day In Iraqi History - May 27 Barzani decided to leave Iraq for USSR after his followers arrested and his brother surrendered to govt
  • Iraq’s Power Gride Faces More Setbacks As Summer Looms
  • This Day In Iraqi History - May 26 Future PM Jamil Midfai led Al-Ahd forces to attack Tal Afar in attempt to start revolt vs UK Mandate in Iraq
  • Most Of Iraq’s Oil Fields Are Closed Due To US-Iran Conflict
  • This Day In Iraqi History - May 25 Turkey launched 1st raid into Iraq to fight PKK under Iraq-Turkey security agreement
  • This Day In Iraqi History - May 24 Iran’s Op Beit al-Moqaddas pushed Iraqis back to border in Basra Iran-Iraq War
  • This Day In Iraqi History - May 23 CPA disbanded Iraq’s military
  • Review Anthony Cordesman, and Ahmed Hashim, Iraq Sanctions and Beyond, Westview Press, 1997
  • This Day In Iraqi History - May 22 Patriotic Union of Kurdistan formed
  • This Day In Iraqi History - May 21 Treaty of Arzurum set line between Ottoman and Persian empires with Iraq as border area

RSS Nafeez Ahmed

  • IDF's Gaza assault is to control Palestinian gas, avert Israeli energy crisis | Nafeez Ahmed
  • World Bank and UN carbon offset scheme 'complicit' in genocidal land grabs - NGOs | Nafeez Ahmed
  • The open source revolution is coming and it will conquer the 1% - ex CIA spy | Nafeez Ahmed
  • Iraq blowback: Isis rise manufactured by insatiable oil addiction
  • Defence officials prepare to fight the poor, activists and minorities (and commies) | Nafeez Ahmed
  • Pentagon preparing for mass civil breakdown | Nafeez Ahmed
  • The inevitable demise of the fossil fuel empire | Nafeez Ahmed
  • US shale boom is over, energy revolution needed to avert blackouts | Nafeez Ahmed
  • Scientists vindicate 1972 'Limits to Growth' – urge investment in 'circular economy' | Nafeez Ahmed
  • Exhaustion of cheap mineral resources is terraforming Earth – scientific report | Nafeez Ahmed

RSS Naked Capitalism

  • Blair Invokes AI to Revive TINA, Denying TIARA
  • Links 5/27/2026
  • Iran War: Negotiations Deadlocked on Fundamental Issues as Media Keeps Up Happy Talk; Iran Promises Retaliation as US Still Coiled to Strike
  • And Then There Was One: The Eurasian Unity Project Runs Out of Trade Route Options as Washington Successfully Spreads Chaos
  • A Short History of Sportswriting: The Clues Are on the Billionaires’ Scorecards
  • Coffee Break: Armed Madhouse – The Cuba Temptation
  • A More Resilient Europe Faces a Renewed Energy Shock – But Difficult Trade-Offs May Resurface
  • Links 5/26/2026
  • Iran War: US and Iran Exchange Fire as Trump Reveals Extent of Israel Capture With Barmy Abrams Accord Proposal; Continued Denial of Approaching Energy Crunch After Reserves Depleted
  • Puerto Rico’s Trump-Adjacent Governor Warns of an Imminent US Attack on Cuba

RSS Naomi Klein

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RSS Naomi Klein – Guardian.UK

  • Alaa Abd el-Fattah’s tweets were wrong, but he is no ‘anti-white Islamist’. Why does the British right want you to believe he is? | Naomi Klein
  • Wealth and power shape the climate emergency – the most important tool we have to defend ourselves is the facts | Naomi Klein
  • The rise of end times fascism | Naomi Klein and Astra Taylor
  • Night of bombing in south Beirut – as it happened
  • How Israel has made trauma a weapon of war
  • We need an exodus from Zionism | Naomi Klein
  • The Zone of Interest is about the danger of ignoring atrocities – including in Gaza | Naomi Klein
  • We have a tool to stop Israel’s war crimes: BDS – podcast
  • We have a tool to stop Israel's war crimes: BDS | Naomi Klein
  • This Giving Tuesday, support the publication that sees news as a right for all | Naomi Klein

RSS Nature Protects, As She is Protected

  • No Name Calling Please, Give Us Evidence Which Proves GM Crops Are Safe
  • Let’s Be Honest About Genetically Modified Crops
  • Hindu roots of modern ‘ecology’
  • Ancient wisdom for a contemporary problem
  • By trashing the Gadgil report recommendations, did we just kill the Western Ghats?
  • GM crops debate needs Swadeshi voice
  • GM food crops – Why India must say no
  • GMOs are uneeded and unsafe - says India's largest farmer union
  • And all is not lost
  • Up and up and up

RSS Navdanya’s Diary

  • Food for health: the right to health is to live healthy lives
  • Making peace with the Earth. 600 organisations urge a sustainable new start
  • The Seed War
  • An Agroecological Transformation to Tackle Climate Change
  • Rewilding food, rewilding farming
  • Which future of food do we want?
  • Vandana Shiva : No to Junk Food in Schools, Yes to Climate Change Education in Schools
  • Education and knowledge can stop the fake “science” of multinationals that is leading the planet and society to collapse
  • We Need Biodiversity-Based Agriculture to Solve the Climate Crisis
  • Industrial Agriculture, based on War Technologies, continues to kill millions of species driving the sixth mass extinction: Agroecology is the Future

RSS New Internationalist

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RSS New Left Project

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RSS New World Notes

  • Observations on Work
  • The GOP and the Dems: Hypocrisy and Betrayal
  • Can Technology Save Us?
  • George Carlin at the National Press Club
  • Bitter Lake
  • How to Ruin an Economy
  • Killing Us Softly
  • Confronting the Authorities
  • Peasant of the Dawn
  • Police

RSS News Junkie Post

  • Mayotte Crisis: Putrid Leftover of France’s Imperialist and Colonialist Scrooge?
  • China, Russia and India Versus USA, EU and Japan: Axes Powers of a New Global Cold War?
  • French Radical Protests: Can the Sinister Fascist Traits of Capitalism be Overcome?
  • Qu’est donc la memoire?
  • The Stench of Extinction
  • Forget Wars on Covid and Terror: War on Climate Collapse Is the Only War of Necessity for Human Survival
  • Covid Fear Management Policies: Distractions from and Tests for Looming Climate Collapse
  • France Neoliberal Macron: Vanguard of a Covid Global Corporate Dictatorship?
  • Magic Woman of Haiti’s Mountains
  • Afghanistan War Outcome: Hope for Sovereign Nations Fighting the Scourge of Neocolonial Imperialism

RSS NOAA: Monthly State of the Climate Report

  • April 2026 Monthly National Climate Report
  • April 2026 Monthly Global Climate Report
  • April 2026 Monthly Regional Analysis
  • April 2026 Monthly Upper Air Report
  • April 2026 Monthly Tropical Cyclones Report
  • April 2026 Monthly Global Snow and Ice Report
  • April 2026 Monthly Wildfires Report
  • March 2026 Global Drought Narrative
  • March 2026 Monthly Tornadoes Report
  • March 2026 Monthly Synoptic Discussion

RSS Notes from the Aboveground

  • On Inequality
  • Shameless is as shameless does
  • Wages of Rebellion
  • Seveneves
  • Guns across America
  • How to Clone a Mammoth
  • Madness in Civilization
  • Post-TV
  • Thieves of State
  • Protecting the Wild

RSS NYT Examiner

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RSS Occupy.com

  • Donald Trump Fits the Bill for the Biblical Antichrist
  • Reconsidering Our Planet, Part III
  • A 3-Step Blueprint Democrats Can Follow to Win in 2028 and Beyond
  • Fighting the Corporations that are Killing Our Planet, Part II
  • Democrats' Last Major Obstacle to Defeating MAGA for Good
  • The Struggle to Keep a Living Planet
  • Can the UK Green Party Surge Match Mamdani’s NYC Earthquake?
  • Minneapolis Is Giving Americans the Model for Fighting a Fascist Regime
  • Hegseth's Alleged War Crime Is the Exact Illegal Order the 6 Democrats Warned Us About
  • 2025 Elections Could Be the Beginning of the End of MAGA — if Dems Seize the Opportunity

RSS Occupy las Vegas

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RSS Occupy Wall Street

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RSS Oddity Central

  • Young Woman Injects Uncertified Silicone into Her Face Every Day with Disastrous Consequences
  • Man Lives with 5-Inch Wooden Branch in Eye Socket for a Year and Half Without Knowing It
  • Natural Wonders – The Fascinating ‘Hellicopter Fruits’ of the Hollong Tree
  • China Becomes First Country to Mass-Produce the World’s Strongest Carbon Fibre
  • The Wonder of Zaria – How a 16-Year-Old Youth Almost Became a Member of Nigeria’s Parliament
  • Real-Life Saitama Emulates One-Punch Man’s Training for Three Years with Impressive Results
  • Controversial ‘AI-Powered Pet Translator’ Boasts a 95% Accurracy Rate
  • Russian Church Tries to Keep Ukrainian Drones at Bay with Religious Procession and Prayer Service
  • 56-Year-Old Man Has 3-Pound Stone Removed from His Bladder
  • 14-Year-Old Girl Allegedly Fakes Unexplainable Bleeding for 1.5 Years to Avoid Going to School

RSS Of Two Minds

  • Why Is Consumer Sentiment at Record Lows?
  • The Overstuffed Freezer Analogy
  • When Unfairness Is Systemic, the Consequences Are Flight, Resistance, Revolt
  • Inequality, AI and Digital Life Are Undermining Society
  • We've Optimized Fragility, Failure, Denial--and Rage
  • Chaos Unleashed: When "Irrational" Makes Perfect Sense
  • When US Treasuries Play a Reverse Card
  • What Would Be Truly Bullish? Actually Fixing What's Broken
  • Recession and Revolution: Our Experience Isn't a Model or System
  • Why We're Helpless When Things Break Down

RSS One Penny Sheet

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RSS One Struggle – South Florida

  • Toys on the Dash and Cops at the Vigil
  • Beyond the Headlines: Issue #2
  • Organize Against Alligator Alcatraz!
  • “No Kings Day 2025”: Your discontent shouldn’t end at a protest
  • Solidarity and Support for Haiti in 2025
  • Beyond the Headlines: Issue #1
  • Beyond the Headlines:
  • GANG VIOLENCE, CHAOS IN HAITI – WHY?
  • Don’t Fall for Capitalist Slick Talk About “Community Redevelopment”
  • Our taxes are funding war and a genocide!

