THIS WEEK IN

Lee Hall on why we must end migrant warehousing.
Ben Terrall on the world after COVID.

PLUS MUCH MORE! FREE ACCESS UNTIL APRIL 2021.

The Judicial Persecution of Steven Donziger

For some, call them criminal justice ingenues, it may be hard to believe this is happening in the United States, that our famed judiciary has sunk this low. But in the U.S., a judge acts as prosecutor and jury on behalf of a giant oil company, Chevron, as it destroys the life and career of human rights lawyer Steven Donziger. His crime? Daring to win a judgment against Chevron in an Ecuadorian court. For those less enchanted with the U.S. justice system, this is no surprise. But there it is. This judicial travesty is occurring in New York state. And the Chevron friendly judges – first Lewis A. Kaplan and his hand-picked appointee judge Loretta Preska, and now the U.S. court of appeals for the second circuit in a March opinion – keep ruling for the company, as they cage Donziger with house arrest, 600 days so far and counting. More

A Great Tree Has Fallen: The Passing of Marshall Sahlins

The renowned American anthropologist Marshall Sahlins died on Monday. With his passing our world lost a brilliant mind, political activist, and cultural theorist. As a contributor and friend of CounterPunch his work will be missed by the readers here; as a towering anthropological theorist his work will continue to be read and argued over in More

Roaming Charges: Just a Shot Away

I spent a few days last week at the mouth of the Columbia River, talking with members of the Chinook tribal people, whose ties to these tidal flats, rivers and coastal rainforests date back at least five thousand years. Probably more. Unlike the Chinook people on the south side of the Columbia, the those on the north never signed a treaty with the US government. Never ceded away any of their land or their fishing rights and harvesting rights. So in 1954, the US government simply terminated them as a “tribe” and all of their legal rights under US law. More

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