Author: Kenny Stancil

  • “The resulting humanitarian catastrophe from a full-scale war in Ukraine will lead to grave human suffering,” said one aid group.

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.

  • “When we have good jobs, our families and our communities thrive,” said a worker at Amazon’s warehouse in Bessemer, where a new union election is ongoing. “And it’s fantastic to know people on every corner have our backs.”

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.

  • “The price of Mark Zuckerberg’s failure to deal with his platforms’ pollution of the information ecosystem,” said one advocate, “is catastrophic damage to our physical ecosystem—including climate change, forced migration, drought, and famine.”

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.

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    This story originally appeared in Common Dreams on Feb. 22, 2022. It is shared here with permission under a Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0) license.

    The US fossil fuel industry is poised to benefit from an expected expansion of gas exports to Europe after German Chancellor Olaf Scholz on Tuesday suspended approval of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline in response to Russian military aggression toward Ukraine.

    Completed in September but awaiting certification by Germany and the European Union, the Nord Stream 2 pipeline, which bypasses Ukraine by running under the Baltic Sea, could double the flow of gas from Russia to Germany.

    “As Ukraine and Russia stand on the brink of a potentially lethal and bloody conflict, the American Petroleum Institute and its allies have been active on social media, arguing that now is a perfect time to expand LNG exports.”

    Op-Ed piece by Andy Rowell of Oil Change International

    While the $11 billion pipeline—owned by Nord Stream 2 AG, a subsidiary of Gazprom, the Russian majority state-owned energy company, with Western partners including the United Kingdom’s Shell, France’s Engie, and Germany’s Uniper—has been criticized on ecological and geopolitical grounds, Scholz had been reluctant to connect the permitting process to deescalation efforts in Ukraine, calling it a “private sector project.”

    Two weeks ago, Sludge journalist David Moore shed light on the potential reason for Scholz’s hesitancy to halt the Nord Stream 2 pipeline:

    With Russia massing its military presence along the border with Ukraine, the Kremlin could seek to weaken the international blowback by constricting gas supply delivered through pipelines in Ukraine. The result would be to ratchet up already near record-high costs for German businesses and households. Germany is projected to have enough gas in reserve for the cold months ahead and has been investing in renewable energy, and energy industry experts say it’s unlikely that Russia would entirely cut off the flow of gas because of the severe economic risks to its export markets. But Russian gas accounts for about a third of German supply and over 15% of its electricity generation, making up Europe’s largest gas source, so the pinch could be real.

    But after Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday formally recognized the independence of two separatist territories in eastern Ukraine and deployed troops to the Donbas region—a move that US President Joe Biden said last month would spell death for the Nord Stream 2 pipeline—Scholz took steps to shut down the project.

    “We have been in close consultations with Germany overnight and welcome their announcement,” White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki tweeted Tuesday. “We will be following up with our own measures today.”

    The Nord Stream 2 pipeline has been the subject of increased lobbying and fierce congressional debate on Capitol Hill, including last month’s failed attempt, led by Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX), to hit the project with sanctions.

    Now that Germany has officially pulled the plug on the Russian pipeline, US fossil fuel corporations—along with Cruz and other members of Congress who are heavily invested in oil and gas companies such as Houston-based Enterprise Products—stand to profit further from increased liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports to Europe, an ongoing trend that is likely to intensify amid the conflict in Ukraine.

    In an opinion piece published on Monday, Oil Change International’s Andy Rowell wrote that “there are always those who will want to profit from war or the threat of war, as unscrupulous as it may seem. And for the American oil and gas industry there is no exception.”

    “As Ukraine and Russia stand on the brink of a potentially lethal and bloody conflict, the American Petroleum Institute and its allies have been active on social media, arguing that now is a perfect time to expand LNG exports,” Rowell continued. “It is a flawed and short-sighted argument and one that will only cause more problems and chaos in the long term.”

    As Moore noted earlier this month, the US fossil fuel industry “rushed to link domestic gas exports with European security,” as seen in a recent blog post by an operative from the American Petroleum Institute—Big Oil’s most powerful lobbying group—and the Wall Street Journal‘s right-wing editorial page.

