[[link removed]]
BRINGING IT ALL BACK HOME
[[link removed]]
Derek Sayer
January 22, 2026
Canadian Dimension
[[link removed]]
*
[[link removed]]
*
*
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_ The genocide in Gaza and the ‘new world order’ _
Donald Trump displaying a giant map with Greenland and Canada as part
of the United States to world leaders in the Oval Office., Photo
courtesy Donald J. Trump/Truth Social.
Before dawn on January 3, the United States launched a “large-scale
strike
[[link removed]]”
against Venezuela during which its President Nicolás Maduro and his
wife Cilia Flores were kidnapped and flown out of the country. They
were subsequently arraigned in a New York court
[[link removed]] on drug and weapons
charges. Though there were no American deaths, at least 100 people
were killed in the assault
[[link removed]],
including Venezuelan civilians and 32 Cubans
[[link removed]].
Four days later, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, a masked Immigration and
Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent, Jonathan E. Ross, fatally shot a
37-year-old American woman, Renée Nicole Good, three times in the
face at point-blank range. Video analysis
[[link removed]]
by the _New York Times_ of “bystander footage, filmed from different
angles, appears to show the agent was not in the path of the
victim’s SUV when he fired.” Contrary to the claims
[[link removed]] put out by the
Department of Homeland Security within two hours, this was a brutal
murder—not self-defence.
What has any of this to do with Gaza? The short answer is: everything.
For it was above all in Gaza that the new world order of which these
are symptoms was forged.
The Donroe Doctrine
Later on January 3, Donald Trump told journalists
[[link removed]]
that “We’re going to run the country [Venezuela] until such time
as we can do a safe, proper, and judicious transition.”
With a nod to the Monroe Doctrine
[[link removed]] (which he has modestly
renamed the “Donroe Doctrine”) of 1823, Trump warned that “Under
our new National Security Strategy
[[link removed]],
American dominance in the Western Hemisphere will never be questioned
again.”
“I understand the anxiety over the use of military force,” Vice
President J.D. Vance posted on X
[[link removed]], “But are we just
supposed to allow a communist to steal our stuff in our hemisphere and
do nothing? Great powers don’t act like that. The United States,
thanks to President Trump’s leadership, is a great power again.
Everyone should take note.”
By “steal our stuff” he meant Venezuela’s nationalization of
foreign oil companies
[[link removed]] in 2007
under Hugo Chávez.
When Britain, France, and Israel invaded Egypt in 1956 aiming to
depose President Gamal Abdel Nasser following his nationalization of
the Suez Canal, US President Dwight D. Eisenhower pressured
[[link removed]] them to accept a
United Nations ceasefire and voted for UN resolutions publicly
condemning the invasion and approving the creation of a UN
peacekeeping force. That was under the old post–Second World War
“rules-based” order.
According to Trump’s Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller
[[link removed]]:
We live in a world in which you can talk all you want about
international niceties and everything else, but we live in a world, in
the real world… that is governed by strength, that is governed by
force, that is governed by power. These are the iron laws of the
world. We’re a superpower. And under President Trump, we are going
to conduct ourselves as a superpower.
Move fast and break things
As Maya Angelou once said
[[link removed]],
when someone shows you who they are, believe them the first time.
Trump made his determination not to have American hands tied by
involvement in multilateral organizations, treaties, or agreements
very clear from the get-go. On his first day in office, he withdrew
the US from the World Health Organization
[[link removed]]
(WHO) and the Paris Climate Agreement
[[link removed]].
Two weeks later he pulled the US out of the UN Human Rights Council
[[link removed]],
prohibited any future US funding for the UN Relief and Works Agency
(UNRWA), and ordered a review
[[link removed]]
of US funding and involvement in the UN, including what he called the
“anti-American” UNESCO (from which he would withdraw
[[link removed]]
the US in July 2025).
Following that review, which was led by Secretary of State Marco
Rubio, on January 7 this year Trump withdrew
[[link removed]]
from a further “35 non-United Nations organizations and 31 UN
entities that operate contrary to U.S. national interests, security,
economic prosperity, or sovereignty” and “advance globalist
agendas over U.S. priorities.”