RSS Orion Magazine

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RSS Our Finite World

  • China and US Trade Talks: A Solution for Oil Shortages?
  • Losing the Iran War May Be the Best Outcome for the World
  • A New Explanation for Tariffs and Bombings
  • Understanding Deglobalization: The Role of Diesel and Jet Fuel
  • 2026: Expect a very uneven world economic downturn
  • Too many promises; too few future physical goods
  • A lack of very cheap oil is leading to debt problems
  • What has gone wrong with the economy? Can it be fixed?
  • Sierra Club talk that may be of interest
  • Why oil prices don’t rise to consistently high levels

RSS Pando Daily

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RSS Paul Haeder

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RSS Paul Kingsnorth – Elswhere

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RSS Paul L. Street

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RSS PBD – Progressive Blog Digest

  • 46
  • HIS LEGACY
  • THE END GAME
  • DISUNIFICATION
  • THE WALL
  • GUILTY!
  • DSM-5
  • MOVING ON
  • 6000
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RSS PeakOil.com News

  • Why the IEA is Wrong About Peak Oil Demand
  • Did we inadvertently speed global warming?
  • Venezuela’s Oil Monopoly Eases
  • Why Germany is Choosing Natural Gas Over Nuclear Power
  • U.S. coal-fired electricity generation decreased in 2022 and 2023
  • Is It Time To Abandon the Idea of Phasing Out Oil and Gas?
  • More than 20% of global refining capacity at risk of closure
  • Charles Hugh Smith Blog: Fire, Then Ice Our Deflationary Future
  • Saudi Aramco CEO Amin Nasser says energy transition strategy ‘visibly failing’
  • 100 million-degree ‘artificial sun’ sets new records in hunt for energy’s ‘Holy Grail’

RSS Peak Prosperity Blog

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RSS Peak Prosperity: Daily Digest

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RSS Peak Prosperity: Featured Voices

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RSS People Before Profit Blog

  • "Blacklisted Again" Michael Berkowitz on "Trumbo" by Norman Markowitz
  • A Corrected and Updated Version of The "Madness" of Donald Trump by Norman Markowitz
  • The "Madness" of Donald Trump by Norman Markowitz
  • Robert Parry's Constructive Criticism for both the Obama Administration and the Center Left by Norman Markowitz
  • A Marxist IQ for December by Norman Markowitz
  • A Wake Up Call for those in Labor and the Left who Who Wait for Hillary Clinton by Norman Markowitz
  • A Powerfful Isreali Critique of the Concept of "International Terrorism" and Wars without End Against it by Norman Markowitz
  • A Corrected Version and Updated Version of "The Missiles of November" by Norman Markowitz
  • The "Missiles of November" by Norman Markowitz
  • The Ontario Federation of Labor Speaks Out in International Terrorism by Norman Markowitz

RSS Phlegm

  • "we fight each other while it devours us" Belgium June 2017
  • West Didsbury Manchester. May 2017
  • Dulwich picture gallery. April 25th 2017
  • Ostend, Belgium April 2017
  • Jacksonville, Florida - USA
  • Sheffield - UK
  • Lexington, Kentucky - USA.
  • Reykjavik - Iceland
  • Toronto - Canada.
  • Birmingham, UK.

RSS Phyllis Bennis

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RSS Physicist-Retired Newsvine

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RSS Pink Tank

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RSS PlanetSave – Climate

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RSS Political Violence @ a Glance

  • A Fond Farewell to Political Violence @ A Glance
  • Sudan’s Junta Chief Survived the Coup, but Can He Win the War?
  • The Limits of Plausible Deniability in Ukraine and Beyond
  • The Responsibility to Protect Palestinians
  • Ecuador Has 99 Problems but a Coup Isn’t One
  • How Economic Crises Make Incumbent Leaders Change Their Regimes from Within
  • Do No Harm: US Aid to Africa and Civilian Security
  • Perceptions in Northern Ireland: 25 Years After the Good Friday Agreement
  • Viewpoint: Is Military Aid Really the Best Way to Help Ukraine?
  • Beyond Victimhood: Women’s Contributions to Criminal Violence

RSS Popular Resistance

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RSS PRN with Danny Schechter

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RSS Progressive Radio Network

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RSS ProPublica

  • U.S. Lawmakers Demand Reforms to Immigration Officers’ Use of Tear Gas and Pepper Spray
  • She Faced a Life-Threatening Miscarriage. Under Arkansas’ Abortion Ban, Even Calls to the Governor’s Office Didn’t Help.
  • Albuquerque Officials Take Steps to Curb Surge in Citations, Jail Stays Related to Homelessness
  • Lawmakers Ask DOJ Watchdog to Investigate Alleged Drugs-for-Votes Scheme After ProPublica Report
  • California Teacher Previously Fired for Sexual Harassment Is No Longer in the Classroom After New Complaints
  • Louisiana’s Tough-on-Crime Policies Stand to Cost Taxpayers Millions More for Years to Come
  • The Trump Administration Is Facing Scrutiny for How It’s Handing Out Billion-Dollar Border Wall Contracts
  • This Sheriff’s Office Says Racial Profiling Reforms Are Too Costly. Auditors Found It Misused $163 Million.
  • Tell Us About Your Experience With Kentucky’s Addiction Recovery Care
  • Ken Paxton Wanted to Crack Down on Forum Shopping. Now Lawyers Say He’s Improperly Seeking Out Favorable Courts.

RSS Project Censored

  • Reframing Mass Incarceration, Antiracism, and Abolition
  • Forged Signatures, Felled Trees: Adani’s Expansion Into Hasdeo Forest 
  • Kansas Officials Plan to Cover Billion-Dollar Subsidy for Sports Team Worth Billions
  • Youth Justice Programs Slashed by Trump Administration, Reinforcing Heavy Employment Barriers
  • The 1 Percent Get Richer Under Trump, Ordinary Americans Pay
  • DOJ Funding Cut Leaves Inmates More Vulnerable to Sexual Violence
  • 88 Corporations Paid No Federal Income Tax in 2025 Thanks to Trump
  • Purdue Ends All Affiliation With Student-Publication After Pro-Palestinian Editorial
  • $1.5 Trillion Defense Budget Benefits Billionaire Trump Supporters With Little Oversight
  • US Prisons Experiment with Scandinavian Restorative Justice Models

RSS Public Intelligence

  • 2025 Bilderberg Meeting Participant List
  • U.S. Senate Homeland Security Committee Interim Report on July 13th, 2024 Trump Assassination Attempt
  • Joint Chiefs of Global Tax Enforcement Crypto Assets Risk Indicators for Financial Institutions
  • 2024 Bilderberg Meeting Participant List
  • U.S. House Financial Surveillance Report: How Federal Law Enforcement Commandeered Financial Institutions to Spy on Americans
  • Asymmetric Warfare Group Iran Quick Reference Guide
  • (U//FOUO) FBI Domestic Terrorism Reference Guide: Sovereign Citizen Violent Extremism
  • Department of Justice Critical Incident Review Active Shooter at Robb Elementary School
  • Virginia Guiffre v. Ghislaine Maxwell Unsealed Jeffrey Epstein Documents Batch 8 January 9, 2024
  • Virginia Guiffre v. Ghislaine Maxwell Unsealed Jeffrey Epstein Documents Batch 7 January 8, 2024

RSS Pulse

  • How Gaza has changed the narrative on global Jihad
  • Universal Jurisdiction in Islam
  • Rachid Ghannouchi’s letter from a Tunisian Prison
  • ILAN PAPPE : There is still time to stop the Gaza genocide
  • From the Israel-Palestine Memory Hole
  • Scotland First Minister’s family stuck in Gaza
  • maiñ Burhan hūñ
  • A Protest for Ukraine free of Dogma and Cynicism
  • Dismantling Hindutva with Islamophobia?
  • Of UnStating the Stated, and the Silences in its Wake

RSS Quartz

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RSS Question Everything

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RSS R-Squared Energy

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RSS Rabett Run

  • Bad (and the few ok) population decline arguments
  • The Mikes have the Willies
  • Just why are people doing the thing that I said they should do?
  • Elon believes in half of "Fake It Til You Make It"
  • Dispatchable Hydropower For The Win! (Just Don't Call It That)
  • Alex Tabarrock and Argumentum ad Flubberum
  • Brian's new gig
  • Something left unsaid about Koutsoyiannis et al.
  • "A Left That Refuses to Condemn Mass Murder Is Doomed"
  • Well, crud