    Emphasizing that Russia and the US “have a decades-long history of competing over the European energy market,” Guy Laron, a senior lecturer in International Relations at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, argued two weeks ago that “the crisis plays right into the hands of American shale gas companies, which are reaping a windfall.”

    “American liquefied natural gas exports to Europe increased by 40% in the last quarter of 2021 and are expected to be much higher during the first quarter of 2022,” he added. “American energy executives have declared in recent weeks that they were eager to replace Russian pipeline gas with American liquefied gas.”

    Although US exports, Moore noted, “would not be enough to make up for the vast Russian supply, they would serve to develop trade channels for future shipments of fracked fossil gas to Germany.”

    Despite numerous scientific warnings about the need to block new fossil fuel projects to have a chance of avoiding the most catastrophic consequences of the climate crisis, extraction is on the rise in the US, which is projected to become the world’s top LNG exporter in 2022.

    Last decade’s drilling and fracking boom turned the Permian Basin into the “single most prolific oil and gas field” on the planet, and Congress’ decision to lift a ban on crude exports in late 2015 precipitated a massive build-out of pipelines and related infrastructure.

    “Well-connected American gas companies,” stressed Moore, “are poised to capitalize on the export boom.”

    Meanwhile, the US, UK, and EU have all vowed to impose economic sanctions against Russia, heightening fears that the Kremlin might retaliate by cutting off gas supply to Europe.

    In the wake of recent developments in Ukraine, oil prices surged to nearly $100 per barrel on Tuesday, the highest in more than seven years, and European gas futures spiked by as much as 13.8%.

    Dmitry Medvedev, Russia’s former president and now deputy chairman of its security council, suggested that prices could double: “Welcome to the brave new world where Europeans are very soon going to pay €2.000 for 1.000 cubic meters of natural gas!” he tweeted.

    According to Reuters, “Putin did pledge, however, that Russia would not interrupt any of its existing gas supplies.”

    Rowell, for his part, argued that “there may be a case for increasing short-term LNG exports to Europe, especially if the conflict between Russia and Ukraine intensifies, but you cannot do that long term if you want to solve the climate crisis or deescalate tensions in the region. Because a Europe addicted to gas will always be vulnerable.”

    “The only way to deescalate this crisis across Europe,” he added, “is to speed up the transition away from fossil fuels.”

    This post was originally published on The Real News Network.

  • The leader of UNEP said that governments must “invest more in fire risk reduction, work with local communities, and strengthen global commitment to fight climate change.”

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.

  • The U.S. senator from Vermont called for “serious sanctions on Putin and his oligarchs” in response to the Kremlin’s latest moves.

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.

  • “We expected this to happen after the court voted 8-1 to deny Trump’s request to block documents while they considered his petition for review,” said one watchdog group. “But it’s still good to see it happen.”

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.

  • “There are always those who will want to profit from war or the threat of war, as unscrupulous as it may seem,” said one critic. “And for the American oil and gas industry there is no exception.”

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.

  • Researchers say the state-level laws “should be reconsidered to prevent unnecessary violent deaths.”

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.

  • An amendment to Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” bill filed by Republican Rep. Joe Harding would require schools to out LGBTQ students even if educators believe doing so will result in “abuse, abandonment, or neglect.”

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.

  • Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez speaks during a news conference

    Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez on Thursday criticized New York City police officers for boasting about arresting a dozen people over stolen necessities, including diapers, baby formula, and medicine.

    In a Wednesday tweet that has since been deleted, the New York City Police Department (NYPD) wrote: “After receiving numerous larceny complaints in the Bronx, officers from the NYPD 44th Precinct recently arrested 12 individuals following an enforcement initiative targeting shoplifters. The arrests made led to the closure of 23 warrants and the recovery of $1,800 worth of merchandise.”

    The message was accompanied by an image of confiscated products, including baby formula, diapers, wipes, lotion, shampoo, soap, detergent, and over-the-counter medications.