One of these was the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change
(UNFCCC), to which _all other countries_ in the world belong. This
frees up the US from any future international obligations regarding
action on carbon emissions and global warming. Trump has long made it
clear to the world that he proposes to “Drill, baby, drill!
[[link removed]]”
More recently (and very ominously), in the words of former UK Prime
Minister Gordon Brown
[[link removed]],
Trump has made “the momentous decision to constitute an
alternative” to the UN, a so-called “‘board of peace
[[link removed]]’,
with a remit for interventions far beyond Gaza, and with membership
offered to about 60 favoured states, including Russia.”
That the UN opened the road for this when it cravenly endorsed
[[link removed]]
Trump’s “Gaza Peace Plan” on November 17 is indicative of just
how moribund the old order has become.
Triumph of the will
The invasion of Venezuela is not a one-off. Despite running on an
anti-war platform, the use of force (or threat thereof) has been a
defining feature of Trump’s presidency.
He has threatened to annex Greenland
[[link removed]], “take back
[[link removed]]”
the Panama Canal, and employ economic force to compel Canada to become
“a cherished and beautiful 51st state
[[link removed]].”
Notwithstanding his petulant lobbying
[[link removed]]
for a “Noble Peace Prize
[[link removed]]”
(like Obama) and his specious claim to have “ended eight wars
[[link removed]],”
in 2025 Trump bombed Yemen, Somalia, Iraq, Iran, Syria, Nigeria, and
Venezuela, and the US has killed at least 112 people
[[link removed]]
in strikes on alleged drug-smuggling boats in the Caribbean and
Pacific. Asked whether “killing the citizens of another nation who
are civilians without any due process is called a war crime,” J.D.
Vance responded: “I don’t give a shit what you call it.
[[link removed]]”
On December 16 Trump declared
[[link removed]]
“A TOTAL AND COMPLETE BLOCKADE OF ALL SANCTIONED OIL TANKERS going
into, and out of, Venezuela … Until such time as they return to the
United States of America all of the Oil, Land, and other Assets that
they previously stole from us.” As of January 13, the US Navy had
seized five tankers
[[link removed]].
Asked what would happen to the oil, Trump responded “We’re gonna
keep it
[[link removed]].”
Trump has now extended the blockade to Cuba, warning
[[link removed]]
“THERE WILL BE NO MORE OIL OR MONEY [from Venezuela] GOING TO CUBA
— ZERO! I strongly suggest they make a deal, BEFORE IT IS TOO
LATE.” He has also threatened to take military action in his
quarrels with Mexico
[[link removed]]
and Colombia
[[link removed]].
Nothing like showing them who’s boss.
Asked in a lengthy interview
[[link removed]]
for the _New York Times_ in January 2026 whether there was any limit
on his powers, Trump replied: “Yeah, there is one thing. My own
morality. My own mind. It’s the only thing that can stop me… I
don’t need international law.”
A global protection racket
In a sharp reversal of the free trade consensus that has governed the
world economy since the Second World War, Trump has imposed tariffs
[[link removed]] ranging from 10-41
percent on imports from all US trading partners, and certain goods
(steel, aluminum, critical minerals, automobiles, pharmaceuticals,
semiconductors, lumber) face higher levies. As I write, the legality
of Trump’s use of tariffs is being litigated before the US Supreme
Court
[[link removed]].
On February 1, 2025 he imposed 25 percent tariffs on most goods from
Canada and Mexico, supposedly because neither country was doing enough
to stem the flow of fentanyl (and in Mexico’s case immigrants)
across the US border. On March 24 he imposed 25 percent tariffs on all
goods from countries that import Venezuelan oil—a tactic he extended
[[link removed]] on January 12, 2026
to “any country doing business with” Iran.
On July 30, 2025, Trump put tariffs on various goods from Brazil
“due to Brazil’s actions regarding the prosecution of former
President Bolsonaro, the regulation of online platforms, and other
issues.” In August he imposed a whopping 50 percent tariff on India,
which included a 25 percent punishment for continuing to buy Russian
oil. In October he made a $20 billion line of credit to Argentina
contingent
[[link removed]]
upon his right-wing ally Javier Milei’s party winning the upcoming
parliamentary elections.
