Why should corporate spying be more tolerated than government spying?
Pete Dolack
We can have a sustainable future with production geared toward human need, or we can continue to produce for private profit until we find out the hard way that you can’t eat money
Lurking behind this devastating corporate offensive is the little matter of the extra $1.5 trillion to be added to the deficit.
It is nice to have stimulating fiction that works not only as a fine read, but allows us to think about the possibilities along the way
The Trump administration’s plans to rebuild infrastructure in the United States have been leaked, and it appears to be as bad as feared
You’ll work until you drop, but Wall Street will profit
This sort of class warfare rages on because only one class is waging it, and that class has the means to dominate society through a mass of institutions paid to do their bidding
More than four decades past the end of that imperialist adventure, having a serious discussion about it remains taboo.
One of the primary ongoing goals of the U.S. government for so-called “free trade” agreements, such as the Trans-Pacific Partnership, is to impose rules that would weaken the national health care systems of other countries