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  • Claustropolis: 1984

    “Claustropolis: 1984” is excerpted from a forthcoming novel. In Bhopal, I could lie low. In Bhopal, there would be instructions for me. Because I had been told not to take the express, I traveled on a local, in an unreserved bogie. The whiskey was Director’s Special, a parting gift from Gupta’s people. I didn’t even…

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  • by Domenico Losurdo and Gabriel Rockhill $32.00 – $89.00 Western Marxism: How It Was Born, How It Died, How It Can Be Reborn is a paradigm-shifting book that provides a trenchant critique of the Western left intelligentsia. It reveals how its dominant ideological orientation—characterized by defeatism, utopianism, and anti-communism—is rooted in the political economy of imperialism. Internationally acclaimed theorist Domenico Losurdo…


  • Originally published: Mondoweiss  on June 11, 2024 by Ahmed Omar (more by Mondoweiss)  |  (Posted Jun 13, 2024) Human Rights, Inequality, Strategy, WarAmericas, Gaza, Israel, Middle East, Palestine, United StatesNewswire‘Aid Pier’, genocide, President Joe Biden In March 2024, U.S. President Joe Biden announced in his State of the Union address that the U.S. would be building a temporary “floating pier” on the Gaza shoreline to…


  • The left chapter

    “The heart of the international Socialist never beats a retreat” — Debs speaks June 16, 1918 On June 16, 1918 the great US Socialist leader Eugene V,. gave his famous speech in opposition to World War I and in favour of peace and socialism in Canton, Ohio that lead to his imprisonment for sedition. Debs…


  • The War On Weeds

    Pesticides and herbicides made from fossil fuels that are freely available to unwitting consumers poison our land, our bodies and life all around. Sarah Mafféïs for Noema Magazine ESSAYCLIMATE CRISIS BY LAURA J. MARTINMAY 14, 2024 FacebookTwitterEmail Laura J. Martin is an associate professor of environmental studies and faculty affiliate in history at Williams College. Her…


  • BY MARIA POPOVA Sociologist and civil rights pioneer W.E.B. Du Bois (February 23, 1868–August 27, 1963) was the first African American person to receive a doctorate from Harvard — an achievement that both reflected and affirmed his faith in the life-changing power of education. So when his daughter Yolande — his only surviving child — was about…


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