Free Teaching Guide
November 30, 2009
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Feature
Green Jobs for Recovery
Clean-energy sectors, which hold the promise of being major engines of job growth, are creating opportunities for those communities hit hardest by the recession: low-income communities and communities of color.
Phaedra Ellis-Lamkins
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The World’s Women Stuck in the UN’s Blind Spot
“Mainstreaming” a focus on women into all of the United Nations’ work never happened. So will an agency for women ever get off the ground?
Barbara Crossette
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The Palin Effect
Why Sarah Palin can’t be stopped from going nuclear inside the Republican Party.
Max Blumenthal
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Honduran Crisis Outfoxes US Attempts at Negotiation
A small delegation from the Honduran resistance movement visiting the US last week drew attention to the human rights abuses of the coup government.
Tom Hayden
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Financial Crisis Inquiry Kicks into High Gear
Americans want to know what went wrong during last year’s economic meltdown. The Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission will find the answers.
Greg Kaufmann
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Welcome Home, War!
Will the Afghan and Iraq wars lead to a surveillance state here in the US?
Alfred W. McCoy
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Justicia Poetica
The victory over Lou Dobbs demonstrates that the immigrant community is mobilized like never before.
Roberto Lovato
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No Country for Yes Men
Notorious political pranksters the Yes Men have made a career out of impersonating henchmen from major companies, including Exxon, Dow Chemical and McDonald’s–and getting away with it.
Shakthi Jothianandan
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The Money Man’s Best Friend
Blue Dog Democrats are undermining prospects for financial-industry regulation and reform.
William Greider
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The Fifty-Year War
We learned so much, at such cost, in Vietnam. Why must we learn it all again in Afghanistan?
Jonathan Schell
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How the US Funds the Taliban
With Pentagon cash, contractors bribe insurgents not to attack supply lines for US troops
Aram Roston
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Editorial
Charitable Capitalism
Goldman and the other big dogs of Wall Street are afflicted with the stink of greed, having harvested swollen fortunes from the calamity they caused for the rest of the country.
William Greider
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Getting Tough on Exploitation
Vigorously enforcing labor law and stopping the crackdown on the nation’s undocumented immigrants can boost the American economy.
Amy Traub
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Solution to Unemployment: Pay People to Work Shorter Hours
There is an easy way to get unemployed workers back to work: pay them to work shorter hours.
Dean Baker
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Outrageous Fortuño
The combination of a four-year recession, a $3.2 billion deficit and a toxic Republican-style governor has turned Puerto Rico into a political powder keg.
Ed Morales
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Noted.
"Tobin Tax" on the table; Palestinian Authority in peril; predictable Islamophobia after the Fort Hood shootings.
The Editors
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Healthcare History
The House’s healthcare reform bill is a first draft of history; as with most first drafts, it has its share of flaws.
The Editors
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Column
Women Ski Jumpers Grounded
A Canadian judge allows the International Olympic Committee to trump Canadian equal rights law and keep women ski jumpers out of the Vancouver Olympics.
Dave Zirin
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Who Are You and What Have You Done With the Community Organizer
What’s up with Barack Obama? Finally someone has a good idea about how to deal with Wall Street and the White House condemns it.
Robert Scheer
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Copenhagen: Seattle Grows Up
In Copenhagen, activists won’t just say no–they will aggressively advance solutions that reduce emissions and narrow inequity.
Naomi Klein
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Whose Team Is It, Anyway?
Prochoicers have been taking one for the team for too long now. Enough already.
Katha Pollitt
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A Year of Obama
Since the president took office, his administration has yielded one surrender after another.
Alexander Cockburn
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Books & the Arts
Evicted From His Own Head: On Sigizmund Krzhizhanovsky
In the stories of Sigizmund Krzhizhanovsky, the landscape of the Russian revolution is hostile territory, and terrifying in its scope.
Elaine Blair
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Back Talk: Amy Bach
A conversation with the author of Ordinary Injustice about why the right to trial is no protection against a shoddy legal system.
Christine Smallwood
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The Misunderstood Robber Baron: On Cornelius Vanderbilt
T.J. Stiles’s The First Tycoon is a gilded portrait of the robber baron Cornelius Vanderbilt.
Steve Fraser
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