    “When I talk about violent conditions, this is what I mean,” Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) said Thursday on social media. “But hey, it’s much easier to frame people who steal baby formula and medicine as monsters to be jailed than acknowledge our politics and economic priorities create conditions where people steal baby formula to survive.”

    The progressive champion connected the dots between the expiration of key pandemic relief programs and surging poverty — blasting right-wing lawmakers who helped undermine many people’s ability to afford basic necessities for refusing to take responsibility for their role in pushing some caretakers to steal to keep children fed, bathed, and clothed.

    “[The] Child Tax Credit expired [on] December 31 and it was many people’s lifeline to feed and clothe their kids,” said Ocasio-Cortez. “Politicians let it expire overnight with a shrug, but now want to feed into the sensationalism around crime acting like shoplifting has nothing to do with their actions. Wild.”

    As Common Dreams reported earlier Friday, child poverty spiked by 41% in the U.S. in January — the first month since July 2021 that eligible families didn’t receive the expanded CTC. Since all 50 Senate Republicans and corporate Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin (W.Va.) allowed the popular $300 monthly benefit to lapse, at least 3.7 million children have been plunged into poverty.

    Ocasio-Cortez was far from alone in rebuking the NYPD’s recent photo-op.

    “This is not public safety,” said Eliza Orlins, a former candidate for Manhattan district attorney. “This is cruelty on display.”

    According to Elizabeth Weill-Greenberg, a reporter at The Appeal, two of the people arrested for stealing basic necessities live in homeless shelters, one of whom is a 64-year-old woman.

    Alec Karakatsanis, founder and executive director of the Civil Rights Corps, contrasted the image of the NYPD bragging about seizing stolen diapers with an image of “Alabama cops celebrating a fun quilt they made from the signs of unhoused people begging for money,” and said they “reflect the budget priorities of the U.S. police bureaucracy.”

    In his first executive budget proposal, unveiled Wednesday, New York City Mayor Eric Adams, a former police captain, called for reducing the city’s workforce by 10,000 and slashing spending at most agencies by 3%, with no changes in NYPD funding.

    In an interview with The New Yorker earlier this week, Ocasio-Cortez said that “because we run away from substantive discussions about [the relationship between inequality, budgetary priorities, and crime], we don’t want to say some of the things that are obvious, like, Gee, the Child Tax Credit just ran out, on December 31, and now people are stealing baby formula.”

    “We don’t want to have that discussion,” she continued. “We want to say these people are criminals or we want to talk about ‘people who are violent,’ instead of ‘environments of violence,’ and what we’re doing to either contribute to that or dismantle that.”

    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • “If Texas can use a law to ban a woman’s right to chose and to put her health at risk, we will use that same law to save lives and improve the health and safety of the people in the state of California,” said Gov. Gavin Newsom.

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.

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    This story originally appeared in Common Dreams on Feb. 17, 2022. It is shared here with permission under a Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0) license.

    During a mandatory anti-union meeting on Wednesday, an Amazon official warned workers at the corporation’s biggest New York City warehouse that if they unionize, pay and conditions could become worse, with salary negotiations possibly starting at “minimum wage.”

    According to leaked audio obtained by Motherboard, the Amazon union-buster tells a captive audience that “the negotiation phase of the process is called collective bargaining, and in the negotiation, there are no guarantees… you can end up with better, the same, or worse than you already have.”

    The newly leaked audio suggests that the e-commerce giant is still failing to comply with federal labor law.

    After an employee asks the speaker to confirm what is meant by “we could end up with worse,” the so-called union avoidance consultant says:

    There are no guarantees as to what would happen, right?… We can’t make any promises things will get better or stay the same. They could get worse. We can’t promise what’s going to happen. Amazon can’t promise you that they’re going to walk into negotiations and that the negotiations will start from the same [pay and benefits workers have already]. They could start from minimum wage for instance. I don’t think that will happen, but it’s a possibility.

    “So you’re saying that Amazon’s gonna say…” the worker responds.