RSS Rabble.Ca

  • Don’t buy-in to climate science denialism
  • UCP set to announce plan to bust up AHS
  • Deepfakes and gender based violence
  • City of Vancouver to lowest paid workers: Let them eat cuts!
  • Hundreds of thousands of Quebec public sector workers vow further strike action
  • Dual boss battle: video game workers face-off multiple employers at once
  • Degrowth, green energy, social equity, and circular economy
  • Take Back Alberta completes take over of UCP board
  • Saving Palestinian lives will save Israeli lives
  • Edmonton activist protests climate crisis with demonstration in AB legislature

RSS Radical Philosophy

  • Embodied phantasm
  • Saint-Alban’s contested legacy
  • Frantz Fanon at Saint-Alban
  • The space of ideology
  • The actually existing ‘state of Palestine’
  • Breaking out of the circle
  • On the bourgeois concept of real abstraction
  • Phenomenology of necessary illusion
  • Reproductive subsumption
  • The fascistisation of social reproduction

RSS Ran Prieur

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RSS Random Communications from an Evolutionary Edge

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RSS RANTINGS ON MARKETS, ECONOMICS AND BUSINESS STRATEGY

  • Update On The Crisis Of Capitalism That The System Doesn’t Want You To See
  • France’s Sunday Presidential Election Looms Large
  • 2022 – A World Where Everything Is On The Brink
  • The Power Elite, The World Of Men, And A Simple Litmus Test To Determine When They Will Be Defeated
  • Is The CIA Involved In The Origins Of The Coronavirus?
  • Buckle Up For What May Possibly Be A 2022 Social And Economic Shit Show
  • The Trump Administration And CIA Talked Of Murdering Julian Assange… And More
  • Newly “Discovered” And Potentially Damning Documents On US Funding Of Coronavirus Research
  • Now We Will See America’s True Soul
  • The Best Video I’ve Ever Watched On Why The US Is Really In Afghanistan- Pathological Plunder

RSS Read the Science

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RSS Reader Supported News

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RSS Reader Supported News – Posts

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RSS Real Economics

  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – May 24, 2026
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – May 17, 2026
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – May 10, 2026
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – May 03, 2026
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – April 26, 2026
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – April 19, 2026
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – April 12, 2026
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – April 05, 2026
  • Trump's tariffs will fail because USA is no longer a republic, but an oligarchy - NOTES
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – March 29, 2026

RSS Real-World Economics Review Blog

  • new issue of RWER – #113
  • Weekend read – Who is Neil Lawrence? Or AI and Gardening
  • How economics became a religion
  • What is to be done?
  • Robert Solow kicking Lucas and Sargent in the pants
  • AI productivity boom and shorter workweeks
  • Will gravity pull down the AI bubble?
  • Why we are heading for another financial crash
  • Private wealth as a percent of domestic product 1980 – 2025
  • We don’t need billionaires, and we can structure the market so we don’t have them

RSS Red Pepper

  • Cuba stands firm
  • Deviants and trailblazers – review
  • On the radical politics of sobriety
  • Grace Byron on cultural criticism, transphobia and Trump
  • Behind the ‘intelligent’ chatbot
  • Theatre and political transformations in Brazil
  • Elections 2026: Immigration, employment and the limits of Holyrood
  • Their hour of glory: Trades councils and the 1926 general strike
  • Elections 2026: Soul searching for Scottish political identity
  • Key words: Conjuncture

RSS Reddit: Environment

  • ‘It’s getting hotter and it’s not stopping’: dealing with the heat in five of Europe’s capitals
  • Mining giant polluted Quebec waters for over a decade before $100M fine. What took so long?
  • Chemical tank implosion at Washington pulp and paper mill leaves 10 injured, unknown number dead
  • Why countries are tearing down hundreds of dams
  • Scientists have scrapped the worst-case climate scenario – because action is making a difference
  • The federal government is spraying “record levels” of the controversial herbicide glyphosate in California forests
  • ‘What you see here is a wetland without water’: how the datacentre boom is exacerbating Chile’s mega-drought | Chile
  • An exceptionally early heat wave shatters records and brings deaths in Europe
  • Britain’s green transition should belong to everyone. Why is Labour so intent on stopping us having our say?
  • Sustainable aviation fuel likely to miss 2030 U.S. target

RSS Reddit: Overpopulation – Unending Growth

  • Advocating for murder, eugenics, or culling people does not help make recognition of overpopulation more mainstream.
  • r/overpopulation open discussion thread
  • Yes no one dares to state the obvious.
  • No sympathy for people reproducing in poor countries
  • Korea's March Births Surge 19.4%, Largest Jump in 33 Years
  • Fearmongering articles not discussing the UPSIDE of population halving
  • The Problem with "It's Overconsumption, Not Overpopulation"
  • What's a problem humanity solved so well that younger people don't even realize it used to be a huge issue?
  • New mathematical model predicts global population crash by 2064
  • Taking gevery square metre of Earth for humans. Leave nothing for any other living being...

RSS Republic of Lakotah – Mitakuye Oyasin

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RSS Resilience.org

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RSS Richard Heinberg

  • MuseLetter #398: Small Modular Nuclear Reactors are a Dead End
  • Museletter #397: The 2026 Energy Crisis and Our Wile E. Coyote Moment
  • Museletter #396: The Future of Forests
  • Museletter #395: The Empire Crumbles
  • Museletter #394: Nourishing the Bioregional Economy
  • Museletter #393: Electricity Price Squeeze: Something’s Going to Give
  • Museletter #392: What Futures Are Possible?
  • Museletter #391: Gratitude in the Great Unraveling
  • Museletter #390: Peak Oil for Gen Z
  • Museletter #389: Bioregioning Is Our Future

RSS Robert Koehler

  • Make America Racist Again
  • United Humanity: A Future Beyond War
  • Where Does Indifference to Life Begin?
  • Do You Believe in Them Yet?
  • Sanctuary Cities and International Security
  • This Old House . . .
  • Earth Day Is the Planet’s Future
  • There’s No Real Future Without Empathy
  • Everything That Doesn’t Matter
  • A Little Mix of Money, Poetry and God

RSS Robert Kuttner

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RSS Robert Lindsay

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RSS Robert Scheer

  • Is the AI Industry Reformable?
  • The Logic of Taxing Great Wealth
  • ‘Buffer Zone’: The Media’s Favorite Euphemism for Israeli Occupation
  • Which Way, Democrats?
  • Artificial Hype, Authentic Resistance
  • Protesters Block Newark ICE Detention Facility Amid Hunger and Work Strike
  • Chevron to California: Relax Regulations or We Leave
  • Springtime for Bezos
  • ‘What Kind of Life Is This?’: Desperate Cubans Weigh Their Odds in Texas
  • Anti-Trans Amendment Puts Women’s History Museum on Pause

RSS Robert Scribbler

  • OBX Wave Report July 6 — 1-2 Foot, Waves Likely to Build a Bit Friday and Saturday
  • The OBX Wave Report July 5 — 1-2 Foot With Some Shark Bumps Reported
  • OBX Wave Report July 4th — Celebrating Freedom in the 2 Foot Surf
  • OBX Wave Report July 3 — 2 Foot, Clean, Hot Weather
  • OBX Wave Report July 2 — 2-3 Foot With Little Barrels + Talking Climate Crisis
  • OBX Wave Report June 30 — 2-4 Foot Friday For Future + Record Global Heat
  • OBX Wave Report June 29 — Gorgeous Green 2-3 Footers With Light Northeast Winds
  • OBX Wave Report June 28 — 2-3 Foot and Semi-Clean
  • OBX Wave Report June 27 — 1-3 Foot and Cleaning Up Through Afternoon
  • OBX Wave Report June 26 — 1-3 Foot and Choppy With Strong Southerly Winds

RSS Rogue Columnist

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RSS RollingStone: Politics

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RSS RT: Documentary

  • Free to be yourself. Surf master & disabled pupil inspire each other (Trailer) Premiere 02/23
  • Beauty and the Bleach. Skin-whitening trend ravages Senegalese women
  • A gastronomic odyssey through St. Pete’s literary haunts – Taste of Russia Ep. 17
  • Beauty and the Bleach.Skin-whitening trend ravages Senegalese women (Trailer) Premiere 02/19
  • Of Ice and Fame. Medvedeva v Zagitova: friends off the ice, rivals on it
  • Is this a yolk? Ostrich omelettes & peculiar pastries - Taste of Russia Ep. 16
  • Champions of the spirit. Unknown stories of 1st Soviet Olympic medalists
  • Of Ice and Fame. Medvedeva v Zagitova: friends off the ice, rivals on it (Trailer) Premiere 02/10
  • Champions of the spirit. Unknown stories of 1st Soviet Olympic medalists (Trailer) Premiere 02/09
  • Art at the Stake. Afghan artists risk lives to return style, music, and culture to their country

RSS RT Today

  • Pope used AI to warn about dangers of AI – researcher
  • India’s Sukhoi 30MKI fleet to get major upgrade – media
  • EU considering revoking veto powers for new members – Guardian
  • Spanish police raid ruling party following graft allegations
  • Netanyahu will learn the lesson he deserves – Erdogan
  • Post-Soviet bloc emerging as ‘economic center of multipolar world’ – Russian deputy FM
  • North Korea tests new AI-guided missile systems (PHOTOS)
  • The UAE is slipping closer to direct war with Iran
  • Russian Muslims celebrate Eid al-Adha (VIDEOS)
  • Germany wants X to push state-approved content – report