On January 17 he threatened
[[link removed]] a
10 percent tariff, rising to 25 percent, on Denmark, Norway, Sweden,
France, Germany, the UK, the Netherlands, and Finland, which would
“be due and payable until… a Deal is reached for the Complete and
Total purchase of Greenland”—despite having signed recent trade
agreements with the UK and EU. Following pushback from European powers
he backed down, announcing that talks with NATO chief Mark Rutte had
“formed the framework of a future deal.”
When French President Emmanuel Macron declined to join his Board of
Peace, Trump threatened to impose 200 percent tariffs
[[link removed]]
on French wine and champagne.
It is clear that, irrespective of prior agreements or treaties, Trump
will not hesitate to use economic means to achieve political ends.
He’s running a global protection racket.
Victor Gillam’s 1896 political cartoon depicting Uncle Sam standing
with a rifle between the Europeans and Latin Americans. Image courtesy
the Library of Congress/Wikimedia Commons
[[link removed](F._Victor_Gillam,_1896).jpg].
Strong-arming the courts
Not only has Trump flouted international law
[[link removed]].
He has gone out of his way to discredit international legal
institutions, including the world’s two highest courts.
Accusing South Africa
[[link removed]]
of taking “aggressive positions towards the United States and its
allies, including accusing Israel, not Hamas, of genocide in the
International Court of Justice” (ICJ) the Trump administration
instituted a series of measures
[[link removed].]
intended to discredit South Africa’s moral authority to bring the
case, pressurize South Africa to drop it, and discourage other
countries from joining it.
In February 2025, Donald Trump imposed sanctions
[[link removed]]
on the International Criminal Court (ICC) for indicting Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defence Minister Yoav Gallant for war
crimes
[[link removed]].
ICC Chief Prosecutor Karim Khan was the first victim. The US
sanctioned
[[link removed]]
four more judges on June 5, adding two more judges
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(one of them was Canadian justice Kimberly Prost
[[link removed]])
and two assistant prosecutors on August 20. Rubio sanctioned two more
judges
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in December, and the administration is now leaning on the court
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to amend its guiding documents to exempt US citizens from its
jurisdiction.
Such sanctions include an asset freeze, a prohibition on Americans
doing business with sanctioned individuals, and a ban on their
entering the United States. Unable to access the world banking system,
victims—who also include
[[link removed]]
UN Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese—cannot even use credit
cards
[[link removed]]
or book a flight or a hotel online.
“The purpose is clear,” Prost told
[[link removed]]
the _Irish Times_:
effectively, they are interfering directly with the independence of a
judge. I can’t think of any other way to describe it but an attack
on the independence of the judiciary and the International Criminal
Court’s independence as an institution.
Securing the home front
Trump has moved just as fast on the domestic front, in ways that test
the legal limits of his executive power. His actions have resulted in
at least 583 challenges in the courts
[[link removed]].
While lower courts have overturned many of his orders, the
conservative-dominated Supreme Court—which previously gave him
immunity
[[link removed]]
for “actions relating to the core powers of his office”—has so
far generally proved more compliant.
The administration took an axe to the federal government and its
programs, with the loss of 317,000 jobs
[[link removed]]
by the end of 2025. Elon Musk’s Department of Governmental
Efficiency (DOGE), which was created by executive order on Trump’s
first day outside the normal machinery of government, was responsible
for much of the early carnage. The now-defunct DOGE has been widely
criticized as “illegal and unconstitutional
[[link removed]].”
The 26 executive orders Trump signed on his first day—more than any
previous US president—included a ban on diversity, equity and
inclusion (DEI) programs
[[link removed]]
across the federal government, attempts to limit birthright
citizenship
[[link removed]],
and the declaration of a “national energy emergency
[[link removed]]”
that has led to a bonfire of environmental regulations
[[link removed]].
From removing over 8,000 government web pages
[[link removed]]
related to DEI initiatives, “gender identity, public health
research, environmental policy, and various social programs,” to
excluding transgender soldiers
[[link removed]] from
the military and athletes from women’s sports, waging a “war on
science
[[link removed]]”
and whitewashing
[[link removed]]
how history is presented in the nation’s museums
[[link removed]],
Trump has used his executive powers to advance MAGA’s culture wars.
