Talk World Radio: Brian Concannon: Haiti Has Had All the U.S. Help It Can Stand
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This week on Talk World Radio, we’re discussing Haiti with human rights lawyer and activist Brian Concannon. He is Executive Director of Project Blueprint, which promotes a progressive, human rights-based U.S. foreign policy by bringing the perspectives of people impacted by U.S. actions abroad into policy discussions. Brian founded the Institute for Justice &
How Not to Prevent U.S. Military Suicides
By David Swanson, World BEYOND War, July 13, 2021
If I were to just read the admirable recent study of U.S. military suicides from the Costs of War Project, my inclination would immediately be to join with President Biden and start proclaiming the war on Afghanistan a success, or with Obama in announcing that the Korean War was a success after all, or with the general U.S. establishment in declaring all wars a noble “service”
Tomgram: Michael Klare, An All-American Path to War?
This article originally appeared at TomDispatch.com. To receive TomDispatch in your inbox three times a week, click here.
The single scariest night of my life may have been on October 22, 1962, when I thought that all the duck-and-cover
Tomgram: Rebecca Gordon, Teetering on the Existential Edge
This article originally appeared at TomDispatch.com. To receive TomDispatch in your inbox three times a week, click here.
On an unnaturally hot late June day in the Northeast, my eight-year-old grandson was walking back to a broiling car to continue a long trip. It was in the mid-nineties and he and his three-year-old sister were complaining about how miserable they were when, out of nowhere, he said, “This is why climate change is important!”
Startled, his mother agreed, and then he suddenly
Conflict or Cooperation in U.S.-China Relations?
The United States and China, the world’s mightiest military and economic powers, are currently heading toward a Cold War or even a hot one, with disastrous consequences. But an alternative path is available and could be taken.
Beginning in 2018, U.S. government policy toward China turned sharply hostile, bringing relations between the two nations to their lowest point in the last four
Biden Defends Ending a War He’s Not Fully Ending
It’s been a dream of peace-loving people everywhere for over 20 years now for a U.S. government to end a war and to speak in support of having done so. Sadly, Biden is only partially ending one of the endless wars, none of the others having yet been fully ended either, and his remarks on Thursday were too glorifying of war to be of much use in the cause of abolishing it.
That said, one would not wish for Biden to bow before the belligerent demands of the U.S. media and escalate every possible
Tomgram: Karen Greenberg, The Age of Unaccountability?
This article originally appeared at TomDispatch.com. To receive TomDispatch in your inbox three times a week, click here.
Only recently, more than 18 years after President George W. Bush launched the invasion of Iraq and quickly declared victory (“Mission accomplished!”), Joe Biden once again ordered
The Way Between
By David Swanson, World BEYOND War, July 6, 2021
For decades I — and, no doubt, everybody else who points out the power and effectiveness of nonviolent action — have had the endlessly recurring experience of being asked “But shouldn’t people defend themselves with wars rather than do nothing?”
How did wars get to be the only alternative to nothing? If I were to run around shouting “Will you deny people the right to stick slugs up their noses rather than do NOTHING?”
Tomgram: Alfred McCoy, The Drugging of American Politics
This article originally appeared at TomDispatch.com. To receive TomDispatch in your inbox three times a week, click here.
Between the 1960s and 2021, the United States fought two disastrous drug wars in distant lands and historian Alfred McCoy covered them both. The initial one was, of course, the Vietnam War, which, as he reminds us today, left staggering numbers of American soldiers hooked on heroin. In those years, McCoy quite literally tramped the “heroin trail” in Laos, “meeting gangsters