    “I just said I’m not saying that,” the Amazon union-buster fires back.

    “So why put that out there?” asks the worker.

    JFK8, a sprawling Amazon fulfillment center in Staten Island where roughly 9,000 workers toil away under brutal conditions, is currently in the midst of a union drive. Following months of organizing, the Amazon Labor Union (ALU) in January collected enough signatures to file for a union vote with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB).

    Wednesday’s anti-union meeting occurred on the same day Amazon and ALU “reached a tentative stipulated agreement for the terms of a union election that will be held at JFK8,” Motherboard reported. Citing a text message sent to all workers at the warehouse, the news outlet reported that the in-person election is scheduled for March 25 through March 30.

    ALU is led by Chris Smalls, a former employee at JFK8 who was fired after organizing a walkout to protest Amazon’s refusal to adequately protect workers during the early weeks of the COVID-19 pandemic. More than 100 workers at the Staten Island facility are organizers for the independent union, which was formed last year in the wake of Amazon’s defeat of the Retail, Wholesale, and Department Store Union (RWDSU) in an election at a warehouse in Bessemer, Alabama.

    RWDSU filed nearly two dozen complaints with the NLRB alleging that Amazon illegally threatened employees with loss of pay and benefits, installed and surveilled an unlawful ballot collection box, and expelled pro-union workers from captive audience meetings during which management argued against collective bargaining.

    Last month, the NLRB threw out the results of the Bessemer election—the first union vote at an Amazon warehouse in US history—and said that it would supervise a new election, which is ongoing. That announcement came three weeks after Amazon reached a settlement with the board regarding the cases of six workers who accused the corporation of union-busting.

    Under the settlement, Amazon agreed to communicate with workers about their right to organize and to lift its ban on workers being on Amazon property longer than 15 minutes before or after their shifts. But according to veteran labor journalist Steven Greenhouse, the newly leaked audio suggests that the e-commerce giant is still failing to comply with federal labor law.

    Under the National Labor Relations Act, it is illegal for employers to prevent, interfere with, or retaliate against employees’ unionization efforts.

    The Amazon union-buster “makes the threat and tries to walk it back but once you’ve poisoned the well you can’t take it back,” Frank Kearl, an attorney representing worker activists at JFK8, told Motherboard, referring to the consultant’s comment that wages might decline if workers unionize.

    “Even though she realized she made a mistake in making the threat, it doesn’t mean the threat wasn’t made and heard by all the workers who were forced to sit in on that session,” said Kearl. “It’s against the law and an unfair labor practice to make a threat of reprisal.”

    The Amazon official also apparently tried to dissuade workers from voting to unionize by focusing on the fact that “you will be liable to pay union dues or another representation fee. Everyone is liable to pay those union fees. You can’t opt out, and everyone will have to follow what’s negotiated even if you don’t like what’s in it.”

    “Electing a union is not like trying out a Netflix subscription for 30 days. It’s very difficult to unelect a union once you’ve elected them,” said the anti-union representative, who added that the election has “significant and binding consequences not just for yourselves but for future associates, your coworkers, and potentially for your family.”

    According to the Economic Policy Institute, workers covered by a union contract earn 10.2% more than non-unionized workers in the same sectors.

    Motherboard reported that “in addition to holding weekly mandatory anti-union meetings, Amazon representatives at JFK8 have pulled workers aside to interrogate them about their union activities, surveilled them, barred them from distributing union literature, confiscated literature, and referred to union organizers as ‘thugs,’ according to a federal complaint filed in late January.”

    Since it opened in September 2018, Amazon’s Staten Island warehouse has earned a reputation for violating workers’ rights. Workers at JFK8 have reported unsafe conditions amid intense pressure to meet quotas, and according to data from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, injury rates at the facility are much higher than the national average.

    ALU, for its part, has said that “we intend to fight for higher wages, job security, safer working conditions, more paid time off, better medical leave options, and longer breaks.”

    This post was originally published on The Real News Network.