He also found time on his first day to unconditionally pardon
[[link removed]]
almost all 1,600 rioters convicted in the January 6, 2021 assault on
the Capitol and commute the sentences imposed on Proud Boys and Oath
Keepers militia members for seditious conspiracy. While this was
within his powers as president, it shows scant respect for the courts.
House Democrats are now asking
[[link removed]]
how many of the rioters have joined ICE, which increasingly looks like
Trump’s Gestapo
[[link removed]].
The same contempt for the rule of law is shown by the fact that nearly
a month after Congress set a deadline of December 19 for the release
of all files relating to the Jeffrey Epstein case
[[link removed]],
Trump’s Department of Justice has made public only 12,285 out of
over two million relevant documents, and many of these have been
heavily redacted.
I am your retribution
Not content with stacking the governing bodies of public institutions
from the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
[[link removed]]—now
renamed
[[link removed]]
the Trump-Kennedy Center—to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
[[link removed]]
with loyalists, Trump has good on his promise to his MAGA supporters
that “I am your justice… I am your retribution.”
The president has purged the US military
[[link removed]],
the Justice Department
[[link removed]],
immigration judges
[[link removed]],
and at least 17 inspectors general
[[link removed]]
(the independent watchdogs who oversee federal government
departments). The list
[[link removed]]
of those whose security clearances been revoked in retaliation for
past actions deemed hostile to Trump is growing very long indeed.
Weaponizing the Justice Department, Trump has opened criminal
investigations or prosecutions
[[link removed]]
against, among others, Letitia James
[[link removed]],
Jack Smith
[[link removed]],
James Comey
[[link removed]],
John Bolton
[[link removed]],
Eric Swalwell
[[link removed]],
Adam Schiff
[[link removed]],
Mark Kelly
[[link removed]],
John Brennan
[[link removed]],
and Jerome Powell
[[link removed]],
all of whom he has crossed swords with in the past. The
administration’s response to pushback against the murder of Renée
Good from elected city and state officials has been to issue subpoenas
[[link removed]]
against Governor Tim Walz and Mayor Jacob Frey.
Trump has sanctioned big law firms (WilmerHale, Jenner and Block,
Covington & Burling) because they represented clients of which he
disapproved
[[link removed]].
Rather than face being shut out of business with federal agencies,
excluded from federal buildings (including courtrooms), and losing
security clearances, several firms have caved to Trump’s demands and
promised millions in pro bono work to causes he supports.
Silencing speech
The administration has dismantled
[[link removed]]
Voice of America, Radio Free Europe, and Radio Free Asia and defunded
PBS and NPR
[[link removed]]
on grounds that the former has “a “leftist bias” and fails to
project “pro-American” values and the latter do not offer “a
fair, accurate, or unbiased portrayal of current events to taxpaying
citizens.”
Trump removed
[[link removed]]
_Associated Press_ from the White House press pool and stripped
[[link removed]]
the White House Correspondents’ Association of its traditional power
to decide which journalists have access to the president. In October,
reporters from all but one news organization—including even the
regime-friendly Fox News—turned in their Pentagon access badges
rather than agree to new rules from Secretary of Defence (now styled
“Secretary of War”) Pete Hegseth restricting what they were
allowed to report.
Trump has personally sued, among others, ABC News (obtaining $15
million in an out-of-court settlement
[[link removed]]),
the _Daily Beast_, CBS News (a $16 million settlement), the _Des
Moines Register_
[[link removed]],
the _Wall Street Journal_
[[link removed]], and
the _New York Times_
[[link removed]].
He is suing the BBC
[[link removed]]
for defamation for no less than $10 billion, a sum that would bankrupt
the UK’s public broadcaster (whose entire income in 2025 was £5.9
billion, or US$7.88 billion).
CBS cancelled _The Late Show with Stephen Colbert_ after Colbert
criticized Trump. The next month, ABC suspended _Jimmy Kimmel Live!_
after Kimmel commented on the assassination of right-wing darling
Charlie Kirk, leading Trump to muse: “They’re giving me all this
bad press, and they’re getting a license. I would think maybe their
license should be taken away.” This is hardly a climate conducive to
free speech.
