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  • Election
    • Indiana Voting-Rights Group Tackles Redistricting Reform
    • It's Time to Get out the Vote!
    • A Republican Mayor's Unexpected Presidential Vote
    • America Meets Its Judgment Day
    • Electing an American Fuhrer as Wall Street Cheers and Soars
    • JPMorgan Chase CEO Vows “Knife Fight” To Keep Consumers Trapped
    • KNOW YOUR RIGHTS: VOTING IN INDIANA
    • Noblesse Oblige Is Dead: Today’s Wealthy Elite Just Don’t Give a Damn
    • Now We Will Get What We Asked For
    • Our Rights
    • REPUBLICANS’ CYNICAL AND SELECTIVE CONCERN FOR SOCIAL WELFARE
    • Reporting from Sacramento
    • Republicans who worked for Trump who are not endorsing him
    • Through the darkness, some rays of light
    • Trump is a Whisker Away from the Presidency - How is this Possible?
    • Trump’s Defense Secretary Pick Hopes for a Christian Crusade
    • What Good Is an Election Rigger If They Can't Rig the Rigging?
    • Our grandparents made America great, but Trump would have trashed them, too
    • Donald Trump Has Not Won a Majority of the Votes Cast for President
  • State
    • Commentary: A system that rewards fights and punishes solutions
    • 'Complete takeover': Lawmakers exert control over university policy in 11th hour
    • A potential $110B economic hit: How Trump’s tariffs could mean rising costs for families, strain for states
    • ACLU sues after state stops updating gender markers on birth certificates
    • Diego Morales' $90K SUV came from dealership that gave him $65K in campaign donations
    • Here's How Trump's Cuts Will Hit Hoosiers
    • Indiana sets goal to boost 3rd grade reading proficiency
    • Indiana students fight bill blocking college IDs at polls
    • Indy vaccination program in jeopardy after Trump’s cuts
    • ‘Really scared’: Parents of kids with disabilities confront Education Department chaos
    • ‘You’re not listening to us’: Hoosiers air frustrations as public officials face access scrutiny
    • 8 Ways States Can Fight Inequality and Build Worker Power
    • A Comparison of the Indiana State Budget Presented by Democrats to that Presented by Republicans:
    • Braun inauguration signals disconnect between state government, college students
    • From State Rep. Chris Campbelll's report on Governor Braun's 2025 Budget:
    • Heart tips to stay healthy in Indiana's winter cold
    • Hopelessly Undemocratic Indiana
    • House Bill 1136
    • Lawmakers want Indiana University to be defunded over Kinsey Institute
    • Leppert Commentary: Braun puts others in their place, just by othering them
    • MORE DISCIPLINE? AG Rokita denies charges after new disciplinary complaint alleges ‘dishonesty’ in reaction to earlier misconduct
    • New water studies document ample water supply but advise protective measures
    • ACLU of Indiana stands ready to support voter safety
    • CITIZENSHIP QUESTIONED: Voting Advocacy Groups Cry Foul Over Indiana Election Officials’ Request For Verification Of More Than 500K Persons
    • Hoosier voters gain access to nonpartisan election information tool
    • Indiana Libraries rally against rising censorship efforts
    • Indiana teens face rising mental health crisis
    • Indiana's Gubernatorial Candidates and Public Education
    • McCormick’s economic plan: Fewer tax breaks, greater focus on worker retention
    • Report: state loses out on $4.2B annually due to child care shortage
    • ‘ARBITRARY AND CAPRICIOUS’: SOS Morales And AG Rokita Face Public Access Complaint For Not Releasing Names Of Nearly 600,000 Registered Voters
    • Census data
    • Feeding Indiana’s Hungry calls for action as food insecurity worsens
    • Foster Care in Indiana
    • IEDC nabs approval to ‘repurpose’ $88M for LEAP, fill ‘holes’ in land ownership
    • IN food banks concerned about draft Farm Bill
    • IN university hopes to lead in environmental responsibility
    • Increasing demand devours IN food bank resources
    • Indiana private school vouchers hit record with 70,000 students, nearly half-billion dollar cost
    • Indiana's housing affordability gap is growing, analysis finds
    • LAWMAKERS’ SCORECARD: Common Cause Says Most Indiana Congressional Members Did Little With Their Votes To Preserve Democracy
    • McCormick hopes to bring ‘focus on real issues’ to Indiana governor’s race
    • National conservative group alleges systemic election fraud in survey sent to Indiana voters
    • New program provides healthy summer meals for IN students
    • Potential water project poised to deliver 25M gallons a day to LEAP District, Lebanon
    • U.S. House reps for Indiana collect almost $200,000 in meal and lodging reimbursements
    • ALICE: Asset Limited, Income Constrained, Employed
    • Environment, economy spark EV sales growth in Indiana
    • Hamilton amendment to expand voting access struck down: ‘Democracy is not a spectator sport’
    • IN Rape crisis center opens to reduce assault cases, heighten attention
    • IN lawmakers manage expectations ahead of 2024 session
    • IN legislators pause on federal environmental plan
    • IN research: Federal workers defy 'deep state' stereotype
    • IN teachers 'stunned' by lawmakers' bid to bypass collective bargaining
    • Indiana cities are dishing out thousands of dollars to get out-of-state workers to relocate
    • Juvenile detention rates show big racial disparities in IN, US
    • MUNICIPAL POWER: As state legislators chip away at local government initiatives, does ‘home rule’ still matter?