  • “It’s much easier to frame people who steal baby formula and medicine as monsters to be jailed than acknowledge our politics and economic priorities create conditions where people steal baby formula to survive,” said the New York Democrat.

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.

  • Gerrymandered congressional districts come alongside a wave of GOP voter suppression laws.

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.

  • “An Amazon anti-union official evidently warns of illegal retaliation—Amazon might try to cut pay to the minimum wage—if workers vote in favor of unionizing,” one labor journalist remarked.

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.

  • “Allowing the war to continue is a choice—and so is ending it,” the special envoy for Yemen told the U.N. Security Council.

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.

  • Global outrage has continued to grow since the Biden administration stole Afghanistan’s foreign reserves with nearly 23 million Afghans facing acute hunger.

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.

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    This story originally appeared in Common Dreams on Feb. 15, 2022. It is shared here with permission under a Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0) license.

    As early voting continues in Texas’ primary election, pro-democracy advocates are sounding the alarm over the high rate at which mail-in ballots are being rejected as a result of the GOP’s newly enacted voter suppression law.

    Election officials in Harris County said they had returned almost 2,500 of the 6,548 mail-in ballots received as of Saturday due to cumbersome new ID rules—a rejection rate of nearly 38% in Texas’ most populous county, a Democratic stronghold that includes Houston and more than 2.4 million voters.

    Although parts of Senate Bill 1 have been temporarily blocked in the courts, much of the Texas GOP’s anti-voter law is now in effect.

    Civil rights advocates have pointed to a record number of mail-in ballot rejections during the opening days of early voting in Texas’ 2022 primaries as evidence of the effectiveness of the Republican Party’s draconian voter suppression law, Senate Bill 1.

    “Mail ballots are people’s votes,” Isabel Longoria, the Harris County elections administrator, told NPR on Tuesday. “So, I am very concerned—not just with the complexity of the process, but how that added complexity is going to increase the number of mail ballots that we have to reject.”

    Texas already had some of the nation’s most restrictive voting rules, but last year the GOP-controlled state Legislature and Republican Gov. Greg Abbott approved sweeping changes—including new ID requirements for mail-in ballots, a ban on drive-thru voting, and limits on counties’ ability to expand voting options—that critics warned would make voting even harder. Emerging data shows those worries were warranted. 

    Texas only allows people who are 65 and older, disabled, out of town, or in jail to vote by mail. Under Senate Bill 1, the ID used to request and return a mail-in ballot—whether it is a driver’s license number or partial Social Security number—must match what is on a voter’s registration record.

    This requirement has already derailed thousands of voters who didn’t remember which ID they used to register—often several years ago—when requesting mail-in ballots. As of one month ago, roughly half of mail-in voting applications had been rejected in Travis County—Texas’ fifth-largest county and home of the state capital, Austin—as Common Dreams reported.

    The Texas Tribune reported late last week that “even counties that saw few request rejections are now grappling with high rates of faulty ballots.”

    “That includes Hays County, where about 30% of the voters who had already returned their mail-in ballots had not filled out the ID requirement,” noted the Tribune. “Those are early figures, as ballots are only starting to trickle in, so Jennifer Anderson, the county’s elections administrator, is hoping voter outreach efforts will help curb more errors.”

    “We usually have a very low rejection rate so it’s not something we want to see in Hays County,” said Anderson.

    The Tribune added that “other suburban counties are seeing similar rates. Election officials in Williamson County said about 30% of completed ballots were missing ID numbers.”

    According to the newspaper:

    The ID requirements forced a redesign of the carrier envelopes used to return mail-in ballots, allowing them to be sealed in a way that protects a voter’s sensitive information while traveling through the mail. The ID field was placed under the envelope flap. But based on early figures, local election officials this week said they feared voters were missing it altogether.

    While voters are permitted to fix ballot issues, the window to do so is narrow and rapidly closing with Election Day just two weeks away. Officials expect to see more mistakes between now and March 1, when the vast majority of mail-in ballots arrive. Whether voters are made aware of errors in a timely manner depends in large part on the existence of resources that vary widely across Texas’ 254 counties.