RSS RT: USA News

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RSS Sail Transport Network

  • We Did It: Sailing Cargo in the Aegean
  • Cure for Depending on 90K Oil Spewing Cargo Ships: Sail Power Makes Inroads, Now in Mediterranean
  • Dirty Fossil Fuel ‘Business-As-Usual’ Tactics Spew Out of the IMO at COP22
  • Noah’s Ark Gone Awry
  • Good News/Bad News for Consumers in an Increasingly Energy-Challenged, Shipping-Dependent World
  • Sail cargo's imminent achievement: Timbercoast's Steel Schooner, the Avontuur
  • COP21 Follow-up for Sail Transport and Its Fight against Shipping Emissions and for Resilience
  • Shipping Emissions Must Be Tackled at COP21 with Advances such as Sail Power
  • Maine Sail Freight — America Gets Serious about Clean, Renewable Energy for Transport
  • The Tres Hombres Ship is Homeward Bound

RSS Science-Based Life

  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 22
  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 21
  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 20
  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 19
  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 18
  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Weeks 16 & 17
  • Science Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 15
  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 14
  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 13
  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 12

RSS ScienceDaily: Top Environment News

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RSS ScienceDaily: Top Science News

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RSS Scrap Weapons

  • Conceptualising a COP for Weapons
  • When Deterrence Meets Climate Catastrophe: Rethinking Nuclear Risk in a Post-Treaty World
  • Arms and Arguments April 2026 Review
  • Arms and Arguments March 2026 Review
  • Arms and Arguments February 2026 Review
  • Arms and Arguments January 2026 Reviews
  • The New START Treaty and Nuclear Winter: Re-centering Global Risk in Arms Control Debates
  • Prioritizing Weapons and Ammunition Management Ahead of the 2026 Somalia Transition
  • Who Decides the Future? Intergenerational Perspectives on Disarmament
  • ‘A House of Dynamite’ is a great film, which gets nuclear security dangerously wrong. Why does that matter?

RSS Seemorerocks

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RSS Shadow Government Statistics

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RSS Shame Project

  • Wall Street Journal Issues Epic Correction On Radley Balko’s Error-Riddled Reporting
  • Malcolm Gladwell’s “David & Goliath” Asks Us To Pity the Rich
  • Radley Balko: Anatomy of a “Stand Your Ground” Shill
  • Radley Balko
  • Radley Balko: Anatomy of a “Stand Your Ground” Shill
  • NPR’s Education Coverage Funded By Pro-Privatization Billionaires
  • Charles Murray
  • Why is Malcolm Gladwell running cover for the enablers of serial child molester Jerry Sandusky?
  • The Atlantic’s Jeffrey Goldberg Was a Follower of Jewish Rightwing Terrorist Meir Kahane
  • Recovered History: Wall Street-Funded Self Help Propaganda Greased the Real Estate Bubble

RSS Simple Climate

  • What is the gender and ethnic balance of the science stories I write?
  • New year, new ideas
  • Why we should be wary of ’12 years to climate breakdown’ rhetoric
  • Can we fight climate change on our own?
  • Becoming more than an old gasbag: Climate chemistry on YouTube, cryogenic energy storage, and community renewable energy
  • How does carbon dioxide cause global warming?
  • Australian rodent first mammalian victim of climate change
  • Modern mussel shells much thinner than 50 years ago
  • A very beautiful and unusual animal in danger
  • Eyes on Environment: the many stories of climate change

RSS Skeptical Science

  • On the death of RCP8.5
  • RCP8.5 Update
  • 2026 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming News Roundup #21
  • Skeptical Science New Research for Week #21 2026
  • What’s a ‘super El Niño’? And other El Niño questions, answered
  • Five things you need to know about El Niño’s likely comeback
  • 2026 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming News Roundup #20
  • Fact brief - Does electromagnetic radiation from wind turbines pose a threat to human health?
  • Skeptical Science New Research for Week #20 2026
  • Higher warming predictions for 2026 and 2027

RSS Smithsonian – Smart News

  • Scientists Used A.I. to Redesign a Microbe's Machinery to Function Without a Key Ingredient of Life
  • Daddy Longlegs Seem to Hunt Frogs in South America, Revealing the Gangly Arachnids as Overlooked Predators
  • A Shipwreck, but Make It Fashion: Researchers Transformed Wooden Fragments From a 17th-Century Shipwreck Into a Pair of Stylish Maxi Dresses
  • Scientists Detect an Elusive Giant Squid and Many Other Surprising Marine Animals Near Western Australia Thanks to DNA in the Water
  • A 4,500-Year-Old Neolithic Hall Replica Rises at Stonehenge as Archaeologists and Volunteers Build With Prehistoric Tools and Techniques
  • A Sudden Landslide Triggered Alaska's 2025 'Mega-Tsunami.' Now, Scientists Have Identified Warning Signs to Predict Similar Events
  • Whistler Didn't Mean to Make His Mourning Mother an Art World Star. Today, She's a Highlight at a Major Exhibition in London
  • The Mere Presence of Humans—Not Just Our Changes to the Land—Can Alter Wild Animals' Behaviors, a New Study Suggests
  • An Underwater Robot Explores the Hidden 'Shipwreck City' Beneath the Surface of This Popular Urban Lake in the Pacific Northwest
  • Paleontologists Discover an Ancient Marine Reptile They've Dubbed the T. Rex of the Sea, Crowning Another King of the Cretaceous

RSS Social Text Journal

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RSS Speaking Truth to Power

  • Carolyn Interviewed about her book “Undaunted” by Canadian Ecopsychology Network
  • Will You Be Diagnosed With Mysticism In 2021? By Carolyn Baker
  • Collapsing Into The New Administration Amid Pandemic Lunacy, By Carolyn Baker
  • Collapse Changes Everything: Stop Whining For Perfection, By Carolyn Baker
  • The Collapse Of Ideology And The End Of Escape, By Jem Bendell
  • Top Global Experts Say Humanity Must ‘Heal Our Broken Relationship With Nature’ to Prevent Future Pandemics, Jessica Corbett
  • The United States: An Obituary, By Richard Heinberg
  • Reviving Radical Social Work In Collapse, By Desiree Coutinho
  • We Are All Being Cooked In The Soup Together, By Paul Levy
  • Some Progressives Are in Denial About Trump’s Fascist Momentum, By Norman Solomon

RSS squashpractice

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RSS State of Nature

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RSS State of the Union

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RSS Stephanie McMillan

  • Constant decentralization builds collective strength
  • What does this moment ask of us?
  • Forced to become a commodity
  • Comrades
  • United, the working class can end capitalist exploitation
  • Everything for Everyone
  • “Overthrow” and other verb choices
  • Dialectics: fundamental contradiction
  • Revolution: overturning
  • Intentions for 2022: affirmations for revolution

RSS Steve Cutts

  • Safety First
  • Happy Friday!
  • Loop #3
  • Merry Christmas!
  • Infinity Loop II
  • ‘The Battle of Walmarté’
  • Can’t beat the classics
  • Happy Judgement Day
  • Slumber Party
  • A Brief Disagreement

RSS Steve Lendman Blog

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RSS Stop the War Coalition

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RSS Submedia TV – Molotov!

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RSS Subrealism

  • Chipocalypse Now - I Love The Smell Of Deportations In The Morning
  • No Donut Or Coffee Breaks Required...,
  • Is This Why The Little Dogs Have Been Yapping And Snarling At The Russian Bear?
  • USS Harvey Milk To Be Renamed 'USS No Homo'
  • Lil Buckwheat Can't Get A Job But Still Gotta Eat....,
  • Negroe Fatigue
  • Our private research universities are not actually purely private...,
  • The Hidden Holocausts At Hanslope Park
  • Is RFK Jr Being Blackmailed?
  • Are American Elites Terrified Of Whitney Webb?

RSS Subversify Magazine

  • Hillbilly Elegy: An Uncomfortable Glimpse Into the Mindsent of Young Republicans
  • Andy Kaufman and Paul Reubens: Welcome to the Playhouse
  • Georgia Tann: America’s Most Notorious Child Trafficker
  • Comedy as Moral Allegory: Modern Literature’s Subtle Lessons
  • 10 Books Considered Ahead of Their Time

RSS Summit County Community Voice

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RSS Sun Weber

  • “Pity the nation"
  • A Requiem for the Beautiful Earth
  • On Our Way
  • Earth Gifts 2
  • Earth Gifts 1
  • An American Child's Future.
  • Green Irony
  • NARCISSUS from me me to ennui
  • Survivalists, The Optimistic Minority
  • A Rock, A Tree, A Cloud

RSS Survival Acres

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RSS Surviving Capitalism

  • Recommended Websites/weblogs & Sources of Information and Analysis (updated at least once a month to include current changes. Grand Thesis, which formulates my political philosophy, is below this post.)
  • Recommended Websites/weblogs & Sources of Information and Analysis (updated at least once a month to include current changes. Grand Thesis, which formulates my political philosophy, is below this post.)
  • Grand Thesis: Socialism is not only necessary, it is a matter of survival of the human species and other species (This is an essay in its final edited form except for needed improvements.)
  • Recommended post of the year: President Putin at the Valdai Discussion Club: “He Who Sows the Wind Will Reap the Whirlwind”
  • Recommended article: War on ‘Russian Disinformation’ is the New ‘War on Terror’ and Equally Fake with Ben Norton
  • A recommended article of the year: "Germany’s Energy Suicide: An Autopsy" by Pepe Escobar
  • Article of the month of September 2022: Breaking! NY Times: "US Created COVID-19"
  • Video of the month: "Is the Ukrainian War on its Own People Now Over?"
  • A message to my readers
  • Article of the year: "How Spooks and Establishment Journalists Are Circling The Wagons"

