On this week’s episode of “On Contact,” the Truthdig columnist sits down with the economist to discuss the detrimental impacts of austerity programs following the 2008 financial crisis.
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By Bill Moyers / TomDispatch —
How would I help my fellow Americans recoup their sanity, come home to democracy, and help build the sort of moral compact embodied in the preamble to the Constitution, that declaration of America’s intent and identity?
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By Kieran Cooke / Climate News Network —
Wildfires used to hit California only in the latter part of the year, but changing climate and persistent drought mean they are now a constant threat.
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By Juan Cole / Informed Comment —
Hezbollah, the national guard for South Lebanon, announced Saturday that it supports the agreement on a truce in Syria, while, for its part, Iran said that the agreement, which it welcomed, needed a “monitoring instrument.”
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A harrowing new study sheds light on the extreme measures American children between the ages of 13 and 18 are taking in order to feed themselves and puts Bill Clinton’s welfare policies into question.
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By Desirae Hoover / AlterNet —
It won’t solve everything, but it can help a lot.
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What a difference 28 pages can make.
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By Jim Hightower / AlterNet —
The incitement of anti-immigrant prejudice for political gain is shameful, but it’s not new in our country.
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By Harvey Wasserman — The former EPA chief regrets misleading the public about the air quality after the New York terrorist attacks. Her apology leaves some doubting her sincerity.
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By Common Dreams Staff —
After fierce debate, disagreements and walkouts, the motion was adopted on the final day of the International Union for Conservation of Nature World Conservation Congress.
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By Michael Winship / Moyers & Company —
The renewed patriotism and commitment we felt 15 years ago has decayed, sullied by jingoism, xenophobia and paranoid fantasies about race and religion.
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Clinton’s doctor had diagnosed the Democratic presidential nominee with pneumonia on Friday, according to reports.
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“I need help. I am not getting any,” the incarcerated WikiLeaks whistleblower wrote in a statement released Friday as she began her protest against “bullying by prison and U.S. government.”
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By Bill Moyers / Moyers and Company —
In the wake of the awful attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, while many in New York were still attending memorial services for firefighters and police, while across the country Americans’ cheeks were still stained with tears, the corporate and Washington-based predators were already pursuing private plunder at public expense.
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By Jill Richardson / OtherWords —
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration just passed a regulation that will actually protect people, and may save you a few bucks and an unnecessary purchase.
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By Juan Cole / Informed Comment —
The Founding Fathers thought keeping a standing army was a danger to democracy. The great wars of the 20th century appear to have left the United States with a permanent standing army—a state of affairs only reinforced by the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
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By Medea Benjamin —
The Sept. 11, 2001, attacks were a direct outgrowth of the fundamentalist Wahhabist ideology that defines the oil-rich kingdom. For this reason alone, the Saudi regime should be held accountable.
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By Eric Ortiz — The NFL quarterback took a big personal risk with his national-anthem protest against injustice in the U.S. Now other athletes are joining him, as are countless other Americans who want to overturn the status quo. Their courage can make all the difference.
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By Juan Cole / Informed Comment —
Some officers in the U.S. military do not like the idea of coordinating with Russia, feeling that it has taken advantage of past cease-fires to advance its interests and those of Bashar Assad.
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This week gave Americans a sneak peek at the upcoming presidential debate, and Truthdig wants to know what you think is being left out of the political dialogue.
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