    As The Tribune explained:

    Defective ballots must be sent back to voters if they arrive early enough to be sent back and corrected. If officials determine there’s not enough time, they must notify the voter by phone or email. Voters must then visit the elections office in person to correct the issue, or use the state’s new online ballot tracker to verify the missing information.

    “Obviously the main concern, I think, with most election officials is that people that receive ballots by mail may not have the ability to come to the clerk’s office,” Heather Hawthorne, the county clerk of Chambers County, told the newspaper.

    After Abbott signed Senate Bill 1 into law in September, rights groups took legal action, arguing that the changes would disproportionately impact the poor, the elderly, people with disabilities, and people of color. The Biden Justice Department also filed a lawsuit alleging that the new restrictions violate the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act.

    Although parts of Senate Bill 1 have been temporarily blocked in the courts, much of the Texas GOP’s anti-voter law is now in effect. Amid the state’s first major election since the legislation was enacted, the potential for disenfranchisement is becoming increasingly apparent, according to on-the-ground reports.

    At least 19 states passed 34 laws restricting access to voting in 2021—a “tidal wave” of voter suppression that shows no sign of slowing down as the nation heads into the 2022 midterms and, before too long, campaigns for the 2024 general election.

    Senate Bill 1 is part of a nationwide assault on the franchise by state-level Republicans that includes map-rigging, new voter identification laws, and a reduction in early voting and polling places and hours.

    According to the Brennan Center for Justice, at least 19 states passed 34 laws restricting access to voting in 2021—a “tidal wave” of voter suppression that shows no sign of slowing down as the nation heads into the 2022 midterms and, before too long, campaigns for the 2024 general election.

    As of Jan. 14, according to the latest tally from the Brennan Center, “legis­lat­ors in at least 27 states have intro­duced, pre-filed, or carried over 250 bills with restrict­ive provi­sions.”

    The GOP’s attack on democracy has been fueled by an avalanche of lies about voter fraud and a stolen election repeated ad nauseam by former President Donald Trump and other right-wing figures.

    Voting rights advocates have argued that the best way to counter GOP voter suppression efforts is by passing two pieces of federal legislation—the Freedom to Vote Act and the John R. Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act. Those bills have stalled in Congress, however, due to the opposition of every Republican and a pair of right-wing Democratic senators.

    This post was originally published on The Real News Network.

  • “This decade we’re in right now is one of the most consequential decades for our climate future,” said one scientist.

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.

  • “Mail ballots are people’s votes,” said a Harris County elections administrator who is “very concerned” about the anti-democratic effects of the Texas GOP’s new voter suppression law.

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.

  • “We’re going to the Department of Education on April 4th to force Biden to cancel student debt,” said the Debt Collective.

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.

  • “Now is the time for banks to get real with the science, and announce a science-based moratorium on funding new fossil fuel projects,” said one critic.

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.

  • The GOP lawmaker called the threatened species a “mediocre bird,” but one watchdog group says her husband’s ties to a major oil and gas firm better explain it.

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.

  • “The stubborn commitment to this flawed policy is contrary to the department’s mission of protecting students from fraud and ensuring that higher education is a launching point, not a stumbling block,” says a new letter.

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.

  • “The current legal system fails to represent the intrinsic value of nature, with laws and decision-makers typically only considering economic or human interests,” said one advocate.

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.

  • “Members of Congress who own stock in pipeline companies like Enterprise Products stand to profit from the push to export liquid fossil gas amid Russia-Ukraine tensions,” according to a new investigation.

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.

  • “If we don’t speak up now, and act, Republicans will keep fighting to make laws like DeSantis’ hateful ‘Don’t Say Gay’ bill the norm,” warned one advocate.

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.

  • “Memphis workers are calling on partners around the country to support them by organizing more stores across the nation,” says Starbucks Workers United.

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.

  • “Biden must seize this opportunity, veer off the path to military confrontation with Iran, ease crushing sanctions, and restore the most significant agreement between the U.S. and Iran in decades.”

    This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.