RSS Talking Points Memo

  • Trump Targets Seize on Abrego Garcia’s Vindictive Prosecution Win
  • Far-Right Candidate Who Wants to Deport 100 Million People Wins GOP Runoff for Texas Oil Regulator
  • Armed With Trump’s Last Minute Endorsement, Paxton Defeats Cornyn in Texas GOP Runoff Primary
  • In Defiance of Trump, South Carolina Senate Kills Pre-2026 Redistricting Push
  • If SCOTUS Invokes Purcell Principle to Let Alabama Use Discriminatory Map, It’ll Be the Most Egregious Abuse We’ve Seen Yet
  • Rock-em, Sock-em Redistricting Continues
  • Saving the Country Game, You Can Play at Home
  • In Three Months, Trump’s Cabinet Has Lost Four Women
  • Trump Races to Bury Jan. 6 Under More Lies and $1.776 Billion
  • Alabama Blocked from Using Map ‘Tainted By Intentional Race-Based Discrimination’

RSS The Agonist Blog

  • Rétention client : le secret des entreprises qui durent sans publicité
  • L’art de l’Optimisation : transformez votre site web en machine à convertir
  • Comment l’Automatisation m’a fait gagner 15 heures par semaine
  • Réforme de la facturation : comment s’adapter ?
  • Cbd pour buralistes : s’approvisionner auprès du meilleur grossiste
  • Le guide complet pour l’achat de cbd en ligne : conseils, tendances et nouvelles réglementations
  • Pourquoi la Productivité toxique freine votre réelle progression
  • Dirvox nouvelle adresse bloquée : streaming, légalité, risques et blocages ARCOM
  • Comment pratiquer la réflexologie plantaire en France ?
  • 5 stratégies méconnues de Monétisation pour générer des revenus passifs

RSS The Angry Arab

  • Migrated to Twitter
  • Will US global hegemony last for another century?
  • Eulogy of Dar As-Sayyad
  • My interview from yesterday on the latest about the Khashoggi matter
  • US Secret Wars against Communism
  • The New Congress and Palestine
  • Why the US-Saudi Crisis will Pass
  • The Khashoggi Affair
  • jets over Ridyah
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RSS The Archdruid Report

  • This blog is now closed...

RSS The Art of Annihilation

  • It’s a Family Affair – Venezuela’s Second Largest Newspaper Serves U.S. Empire
  • Support for Canadian Truckers Skyrockets – Alongside Vaccine Injuries in Canadian Children
  • The Great Reset: The Final Assault on the Living Planet [It’s Not a Social Dilemma – It’s the Calculated Destruction of the Social, Part III]
  • It’s Not a Social Dilemma – It’s the Calculated Destruction of the Social [The Enclosure of Africa, Part II]
  • It’s Not a Social Dilemma – It’s the Calculated Destruction of the Social [Part I]
  • COMMENTS on ‘Green’ billionaires behind professional activist network that led suppression of ‘Planet of the Humans’ documentary
  • The Clairvoyant Ruling Class [“Scenarios for the Future of Technology & International Development” 2010 Report]
  • COVID-19 as a Weapon. The Crushing of the Disposable Working Class – by Design
  • The Show Must Go On. Event 201: The 2019 Fictional Pandemic Exercise [World Economic Forum, Gates Foundation et al.]
  • Mandatory Masks in the Age of Climate Emergency & Planetary Biodiversity Crisis

RSS THE AUTOMATIC EARTH

  • Debt Rattle May 27 2026
  • Debt Rattle May 26 2026
  • Debt Rattle May 25 2026
  • Debt Rattle May 24 2026
  • Debt Rattle May 23 2026
  • Debt Rattle May 22 2026
  • Debt Rattle May 21 2026
  • Debt Rattle May 20 2026
  • Debt Rattle May 19 2026
  • Debt Rattle May 18 2026

RSS The Big Picture

  • 10 Wednesday AM Reads
  • 10 Tuesday AM Reads
  • Transcript: Vimal Kapur, Chairman and CEO of Honeywell
  • 10 Memorial Day Reads
  • Steve Carell, Northwestern Class of 2025 Commencement
  • 10 Sunday Reads
  • MiB: Vimal Kapur, Chairman and CEO of Honeywell
  • 10 Weekend Reads
  • At the Money: Blurring the Lines Between Public & Private Investments
  • 10 Friday AM Reads

RSS The Bureau of Investigative Journalism

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RSS The Conflicted Doomer

  • No Blog Post Today
  • Get Ready
  • Sick and Tired
  • The Year the Nose Fell Off
  • No Blog Post Today
  • Friendships
  • The Right to Be Stupid
  • Lies
  • Whole Lot of Whistling Going On
  • Being Thankful

RSS The Conversation: Energy + Environment

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RSS The Cost of Energy

  • Elevatorul auto, unul dintre cele mai importante instrumente dintr-un service
  • Avantaje si dezavantaje pentru iPhone 7
  • Cele Mai Bune Jucarii pentru Pisici
  • Cel Mai Bun Compresor Auto
  • Cel Mai Bun Pavilion de Gradina
  • Cel Mai Bun GPS pentru TIR
  • Cea Mai Buna Piscina Gonflabila
  • Cea Mai Buna Telecomanda Universala
  • Cele Mai Bune Manusi de Portar
  • Cele Mai Bune Genunchiere

RSS The Daily Banter

  • Interview With A Men’s Rights Activist And Child Porn Advocate
  • MAJOR UPDATE: The Daily Banter Is Closing Down And Moving Exclusively To Email
  • Interview With A Men’s Rights Activist And Child Porn Advocate
  • Watch Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Rips Apart Dark Money In Politics In 5 Astonishing Minutes
  • Eddie Haskell’s State Of The Union Was An Infuriating Study In Gaslighting
  • Let Them Eat Fake
  • Trump Described By U.S. Intelligence Officials As Willfully Ignorant
  • We Now Have Proof Trump’s Family Separation Policy Was Meant To “Traumatize” Children
  • Are Steve Schmidt And Howard Schultz Helping Trump Get Re-elected? Maybe, Maybe Not.
  • Kellyanne Conway: Cory Booker ‘Sexist’ Because He Is Running For President

RSS The Daily Impact

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RSS The Dark Mountain Project

  • The Sister-Sows
  • Boundary? What Boundary?
  • Two Poems from the Bestiary
  • Birubi
  • Five Salmon Dancing
  • Introducing Dark Mountain: Issue 29
  • Plant People
  • Of Hidden Futures and Star-Shaped Worlds
  • January Archive Offer
  • Sea Beet, Sugar Beet

RSS The Disaffected Lib

  • The Sorcerer's Apprentice - Still Looking for the Magic Wand.
  • Raising the Bar or Catch-Up Ball
  • Living In an Anti-Vax World
  • Junk Has Got to Go. In a World Short of Resources, the Case for a Steady State Economy Returns.
  • Our Ghastly Future
  • An Inauspicious Day, March 11
  • A Trip Down Memory Lane
  • McConnell Tells Trump to "Back Off"
  • A Sea of Bodies
  • Wishful Thinking?

RSS The Dissenter

  • David vs. Goliath: Consumer Watchdog Gets Their Day in Court With Googl
  • What I Care About Is the Social Safety Net
  • Obama Meets With Labor, Progressive Groups Today
  • What the Marijuana Legalization Polling in 2012 Says About Its Prospects Moving Forward
  • Petraeus Affair Shows Dominant Power of Government Surveillance State
  • Pelosi to Speak to House Democrats Amid Rumors That She Will Step Down From Leadership
  • United Parcel Service to Boy Scouts of America – no funds for your anti-gay org
  • For the Long-Term Unemployed, It Is A Fiscal Cliff
  • Love In The House Of Spy
  • Fatster’s Roundup

RSS The Duck of Minerva

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RSS The Ecologist

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RSS The Ecosocialist

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RSS The End of Capitalism

  • We live in the 20s
  • Marx and Colonialism – Zombie-Marxism Part 3.2 – What Marx Got Wrong
  • How Capitalism Causes Depression
  • The Paradoxical Viewpoint
  • How Anti-Capitalists Can Seize the Moment as Trump Enters the White House
  • Response to Reader’s Questions
  • Obscuring The Promise of Democracy: Mass Media Reacts to the 1960s
  • How Does Capitalism Make You Feel?

RSS The Energy Skeptic

  • Underestimating the Challenges of Avoiding a Ghastly Future
  • Motherboards: too complicated to make after oil
  • “More and More and More” one of the best books on energy ever written
  • The staggering destruction of knowledge by Christians in the Roman Empire
  • The staggering cost of Net Zero in Britain
  • Why the R/P Reserves to Production ratio does not show when oil will run out
  • Catton on Collapse “Bottleneck: Humanity’s Impending Impasse”
  • Book Review of Grain Brain: Extraordinary claim not backed up by evidence
  • Why did everyone stop talking about Population & Immigration?
  • What would happen if trucks stopped running?