Kneecapping the universities
A recent report
[[link removed]]
by PEN America documents how:
From executive orders and memos, to investigations, the withholding of
funds for research and financial aid, and efforts to detain, deport,
or deny visas to international students and academics, the federal
administration has weaponized every imaginable lever to bring the
higher education sector to its knees.
The report instances more than 90 Title VI investigations
[[link removed]],
$3.7 billion in cuts from federal research dollars
[[link removed]]
from previously awarded grants, and NIH and NSF funding cuts with an
estimated annual cost of $10-15 billion in decreased US economic
output.
The federal government has proposed suspending 38 universities
[[link removed]]
including Harvard and Yale from a research partnership program because
they engage in DEI hiring, fined UCLA $1.2 billion
[[link removed]],
and required that it not enrol “foreign students likely to engage in
anti-Western, anti-American, or antisemitic disruptions or
harassment.” Since January 2025 the State Department has revoked
over 8,000 student visas
[[link removed]],
targeting in particular those who have taken part in pro-Palestinian
demonstrations.
Faced with these pressures many schools, including New York’s
Columbia University
[[link removed]],
have traded academic freedom for federal dollars and accepted
unprecedented political oversight of their hiring practices and the
content of their research and teaching.
Others have resisted—up to a point. Though Harvard is suing the
administration, it has suspended its research partnership with Birzeit
University in the West Bank and dismissed the director and associate
director of its Center for Middle Eastern Studies.
The cruelty is the point
Trump’s _One Big Beautiful Act_ allocated a mind-blowing $75 billion
over four years
[[link removed]]
(in addition to $10 billion already appropriated for 2025) to ICE to
arrest, detain, and deport immigrants. The law provided $45 billion to
increase ICE detention capacity
[[link removed]]
and $46.6 billion for the construction of border barriers and
surveillance systems.
Advertising “You do not need an undergraduate degree,” a generous
pay and benefits package
[[link removed]],
and a $50,000 signing bonus, ICE recruited 12,000 additional agents
during 2025, expanding its workforce by 120 percent. Mobilizing
“Uncle Sam” imagery, the ads are crafted to attract MAGA
supporters, if not outright white nationalists.
DHS boasts that in 2025 “nearly three million illegal aliens… left
the U.S.… including an estimated 2.2 million self-deportations and
more than 675,000 deportations.” The conditions in Florida’s
“Alligator Alcatraz
[[link removed]]” and other ICE
detention centers are grim. A record 32 people died in ICE custody
[[link removed]]
in 2025. The cruelty is the point
[[link removed]]—to
strike fear.
An unknown number of those deported have not been given due process
[[link removed]]
and in some cases have been sent to third countries
[[link removed]]
with which they have no connection. In what is perhaps the most
notorious case
[[link removed]]
of denial of legal rights, the administration defied court orders and
summarily deported 238 Venezuelan men to the CECOT prison in El
Salvador, which is notorious for torture and “life-threatening
prison conditions.”
ICE has conducted large-scale raids across the US aiming at 3,000
arrests per day
[[link removed]].
Though DHS claims its targets are “criminal illegal aliens across
the country, including gang members, rapists, kidnappers, and drug
traffickers,” ICE’s goons have rounded up people
[[link removed]]
from factories, farms, meatpacking plants, restaurants, churches,
schools, and even immigration courts. In Minnesota Trump’s Gestapo
are going from house to house, breaking down doors and arresting
people. Seventy-five percent of those held by ICE in December had no
criminal convictions. This is a reign of terror.
Trump has deployed [[link removed]]
the National Guard to Los Angeles, Washington DC, Chicago and
Portland, Oregon, in the latter case to support ICE. He has threatened
[[link removed]]
to invoke the _Insurrection Act_ in order to dispatch troops to end
the protests in Minnesota. “If I feel it’s important to invoke the
_Insurrection Act_,” he told
[[link removed]]
the _New York Times_, “I have the right to do pretty much what I
want to do.” _L’état, c’est moi_.
Signs in the window
What has any of this to do with Gaza?
Invoking Václav Havel’s parable of the Czech greengrocer who places
a sign in his window reading “Workers of the World Unite” not
because he believes it, but to signal his conformity—and thereby
helps reproduce the system that oppresses him—Mark Carney’s 2026
Davos speech
[[link removed]]
showed rare honesty from a Western political leader:
For decades, countries like Canada prospered under what we called the
rules-based international order.