    • Neighboring states leave Indiana behind in 'cloud of smoke'
    • Research confirms social media's deadly effects on youth of color
    • Secretary of State Morales doles out $308K+ in spot bonuses
    • Status-quo session: A history of the short session
    • THE INDIANA ECONOMY HURTS WORKERS, WOMEN, MINORITIES
    • THE INDIANA ECONOMY HURTS WORKERS, WOMEN, MINORITIES
    • THE WATER WARS COME TO INDIANA
    • Tenure bill passes House despite pushback
    • They Really ARE Crazy
    • 2023 ISTA Legislative Summary
    • As students left Indianapolis Public Schools, leaders paid COVID aid to a company to get them back
    • Big Raises for Top Indiana Officeholders Lacked Public Debate
    • Child abuse and neglect deaths deserve more light, attention
    • Data shows mental health, education declines for Hoosier kids
    • Doctors think “advocate” is a dirty word. But it’s our ethical responsibility
    • Following The Money
    • Gun-Safety Advocates Face Uphill Battle with Indiana Lawmakers
    • Healthcare costs top legislative priorities
    • Help Available to Hoosiers Navigating Medicaid Purge
    • IN Joins Bipartisan Effort to Investigate Food Prices
    • IN Legislature Advances Bill to Improve Seniors' Access to SNAP Benefits
    • Indiana Apprenticeship Initiative Win-Win for Students, Employers
    • Indiana Food Banks Step Up to Use Funding from Legislature
    • Indiana Housing Market Struggles with Affordability, Demand
    • Indiana Supreme Court Rules Near-Total Abortion Ban Can Take Effect
    • Indiana abortions drop significantly, despite pause on statewide ban
    • Indiana has always had a weak veto power — so why are overrides increasingly common?
    • Indiana lawmakers weigh bill to create universal school choice program
    • Indiana lawmakers will again consider a bill to ban certain topics on race and sex from classrooms
    • Indiana taxpayers will send millions more to charter schools in new state budget
    • Indiana's Summer Meal Programs in Full Swing
    • Indianapolis teacher, ACLU file lawsuit to challenge new K-3 ban on ‘human sexuality’ education
    • Indiana’s governor to be among the highest paid after new salary increases take effect
    • Lobbyists spent $20.7 million during session. Here’s which groups spent the most.
    • Majority of wages in Indiana’s counties lag behind national average
    • Maximize Your Impact. Be an Indiana Change-Maker.