RSS The Equation (Union of Concerned Scientists)

  • A Not So Happy Anniversary: A Year of Deceptive Science “Standards”
  • President Trump Abandoned Environmental Justice Communities. Scientists Can Fill the Void.
  • The Trump Administration Threatens NOAA—Again—as Extreme Weather Looms
  • Trump Administration Will Ignore Civil Rights Violations in the Workplace
  • Keep It Running or Shut It Down? The Diablo Canyon Debate
  • The BUILD America 250 Act Proposes More Roads, Less Transit and Rail
  • Science and Immigration Are Interconnected: On Higher Education, ICE, and the Assault on DEI
  • The Scientific Integrity Act Just Got Its Biggest Boost in Seven Years
  • The Coast in Dispute: Climate, Development, and Dispossession in Puerto Rico
  • La costa en disputa: Cambio climático, desarrollo y despojo en Puerto Rico

RSS The Exile Nation Project

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RSS The Exiled Online

  • Baldfellas: How Belarus’s Failed Regime-Change Movement Shaped Putin’s War Plan
  • The War Nerd: NATO, A Memoir
  • The War Nerd: Was There A Plan In Afghanistan?
  • The War Nerd: Taiwan — The Thucydides Trapper Who Cried Woof
  • The War Nerd: Gray Wolves — The Fascists Nobody Wants To Talk About

RSS The Fall of Civilization

  • Join the LiveJournal Revival!
  • Woo-hoo!
  • The Recession has Restarted
  • 10 to 15 years
  • Untitled
  • NASA-sponsored HANDY model tells us what we already knew.
  • A big pile of crap.
  • If not one hell, then the other.
  • In the End, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.
  • Peak Food

RSS The Global MuckRaker

  • Amid a scam crackdown, crypto giants keep fueling bitcoin ATMs
  • WATCH: Inside the Cancer Calculus investigation — a live Q&A
  • Intelligence official Amaryllis Fox Kennedy, a Gabbard ally, leaves two jobs
  • Crypto ATM operator Bitcoin Depot files for bankruptcy
  • Alleged cryptocurrency Ponzi scheme ‘goddess’ extradited from Thailand to face conspiracy charges in US
  • Trump administration curbs state oversight of crypto industry
  • Following the paper trail to Guatemala to uncover what records can’t reveal about access to Keytruda
  • Tunisian authorities threaten to dissolve the parent company of ICIJ partner Inkyfada
  • US bars executives of Costa Rica’s leading newspaper La Nación from entry
  • Arizona gun shop owner faces terrorism-related charges for allegedly selling high-caliber weapons bound for Mexican cartels

RSS The Great Change

  • Hanta Me, Baby
  • Mars or Bust
  • The Woman Who Knew What Dirt Was
  • When the House Loses
  • What the Cyanobacteria Said
  • Move Fast and Glow Things
  • The Godfatter, Part 2
  • $6 Million, 19 Minutes, and the Bear in the Berry Bush
  • 12 Amendments to Meet the Moment
  • The Keys to the King Dumb

RSS The Guardian – Environment

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RSS The HipCrime Vocab

  • New Location
  • New Site Up.
  • Automation and The Future of Work: Black Lives Matter - part 2
  • Automation and The Future of Work: Black Lives Matter
  • Against Techno-Fetishism
  • Corn-Pone Hitler?
  • The Other Dieoffs
  • The Dying Americans
  • The Hipcrime Vocab on JRE
  • Oil and Money - Lessons Learned

RSS The Institute for Anarchist Studies

  • Applications Now Closed for the 2025-2026 Grant Cycle
  • Announcing the 2026 Grant Cycle – Applications Now Open!
  • Encampments Paved the Way for Jewish Liberation by Naomi Bennet
  • 10 Movies for Anarchists (and the Anarcho-Curious) By Tate Williams
  • CONTROL: Call for Perspectives’ Submissions: 2026 Deadline Extended to February 16th!
  • Announcing the 2025 IAS Anarchist Horizons Grantees
  • Applications Now Closed for the 2024-2025 Grant Cycle
  • Announcing Our 2024-2025 Grant Cycle – Applications Now Open!
  • New IAS Lexicon Pamphlet: Democracy Beyond The State
  • Announcing the 2024 IAS Anarchist Horizons Grantees

RSS The Monkey Trap

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RSS The New Left Review

  • Alexander Zevin: Trump’s Gulf War
  • Nathan Sperber: Beyond Neoliberalism?
  • Nancy Fraser: Gaza as World Event
  • Richard Overy: Rethinking The Second World War
  • Loic Wacquant: Against Abolitionism
  • Marcus Verhagen: The Art of Counter-Remembrance
  • Sebastian Veg: Three Vistas of Hong Kong
  • Thomas Meaney: Western Promises

RSS The Oil Drum

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RSS The Onion (Satire)

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RSS The Physics arXiv Blog

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RSS The Political Circus

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RSS The Principle of Imminent Collapse

  • Emergent Characteristics and Behaviors
  • Flash Flooding and The PIC
  • Photo of the Day - Feb 12, 2024
  • Lunar New Year Year of the Dragon
  • My MERCHR shop of ClickaSnap Images
  • ClickASnap has partnered with Merchr Hub for Print on Demand
  • The PIC in Everyday Situations
  • Dear Readers of the PIC
  • The AI Revolution Will Be What We Make It
  • Hop on Over to My New Blog

RSS The Rag Blog

  • ALICE EMBREE / MAY DAY! MAY DAY!
  • ALICE EMBREE / HISTORY / Where on earth was The Rag?
  • JAN LANCE / RETIREES / Senior Solidarity
  • MICHAEL MEEROPOL / FOREIGN POLICY / Trump’s War of Choice
  • LAMAR HANKINS / FARMWORKERS / Another civil rights icon who had feet of clay
  • ALICE EMBREE / REVIEW / Reading C. Wright Mills in the Age of Trump
  • LAMAR HANKINS / RELIGION / Make America’s public school children bible-readers again
  • JONAH RASKIN / BOOK REVIEW / Dangerous, Dirty, Violent, and Young: A Fugitive Family in the Revolutionary Underground
  • ROXANN WEDEGARTNER / BOOK REVIEW / From the Octagon: People, Places, News, Views by Allen Young.
  • DAVE ZIRIN / CULTURE / Bad Bunny Steals the Show

RSS The Raw Story

  • Pam Bondi diagnosed with thyroid cancer following her removal from the DOJ
  • Trump could be liable for 'creative crimes' due to his IRS deal: law professor
  • Medical expert pinpoints overlooked omission in Trump's lab results: 'A heart issue?'
  • CBS boots '60 Minutes' reporter who refused to sanitize deportation story: reports
  • FBI staffers are keeping their heads down after latest 'crushing blow to morale': MS NOW
  • 'Consumers should be prepared': Food costs expected to soar just as voters head to polls
  • Former Republican strategist claims Trump's health is hitting an all-time low
  • Trump's latest bet is 'poor decision' that may unravel GOP's Senate majority: analyst
  • 45,000 ballots thrown out and a governor who calls it 'not a big deal'
  • GOP busted scrubbing attacks on 'disgusting' MAGA candidate after his primary victory

RSS The Satanic Capitalist

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RSS The Siberian Times: Ecology

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RSS The Skeptical Humorist

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RSS The Schuster Institute for Investigative Journalism

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The Smirking Chimp

  • Trump’s Latest Move To Restrict Voting Rights
  • The Religious Right’s Most Disturbing Trump Fantasy Just Keeps Getting Bigger
  • The Logic of Taxing Great Wealth
  • America’s Deadliest Con: How Racism Keeps Millions Sick While Helping Healthcare Billionaires Cash In
  • Labor Unions Celebrate World Court’s Ruling That Enshrines the Right to Strike
  • Trump’s New Green Card Application Policy Is Unlawful, Immoral, and Xenophobic
  • In California, Vote Against the Forces Destroying Democracy
  • Why Howard Bryant’s Kings and Pawns: Jackie Robinson and Paul Robeson Matters Right Now
  • Ontological shlock and Awe: The Empire Falls Down On Last Year's Man
  • Full-Frontal Neofascism

RSS The Sociological Cinema

  • Don't Be Racist!
  • Don't Be a Racist!
  • How One Sociologist is Using Fiction to Address Trauma, Healing, and Interpersonal Relationships: An Interview with Dr. Patricia Leavy
  • No going back to normal--the left must seize the moment and dominate the crisis
  • An Open Letter: What Is the End-goal of Sociology?
  • ​Film: A Case of Literary Sociology
  • Tracking the Model Minority Trope in Hollywood Film
  • Sociologist’s New Novel Teaches Research Methods and Critical Thinking
  • Racism, Can You Talk About It? An Infographic Assignment
  • An Interview with Dr. Patricia Leavy about the Handbook of Arts-Based Research

RSS The Solari Blog Report

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RSS The Thin Red Line

  • Cuba was saved from a brutal, destabilizing despotism
  • Impediments to Peace in Syria
  • Microchip your Pets!
  • The Federal Reserve: A quintessentially capitalist institution
  • Guilty of everything: How America scapegoats a public dissident
  • The right to suppress human rights: 2 case studies
  • Thoughts on the Shuttering of Al Jazeera America
  • My house for a kingdom: Israel resists Palestinian concessions
  • Human life is too important to let police take it with impunity
  • Palestinians Demand huge Concessions - Survival, Rights & Non-destroyed Infrastructure

RSS The Tree

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RSS The Usual Mix

  • Što se MUP-u mota po glavi zadnjih 50+ godina?
  • “Nekultura” hrvatskih “biciklista”
  • Zagrebačke Mickey Mouse biciklističke staze, 2841. nastavak: 3. generacija loših rubnjaka
  • Trijumf “zdravog razuma”
  • Otvoreno pismo B.net-u/A1
  • Biciklom po svijetu: pokret!
  • Biciklom po svijetu: dalmatinsko zaleđe
  • Aktivistička posla: Upravni sud srušio Studiju utjecaja na okoliš za golf na Srđu
  • Kratka povijest hrvatskih šefova države
  • Reforma kurikuluma

RSS The Yes Men

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RSS The Yes Men Blog

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The Young Turks

  • Republicans Have A School Shooting Conspiracy Theory
  • The Young Turks LIVE! 2.20.18
  • How To Get Featured On TYT
  • White People Claiming To Be Attacked At Black Panther
  • Your Boss Might Be Stealing From You But There's Nothing You Can Do About It
  • Cancer Drug Price Raised 1400%
  • WORST National Anthem Performance EVER
  • Conservatives Attacking School Shooting Survivors Online
  • Democratic Focus Group Has Some Bad News...
  • Top REPUBLICAN Donor: No More Money Until AR-15 Ban