We knew the story of the international rules-based order was partially
false, that the strongest would exempt themselves when convenient,
that trade rules were enforced asymmetrically. And we knew that
international law applied with varying rigour, depending on the
identity of the accused or the victim.
This fiction was useful… So we placed the sign in the window. We
participated in the rituals, and we largely avoided calling out the
gaps between rhetoric and reality.
Then came Gaza. When the gaps became chasms.
When George H.W. Bush went to war with Iraq over Saddam Hussein’s
invasion of Kuwait in 1990, he sought and got authorization from the
UN Security Council. When his son, George W. Bush, wanted to fight
Saddam again in 2003, he and UK PM Tony Blair—the same Blair that is
now on Trump’s “Board of Peace”—used fake intelligence to get
support for going to war from the US Congress and UK Parliament. The
UN was unpersuaded by their claims, but they went through the motions
of playing by the rules before going ahead with a “coalition of the
willing” anyway. When Vladimir Putin annexed Crimea in 2014 and
invaded Ukraine in 2024, Western powers, including the US, EU, UK, and
Canada, responded with ever-escalating rounds of sanctions.
But with Gaza, it is different. As I have documented in more than 25
articles [[link removed]]
over the last two years, not only have Western governments, with the
support of mainstream political parties and mass media across the
political spectrum, armed, funded, and provided diplomatic cover for
the genocide. They have thrown international law out of the window and
perhaps fatally undermined the institutions that support it—the UN
and its agencies, the ICJ, and the ICC. And they have sacrificed human
rights and civil liberties at home, persecuting Israel’s critics
under the specious banner of “combatting antisemitism.”
This was not Donald Trump’s doing. The responsibility lies squarely
with Joe Biden, Antony Blinken, and Kamala Harris; with Rishi Sunak,
David Cameron, Keir Starmer, David Lammy, and Yvette Cooper; with
Justin Trudeau, Mélanie Joly, Anita Anand, and—it must be
said—Mark Carney; with Emmanuel Macron, Anthony Albanese and Penny
Wong, Olaf Scholz and Friedrich Merz, not to mention Kaja Kallas and
Ursula von der Leyen. They dealt the final blows to the old order.
Trump is just picking up where they left off.
Gaza’s revenge
Asked by _Democracy Now!_ on December 26, 2025, to comment on
“what’s happening in Gaza,” the Indian novelist and activist
Arundhati Roy
[[link removed]]
replied:
What is there to discuss when you’re murdering children, destroying
hospitals, destroying universities, murdering journalists, and
boasting about it, boasting about it? And everybody’s sort of
ambiguous—I mean, what we are witnessing also is, I think, there are
surveys that say that almost 90% of the population of the world wants
this to stop, but there is no connection between democratically
elected governments and the will of the people. It’s ended. So, the
whole charade of Western liberal democracy is as much of a corpse
under the rubble as the tens of thousands of Palestinians.
Trump’s triumph might be seen as Gaza’s revenge. Revenge for the
West’s complicity in the worst crimes of the century. Revenge for
its repeated trampling on international law. Revenge, above all, on
the American Democrats who demanded everyone’s vote despite
Biden’s “ironclad” support for Israel and Kamala Harris’s
refusal to break with his legacy—and told protestors against
genocide to shut up because “I’m speaking!
[[link removed]]”
She is not speaking any more. Donald Trump is Aimé Césaire’s
imperial boomerang
[[link removed]]. Sow the
wind, reap the whirlwind. The imperial chickens are coming home to
roost.
_Derek Sayer is professor emeritus at the University of Alberta and a
Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. His most recent book,
__Postcards from Absurdistan: Prague at the End of History_
[[link removed]]_,
won the 2023 Canadian Jewish Literary Award for Scholarship and was a
finalist for the Association of American Publishers PROSE Award in
European History._
_Canadian Dimension is the longest-standing voice of the left in
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critically reviewed. Our dedicated and longstanding readership is
comprised of activists, organizers, academics, economists, workers,
trade unionists, feminists, environmentalists, Indigenous peoples, and
members of the LGBTQ2 community._
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[[link removed]]
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[[link removed]]
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[[link removed]]
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[[link removed]]
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