Download the PDF. Eviction resistance Palestine will be free! Also: Tlaib wins, Zionists lose Fierce Madres Bill Russell: a revolutionary Aiming for the stars Boston Starbucks workers and NLRB Black August: Salute to Nigerian women Houston protest for Jalen Randle Starbucks hires CIA spy to bust union On the picket . . .
Continue reading PDF of August 11 issue at Workers.org
The first years of the 2020s were plagued by the coronavirus. As the months wore on, COVID-19 has not only devastated people’s lives, over 1 million people have died, and it has brought the country to a complete fracas both financially and in a social manner. COVID-19 exposed the limitations . . .
Continue reading First COVID-19, now monkeypox at Workers.org
A major victory for women and all who can become pregnant happened when Kansas voters voted NO Aug. 2 on a constitutional amendment that would have given the green light to the state legislature to vote against access to abortions. With 90% of the votes counted, 60% voted to maintain . . .
Continue reading The importance of the Kansas vote – an editorial at Workers.org
Albert Woodfox, 2016. Workers World was saddened to learn of the death of Albert Woodfox Aug. 4 from COVID-19-related complications. Woodfox was released from prison in February 2016, after spending nearly 45 years of incarceration, most in solitary confinement. This exchange between Woodfox, of the Angola Three, and political prisoner . . .
Continue reading ‘Indomitable spirit that refuses to be broken’: Albert Woodfox and Mumia Abu-Jamal at Workers.org
Reunification flag The following remarks were prepared by International Action Center member Richie Merino for the “Denuclearization and Peace on the Korean Peninsula” event at the United Nations Aug. 4, co-organized by Solidarity for Peace and Reunification of Korea (SPARK) and People’s Solidarity for Participatory Democracy (PSPD). The key actors . . .
Continue reading End the Korean war – 70 years is enough! at Workers.org
Almost nine decades ago, a few years shy of a century, in fact, a Black girl was born in Robbins, Illinois. The year: 1932. That girl was actor Nichelle Nichols, who blazed to television fame in the series, “Star Trek,” which debuted in 1966. She played the role of Lieutenant . . .
Continue reading Nichelle Nichols: aiming for the stars at Workers.org
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