RSS This is Ecocide

  • Fausto Pocar
  • Robert Bray
  • Untitled
  • Ocean for Ecocide Law: coming together to legally protect the ocean
  • Agriculture and a liveable planet: the transformative role of ecocide law
  • Davos 2023: the transformative power of ecocide law
  • Accelerating strategic positive change: the business case for ecocide law
  • Recognizing ecocide: a legal framework to protect nature, communities and our common future
  • Global crisis and the potential of the ICC: relevance of ecocide as the fifth crime
  • Powerful and practical legal tools in pursuit of climate justice

RSS Thom Hartmann

  • Sue's Stack is moving
  • Monday 06 March '23 show notes
  • Friday 03 March '23 show notes
  • Thursday 02 March '23 show notes
  • Wednesday 01 March '23 show notes
  • Tuesday 28 February '23 show notes
  • Monday 27 February '23 show notes
  • Friday 24 February '23 show notes
  • Thursday 23 February '23 show notes
  • Wednesday 22 February '23 show notes

RSS Thomas Riggins’ Blog

  • TRUMP/PUTIN APPROVAL RATINGS
  • Untitled
  • China's Road to Socialism
  • New German Left Party
  • China's World View via the NYT
  • Ukraine Update
  • BIDEN VS TRUMP
  • NATO's Proxy War
  • More New York Times Anti-China Propaganda
  • Will the real Zizek stand up

RSS Thoughts On The Roof

  • Punctuated Evolution
  • The AMOC
  • Chris Hayes and Bill McKibbin
  • Arctic - Antarctic tipping point
  • Iran's nuclear ambitions
  • Democracy
  • Ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny
  • An open letter to Kamala
  • The call for an end of the war and for a two state solution
  • Sorting out the American System of government

RSS Three E’s

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RSS Tom Toles

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RSS Too Much Online

  • In France, Echoes of a Daring FDR
  • A Flying Public Finally Erupts
  • The Railroad Robber Baron Returns
  • The Charities Making Inequality Worse
  • Has America Become Too Generous?
  • Policing in America’s Plutocracy
  • A New Rationalization for Riches
  • Standing Up for ‘Bullied’ CEOs
  • By the Numbers
  • What Makes a Recession ‘Great’?

RSS Top of the Ticket

  • Letters to the Editor: Our housing market is creating 'the Manhattanization of Los Angeles'
  • Letters to the Editor: Exclusionary admissions in med schools will only hurt our communities
  • Letters to the Editor: In the face of another chemical crisis, we need prevention, not apologies
  • Letters to the Editor: Trump campaigned on peace and 'no new wars.' That's not what this looks like
  • Letters to the Editor: Hoping for Trump to pull off a victory in Iran is simply magical thinking
  • Contributor: Almost-forgotten atrocity in Vietnam War holds lessons for the Trump era
  • Contributor: The case for a silent commute
  • Column: The Democratic Party 'autopsy' somehow disappointed everyone
  • Contributor: What the marriage and family nostalgia is really about
  • Letters to the Editor: Before banning screens in early education, consider a more focused approach

RSS Transition Voice

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RSS Transparency International News Feed

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RSS Treasure Islands

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RSS Tree Hugger

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RSS Triple Crisis

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RSS TRNN: Audio Feed

  • UK Local Elections: Labour Moves Forward
  • 200th Anniversary of the Birth of Marx and a Revolution in Understanding History
  • Ohio Governor's Race: Kucinich Attacks Cordray's 'Left' Credentials
  • Activists Discuss How Public Officials Thwart Accountability for Sexual Harassment
  • French Unions & Students Mobilize Against Reforms: Another May '68?
  • US Gov. and Media Whitewash 'Reformer' Saudi Prince MBS as He Beheads Dissidents
  • Natalie Portman's Boycott of Netanyahu Prompts Attack by Billionaire-Backed Right-Wing Rabbi Shmuley Boteach
  • UK's 'Windrush Scandal' Shines Light on Who is an 'Illegal' Immigrant
  • 'Poison Papers': US and Canadian Regulators Colluded with Manufacturers of Highly Toxic Substances
  • Police Crack Down on Puerto Rico May Day March Against Austerity

RSS TRNN: News Feed

  • UK Local Elections: Labour Moves Forward
  • Netanyahu's Long History of Crying Wolf over Fake 'WMDs' in Iran and Iraq
  • Laura Flanders Show: Taking Down the Confederacy - Symbol by Symbol
  • 200th Anniversary of the Birth of Marx and a Revolution in Understanding History
  • US Interventions in Latin America Continue and Intensify
  • Ohio Governor's Race: Kucinich Attacks Cordray's 'Left' Credentials
  • Sixth Consecutive Week of Friday Gaza Protests Leaves Over 160 Wounded
  • Economic Update: The Contributions of Karl Marx (Pt 1/4)
  • Hopkins Students Fight Against 'School to War Pipeline'
  • Activists Discuss How Public Officials Thwart Accountability for Sexual Harassment

RSS Truth-Out

  • Eid al-Adha in Gaza Isn’t Like It Was Before the Genocide. We Celebrate Anyway.
  • Vermont Becomes First State to Ban Pesticide Linked to Parkinson’s Disease
  • Maine Removes Trans Sports and Bathroom Ban From November Ballot
  • Trump White House Advances Plan Requiring Federal Workers to Sign NDAs
  • Israel Expands Strikes and Ground Invasion in Lebanon as Iran Negotiations Stall
  • Congressional Black Caucus Demands Corporations Oppose Voting Rights Rollbacks
  • Increased Tax Refunds Have Been Eaten Up by Iran War Price Spikes, Experts Say
  • Residents of Polluted Areas Say Trump’s Rollbacks Are “Getting Really Scary”
  • Protests Erupt at New Jersey Immigrant Jail in Support of Striking Detainees
  • Federal Judges Block Alabama From Using Racially Gerrymandered Congressional Map

RSS Undercurrents Alternative News

  • 'Ethical loneliness’- Sheffield Documentary Festival
  • Sol Cinema gives Wales the Royal Treatment
  • Free radical counter culture videos to good home
  • Majority of Government press meetings are with right wingers
  • Watch LIVE reports from COP climate talks & resistance in Glasgow
  • Court rules undercover policing operation against protest movements were 'unlawful and sexist'
  • Exploding Cinema- video art in the 1990s- new book out
  • Crane protest in support of Palestine at Vauxhall, London
  • Rich man V skateboarders of Mumbles (beep beep)
  • Solar powered Cinema accepts first cryptocurrency payment

RSS Underminers Blog

  • Underminers in German
  • Pulped
  • Autumn Migration
  • After Seasonturn : The Author as Underminer
  • The Conorol Trilogy
  • Guest Essays – At Last A Page
  • Looking for an Agent
  • The Network is No More
  • 10k and Running
  • A Fictional Start

RSS Uploads by Vsauce2

  • Giant Robot, Electronic Skin and more -- Mind Blow #117
  • Robot Muscle, Plant Tattoos and more -- Mind Blow #116
  • Skywalker Hand, Planet Discovery and more -- Mind Blow #115
  • I Eat Brains And Explain Zombies
  • Laser Mapping, Floating Island and more -- Mind Blow #114
  • Dunbar's Number (Friend Limit)
  • One-Touch Healing Device -- Mind Blow #113
  • Eclipse At Sea
  • The Invention Of Blue
  • Scapegoats

RSS Urbanomics

  • The missing link in India's FAR market - a trading platform
  • Applying land value capture to public investments
  • Weekend reading links
  • Some thoughts on sustaining high growth rates in India
  • Update on the AI spending boom
  • The limits to reform as an accounting of activities
  • Weekend reading links
  • The myth of ring-fenced "private" markets
  • Industrial policy is back, but the implementation challenge remains
  • Weekend reading links

RSS Versobooks.com

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RSS Veterans Today

  • Who Set Up The Hit?
  • Might The Polls Be Wrong?
  • Why Is the African Dish, Shakshuka So Popular In Israel?
  • Exploring Winning Betting Strategies In Blackjack
  • How to Identify GI Bill Fraud
  • Rumsfeld Shady Heritage in Pandemic: GILEAD’s Intrigues with WHO & Wuhan Lab. Bio-Weapons’ Tests with CIA & Pentagon
  • Age Old Battle Between Khazarian Mafia and True Christianity Crashing Into Finality
  • Shipping to Poland from the US: Navigating Customs Clearance
  • Braving the Storm and Tackling Addiction in the Ranks of US Veterans
  • Navigating the Transition from Battlefield to Civilian Life for Our Homefront Heroes

RSS Vice

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RSS Vimeo Video Picks

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RSS Volatility

  • The Final Addiction
  • Where it Comes From and Where it Goes
  • Ordeal
  • The Intact Against the Cult (with notes on public protest)
  • Come Home
  • Springtime
  • Desert City
  • Make A Desert to Prepare the Way for the Beast
  • Why Reject the Good News?
  • Miasma Now

RSS Waging NonViolence

  • An ethically honest Memorial Day
  • The quiet resistance of working-class women in Egypt
  • The “Hitler question” should never justify war
  • Automatic draft registration undoes a victory decades in the making
  • From ICE to Iran, veterans are challenging US militarism 
  • A call for bold action from the Gaza flotilla
  • Mothers are the most underestimated force for change
  • The Global Sumud Flotilla is a mission of mercy, met with cruelty
  • May Day was even more important than you think
  • Why power analysis is key to fighting ICE