    • Most eligible Indiana schools hesitant to sign up for federal free meal program, per new report
    • NRA convention set for this spring in Indianapolis
    • PRESS RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: February 14, 2023 Contact: Amy Carter | acarter@incap.org | 317-796-0727 INDIANA COMMUNITY ACTION POVERTY INSTITUTE RELEASES NEW FINDINGS FROM ANALYSIS OF SELF SUFFICIENCY [INDIANAPOLIS, IN] – The Indiana
    • Report: Drug Overdoses Killing More People in Indiana, Nationwide
    • Report: More than 24,000 Miles of IN Waters Unsafe for Recreation
    • Report: Top 1% Income Leaves Working Families Behind During Pandemic
    • Research: Tech Opportunities Could Reduce IN Food Insecurity
    • State Kicks In to Help Boost Literacy Rates for IN Children
    • Study shows sharp increases in maternal deaths over two decades
    • The ReCenter Response
    • Tuberville and Banks show how GOP politics are not about governing
    • ‘Ground zero of the Republican Civil War’: The Indiana Senate race could get ugly, quickly
    • A 'disaster for Indiana': Mike Braun’s constituents revolt after GOP senator criticized legalization of interracial marriage
    • Baby boxes in Indiana continue to increase
    • Bringing up the Rear
    • Driving cards for unauthorized immigrants back on legislative agenda
    • Energy Assistance Program applications now being accepted
    • Enhanced SNAP Benefits for IN Residents Come to End
    • Federal Investment to Boost Emergency Food Aid in Indiana
    • Hoosier midterm election turnout drops 20%, with Marion near the bottom
    • IN Electric-Vehicle Infrastructure Plan Open for Public Comment
    • IN Officials Ask Public to Weigh in on Electric-Vehicle Infrastructure
    • IN Poised to Pass Transgender-Student Sports Ban
    • Indiana AG Escalates Fact-Free War on Doc Who Performed 10-Year-Old’s Abortion
    • Indiana Child Advocates Demand Action on Renewing Child Tax Credit
    • Indiana Group Cheers New National Strategy on Hunger
    • Indiana's record-breaking gasoline taxes heading even higher in August
    • Indiana’s horrific public health standing is a choice it’s willing to make
    • Legislators skeptical as agencies outline their needs
    • Librarians left out of literacy initiative
    • Lilly CEO takes critical stance against Indiana economy
    • New abortion law may further strain foster care system
    • Supreme Court Case Could Dramatically Expand Power of State Legislatures
    • The State Campaign Finance Index 2022
    • These 10 states are America’s worst places to live in 2022
    • Concerns Raised Over IN's New Permitless Handgun-Carry Law
    • High childcare costs hinder women's workforce participation in Indiana
    • IN gets multiyear grant for climate pollution research
    • New urgency to close skills gap between college and employment
    • Report: IN girls struggle with bullying, yet excel academically
  • Local
    • Bowl-A-Thon
    • Corporatizing and Militarizing a University Town
    • HOOSIERS RALLY FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE IN 2025: IN THE TRADITION OF EUGENE V. DEBS
    • RESISTANCE TO TRUMPISM AND THE RADICAL RIGHT AGENDA SPREADS LIKE WILDFIRE: In Indiana Also
    • Trump cuts leave Ph.D. researchers, professors questioning future
    • Jeffery Robinson will be speaking at Long Center at 7pm November 19, 2024
    • West Lafayette Organizations say No to Tax Breaks for Military Production
    • A SUMMARY OF REMARKS SUPPORTING A GAZA CEASE FIRE RESOLUTION: THE WEST LAFAYETTE CITY COUNCIL
    • Purdue Living Wage Coalition says new pay policies not enough
    • Write a Letter in Support of the Water Rights Legislation
    • Controversy after conservative commentator announces visit
    • Fairfield Township Open House
    • Paint Created in Purdue Lab Could Cool Earth
    • Purdue Students, Staff, and Faculty Speak out for a Living Wage -two
    • Tippecanoe County's First Comprehensive Resource for HIV/STDs Healthcare Service.
    • City official opposes plan to pay remote workers to relocate to West Lafayette. Here's why
    • Complaint Alleges Voter-Signup Obstacles in Tippecanoe County
    • Conversion Therapy
    • General Election Candidate Debates Announced
    • Hammond Mayor Thomas McDermott for U.S. Senator
    • Heavilon's mold issue continues two decades later
    • Indoor theme park coming to Tippecanoe Mall this summer
    • Purdue Students and Faculty Say No to War Criminals on Campus
    • Purdue University launches Institute for National Security
    • Purdue and Duke Energy to explore potential for clean, nuclear power source for campus
    • Some Purdue Black History Milestones
    • Suggestions for Preventing Gun Violence Locally
    • TAF Kicks Off "Mural Season" with North 9th Street Project
    • The Experience of Black Students at Purdue
    • The Importance Of Local Politics
    • University Senate discusses PUPD incident, votes against MHAW in academic calendar
    • While Its Humanities Programs Suffer From Budget Cuts, Purdue University Increases Focus on Military
    • With SkyWater Technology's added jobs, how will West Lafayette adjust to the influx?