RSS Waldenswimmer

  • Paul Beckwith, thinking WAY outside the box
  • Saturday Morning Essay: "Pond Scum," a New Yorker article by Kathryn Schulz
  • Now Is the Winter of Our Discontent Made Glorious Summer
  • Over at Fielding's Place
  • Check in with Fielding Mellish over at the other place
  • Arctic Sea Ice and Weird Weather
  • A few notes from Mellish on 9-11 Truther
  • A Reply from Professor Oscar Pemantle
  • Over at Fielding Mellish Observations
  • Politically Incorrect observations at Fielding's Place

RSS Wall of Controversy

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RSS War Criminals Watch

  • 4/7/25 Israeli Troops Blow Whistle on War Crimes in Gaza 'Kill Zone'
  • 3/29/25 The Real Outrage in Yemen
  • 3/9/25 Columbia University’s Nazi Tradition
  • 11/7/24 Don't Let Democrats Whitewash What They Did on Gaza Once Trump Is in Office
  • 10/7/24 1 The Human Toll: Indirect Deaths from War in Gaza and the West Bank, October 7, 2023 Forward
  • 10/07/24 United States Spending on Israel’s Military Operations and Related U.S. Operations in the Region, October 7, 2023 – September 30, 2024
  • 10/4/24 Inside the State Department’s Weapons Pipeline to Israel
  • 9/18/24 'The Genocide Gentry': Weapon Execs Sit on Boards of Universities, Institutions
  • 9/16/24 Biden Genocide Case: Legal Experts, Ex-Diplomats, Human and Civil Rights Groups Urge Court to Review Palestinians’ Claims That Biden Is Enabling Israel’s Genocide in Gaza
  • 9/1/24 UARCs: The American Universities that Produce Warfighters

RSS War in Context

  • Attention to the Unseen
  • The poison in Britain’s Labour Party
  • We have become enslaved by our impatience
  • A history of hype behind Cambridge Analytica
  • Facebook employees feel increasingly responsible for the world’s problems
  • The ancient hunt in which the tracker’s skill united reason and imagination
  • Novichok chemical attack near Porton Down fed catnip to conspiracy theorists
  • The depletion of the human microbiome and how it can be restored
  • Are we smart enough to know how smart animals are?
  • The immobilization of life on Earth

RSS War is a Crime

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RSS Washington’s Blog

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RSS Water is Life

  • Another World Water Day Gone
  • Humanitarian Disaster in the Sahara
  • We Are The Cure
  • The Future Is Now the Present
  • A Thank you
  • Making Rivers Come Alive...My Struggle To Live
  • Planning For An Island's Demise
  • Keep Talking...
  • NASA/Water In Space
  • Climate Change Drying Up One of World's Largest Lakes

RSS We Meant Well

  • School Violence and China
  • Why the Ben Franklin Fellowship at State?
  • Is Iran a Turning Point?
  • Whistleblowers, Leakers, and Spies
  • Can the U.S. Win the Iran War?
  • The One Absolute Non-Negotiable Item with Iran
  • Why Does Media Misrepresent the Iran War?
  • Senate Challenges State Department for Abandoning DEI Back Door Entrance Path
  • RIP Chuck Norris
  • U.S. Naval Escorts in the Persian Gulf: Lessons from the Tanker War

RSS Web of Debt

  • THE ABUNDANCE PARADIGM: WHY AI FORCES A RETHINKING OF MONEY ITSELF — PART 1
  • All Wars Are Bankers’ Wars: Iran and the Bankers’ Endgame
  • Regime Change at the Fed: From Big Bank Bailouts to Local Productivity
  • The Wealth Concentration Engine: Rethinking America’s Financial Plumbing
  • Compound Interest Is Devouring the Federal Budget: It’s Time to Take Back the Money Power
  • Why New York City Needs a Public Bank
  • How a Fed Overhaul Could Eliminate the Federal Debt Crisis, Part II: Curbing Fed Independence
  • How a Fed Overhaul Could Eliminate the Federal Debt Crisis, Part I: The Fed’s Hidden Drain
  • Unaudited Power: The Military Budget Nobody Controls
  • The GENIUS Act and the National Bank Acts of 1863-64: Taking a Cue from Lincoln

RSS What If?

  • Comet Ice
  • Star Ownership
  • Transatlantic Car Rental
  • Hailstones
  • Hot Banana

RSS Where’s Our Money

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RSS Whole Larder Love: Grow Gather Hunt Cook

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RSS Who What Why

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RSS Why Evolution Is True

  • Here are the tree frogs!
  • Rick Beato’s top 40 albums of all time: my take
  • Jesus ‘n’ Mo ‘n’ Hafiz
  • Readers’ wildlife photos
  • Spot the tree frogs!
  • Wednesday: Hili dialogue
  • Readers’ wildlife photos

RSS Wild Ancestors

  • Untitled
  • Wild Free & Happy Sample 65
  • Wild Free and Happy Sample 64
  • Wild Free and Happy Sample 63
  • Wild Free and Happy Sample 62
  • Wild Free and Happy Sample 61
  • Wild Free and Happy Sample 60
  • Wild New World
  • Wild Free and Happy sample 84: Wild Free Isolation
  • Wild Free and Happy sample 83 Update: Human Web

RSS William Bowles

  • The Vitality of Palestinian Freedom for Working-Class Unity
  • Alastair Crooke: Trump Orders EMERGENCY Meeting as Iran just WON — Israel LASHES OUT
  • How Israel and its agents hijacked British democracy
  • Iran DOWNS MQ-9 Reaper Drone, Forces F-35 to FLEE as US Attack FAILS (w/ SPECIAL GUEST)
  • Help expose the Brits fighting for Israel
  • Professor Marandi: US is paying enormous price’ for delay of ceasefire in Lebanon
  • Stopping contemporary fascism: What is to be done?
  • Iran states its objectives
  • Brian Berletic: The New Great Game – War Against Iran, Russia & China
  • Ukraine’s Secret Al Qaeda Invasion Of Africa

RSS Wired – Danger Room

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RSS Wolff Economics

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RSS Work of the Negative

  • Trump to Ukraine/Europe: Drop dead
  • Syrian revolution topples Assad: preliminary thoughts
  • Lead-editorial article: The U.S. election as manifestation of counterrevolution
  • The U.S. election as manifestation of counterrevolution
  • Review of Terminal Warfare
  • The perfect COP head is the oil honcho al-Jaber
  • Trumpist coup reveals fascist threat and Left’s philosophic void
  • The Trump administration’s fear of teenagers
  • No One Is Too Small to Make a Difference, by Greta Thunberg–book review
  • Climate strikes as resistance and revolutionary potential: the connection with Marcuse’s concept of the liberation of nature as determinant between socialism and fascism

RSS Wunderground: Dr. Jeff Masters

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RSS WWS

  • Mine disaster in China: Another tragedy in the global industrial slaughterhouse
  • Australia: NT laws to permit police interrogation of children without legal guardian
  • Measles outbreak in Bangladesh kills over 500 children
  • As New York transit workers prepare to fight MTA austerity, former union president Toussaint defends no-strike affidavit
  • Chemical tank disaster averted in Southern California; owner GKN Aerospace is major military contractor cited for safety violations
  • Cargill locks out Colorado beef plant, as struggles of meatpacking workers intensify
  • Enough is Enough: Catastrophe in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
  • Report reveals impact of Australian school crisis on principals
  • Worker killed, dozens of firefighters injured in Staten Island shipyard fire and explosion
  • Industrial slaughter in Washington: 1 dead, 9 missing after chemical tank implosion at paper mill

RSS Yale Environment 360

  • The U.S. Senator Who Won’t Shut Up about Climate Change
  • Warming Is Raising the Risk of Encounters With Venomous Snakes
  • Global Coal Generation Declines, Even as China, India Race to Build New Plants
  • A First Among Major Nations, India Is Industrializing With Solar
  • After Two Decades, E360’s Founder and Editor Is Moving On
  • How Gold Mining Fueled a Surge in Malaria in the Brazilian Amazon
  • The Best Environmental Photography of the Year
  • In Cuba, the U.S. Fuel Blockade Is Spurring On a Solar Boom
  • Restoring the Flow: A Milestone in the Revival of the Everglades
  • Warmer Waters Bring Great White Sharks to Southern California

RSS Yes Magazine

  • The World Is Burning—Does the YES! Approach Still Matter?
  • Beyond Criminality in the U.S. Immigration System
  • Lessons From the Māori and Japanese Peoples on Grieving Pregnancy Loss
  • Messages of Fierce Hope From the Global South
  • Boycotts Are Back: Queer Travelers Fight Bigotry With Their Wallets
  • Growing Up On the Migration Route
  • Recovering Lost Stories From Trans History
  • The Freedom to Choose Hysterectomy
  • St. Louis Says “Not Another Nickel” to Human Rights Violators
  • Voters Demand a Bolder and More Progressive Democratic Party

RSS Your Passport to Complaining

  • A New Peruvian Commune
  • Is Texas a Dummymander?
  • AI and the midterms – Bushwick Feb 15
  • Commie Clothes Fire
  • A new Paradox Collective
  • The Joys of Censorship
  • November is Mamdani Wins
  • Wearable Art and Creating the Sankofa Space
  • Many Conference Updates
  • Helping Out – Dumpster Dives and Build Camps

RSS Z Communications Economy Page

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RSS Zed Books

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RSS Zero Anthropology

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RSS Zoriah

  • New Exhibition Opening Today in Chicago
  • Children's Most Loved Toys
  • Paris Attacks
  • Happy Halloween From Paris - Père Lachaise Cemetery
  • Chernobyl Small Group Workshop - One Spot Left for December 2015

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