    • EDITORIAL: How Purdue's trustees operate in secret
    • Going for Gold at the Indiana Veterans Home
    • Groups Urge Indiana to Expunge Evictions Filed During Pandemic
    • MatchBOX Promotes Creative Thinking for Professionals
    • Purdue Greek Life Responds to Reports of Increased Sexual Assault
    • Purdue to sell WBAA radio
    • RACISM ON THE CAMPUS: THE STRUGGLE CONTINUES
    • Student accuses Purdue police officer of using 'excessive force'
    • The Plan for ARPA Funds
    • WBAA transfer agreement filed to the FCC
    • WEST LAFAYETTE COUNCIL TARGETS MAYOR’S VETO OF FACIAL RECOGNITION SOFTWARE BAN FOR POLICE
    • West Side Will Consider Restrictions on Conversion Therapy for Minors
    • 'Not revisiting it would be a mistake'
    • Commentary: Purdue Senates govern Purdue’s curricula, not the Trustees
    • All the Things about ‘All The Things Lafayette’
    • Anti-'indoctrination' meeting canceled after pushback
    • Apartment residents say planned high rise will price them out
    • Commercial flights at Purdue Airport, a semiconductor hub at heart of Greater Lafayette regional
    • Fair Pay at Purdue: $15 Minimum Wage Now!
    • Graduate student rent relief denied by business office
    • Hands Off Purdue Students!
    • Hundreds of students attend town hall after Purdue police altercation
    • May 2021 Civics literacy through shared governance
    • Purdue, what are you waiting for?
    • Rolls-Royce expanding research footprint at Purdue University
    • Stipend approved for those moving to West Lafayette for remote work
    • Students gather to demand action in town hall meeting
    • The Road to the Next Superintendent
    • Tippecanoe County Council: Financial Stewards for the County
    • Tony Zamora: Purdue’s Renaissance man for 5 decades
  • Politics
    • "It's sickening": Trump order censoring Black history displays a "fundamental misunderstanding"
    • 198 Methods of Non-Violent Action
    • Action items proposed by Indivisible, April 7, 2025
    • Another Major win in court against Trump
    • Democratic Party Leaders – Mostly Wimps, Wallowers and Wallflowers
    • Dozens of USAID contracts were canceled last weekend. Here's what happened
    • Elon Musk Set to Win Big With Trump’s Trillion-Dollar Pentagon Budget
    • From: NY Times, U.S. Restores Legal Status for Many International Students, but Warns of Removals to Come
    • From: "A Genocide Foretold/ World BEYOND War", Ralph Nader, March 29, 2025:
    • Georgetown Postdoc the Latest to Be Detained by ICE as Crackdown on Campus Speech Widens
    • How Trump Will Use “Anti-Christian Bias” to Entrench His Power
    • Internal VA emails reveal how Trump cuts jeopardize veterans’ care, including two ‘Life-saving cancer trials’
    • Is This the Moment American Democracy Finally Broke?
    • It Can Happen Here…
    • Judge Orders Thousands of Federal Workers Reinstated
    • Keep Demonstrating Against Trump — but Also for a Better Future.
    • Lawsuit Stops Trump regime from dismantling the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB).
    • Mass Deportations, the Economy, and You
    • Millions Stood Up: April 5 Hands Off Day of Action
    • New Study Shows Runaway Influence of Dark Money in Politics
    • Not Known Because Not Looked For: But Heard, Half Heard, in the Stillness Between Two Waves of the Sea~T.S. Eliot
    • Oxfam says billionaires’ wealth soared in 2024, with 4 ‘minted’ every week
    • SCOTUS Thinks Church-State Separation Is Anti-Religious Bigotry
    • The Misuse of Antisemitism Stifles Discussion in Indiana
    • The Next Person in a Cell With No Charges Could Be You
    • The Supreme Court Just Imperiled the Rights — and Lives — of All Trans People
    • The incompetence of these people is staggering.
    • Trump Finds Another Hellish Country for His Mass Deportations
    • ‘Lives Are In Danger' After a Trump Admin Spreadsheet Leak, Sources Say
    • "Let the scams roll": Elon Musk exploits culture wars to turn MAGA against consumer protections
    • 'Nothing Is Sacrosanct': GOP Floats Social Security Cuts After Musk Capitol Hill Visit
    • 19 things Trump and his team did this week
    • America’s Future Hangs on a Democratic Party Decision
    • Biden-era consumer agency head fired by Trump White House
    • Billions of dollars in weapons for the Netanyahu Government
    • CONGRESS KEEPS TRYING TO HIDE THE TRUE GAZA DEATH TOLL
    • Christian Nationalist at the Pentagon: Pete Hegseth’s Calvinist Sect Embraces Confederacy, Crusades
    • Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB)
    • Dear Republicans: Will You Salute the Tyrant or Save the Republic?
    • Debunking the Lies Politicians Say About Immigrants
    • DeepSeek just proved Lina Khan right
    • Democratic Party Leaders – Get Tough and Hold Regular Unofficial Congressional Hearings by and for the People!
    • Divest From Death From Appalachia to Gaza
    • Excerpted from David Corn, Our Land, January 11, 2025: A Parting Reminder from Jimmy Carter.
    • Excerpted from the NY Times release on January 14, 2025 Special Counsel Report Says Trump Would Have Been Convicted in Election Case
    • Fact-checking Trump claims about war in Ukraine
    • From Brownshirts to Billionaires: The Second Trump Inauguration
    • From Don't Fall for Trump's Magic Tricks, Editorial Opinion of 12/27/24, in Left Links of the Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism (CCDS)
    • From Hartmannreport.com of January 11, 2025:
    • From Public Citizen, 1/27/25: A CALL TO ACTION
    • Fwd: Senate must reject Trump's ludicrous nominees
    • GOP, RIP
    • GOP-led states risk leaving 10 million children hungry by rejecting $1.14 billion summer food program
    • Healthcare Is a Right: CEO’s Killing Ignites Calls for Reform Amid Trump’s Plan to Privatize Medicare
    • House Democrat plans articles of impeachment against Trump
    • How Trump and the GOP Fixed the 2026 Election — Yes, 2026
    • In Breaking USAID, the Trump Administration May Have Broken the Law
    • Is Elon Musk Staging a Coup? Unelected Billionaire Seizes Control at Treasury Dept. & Other Agencies
    • Is it time for America’s judges to go on strike?
    • Is this our imminent future?
    • It’s Even Worse Than We Expected
    • Jimmy Carter Was My Last President
    • Media Hype Set Up Tren de Aragua to Serve as Trump’s New Bogeyman
    • Musk’s Nazi Salute Becomes ‘Awkward Gesture’ in ‘Exuberant Speech’
    • New year, same Trump: MAGA pounces on New Orleans tragedy to spread disinformation
    • Now Donald Trump is coming for the Post Office.
    • Our Future Copresidents Wage Garbage Wars on LA Fires
    • Patriotic Americans Alert! A Trumpian Fascistic Coup is Underway—Stop It Before the Terror Starts
    • Project 2025 Is Already a Reality in Many States
    • Public Citizen, SDDF, and AFGE Sue Trump Administration Over DOGE
    • Record-high count shows government failing on homelessness. Trump and SCOTUS may make it even worse
    • Religious War
    • Rubio Bypasses Congress to Send Israel $4 Billion in Arms
    • STATEMENT: CAP’s Patrick Gaspard Mourns the Loss of President Jimmy Carter
    • States Don’t Have a Right to Exist. People Do.
    • TRUMP LOST. Vote Suppression Won.
    • Testimony prepared for the U.S. House of Representatives Full Committee on Education and the Workforce for a hearing titled “Unleashing America’s Workforce and Strengthening Our Economy”
    • The Bishop Who Spoke Truth to Trump Was Doing Her Job
    • The End Of Ethics?
    • The Limits of ‘Running Government Like a Business’
    • The Minimum Wage Claims You Keep Hearing Are Totally Fake. We Can Prove It.
    • The Trump Administration’s First 100 Days
    • The message from Musk and Trump: Government doesn’t owe you anything
    • There Is No Going Back
    • Tracking the First 100 Days
    • Transcript: Trump’s Angry USAID Rant Undercut by Surprise Rubio Video
    • Trump Celebrates After Killing Anti-Money-Laundering Law
    • Trump Executive Orders Will Reverberate in American Schools
    • Trump Is Taking His War on Immigrants to Despicable New Lows
    • Trump administration profile: Tulsi Gabbard
    • Trump/Musk Dictatorship Is Galvanizing the American People’s Resistance
    • Trump’s 2017 Tax Cuts Expire in 2025
    • Trump’s Attack on Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Provokes a Grassroots Backlash
    • Trump’s Gaza Takeover Would Violate International Law, Experts Say
    • Trump’s Tariffs Would Raise Prices, Harm U.S. Workers, and Make It Harder To Solve Global Problems
    • Turning the Tide
    • What the ADL should have said in response to Elon Musk’s salute
    • What the Hell Is Going on at NIH?
    • What’s in a Gulf’s Name? A Test for Democracy
    • Why We Should Still Audit the 2024 Election—and Every Election
    • ‘The Idea That China Growing Wealthier Is a Threat to Us Is Wacky’:
    • “The President Wanted It and I Did It”: Recording Reveals Head of Social Security’s Thoughts on DOGE and Trump
    • 'Project Esther': The Right-Wing Group Behind Project 2025 Has a Plan to Crack Down on America's Pro-Palestine Movement
    • AP Describes Musk’s Coup as ‘Penchant for Dabbling’
    • Christian Nationalists Dream of Taking Over America. This Movement Is Actually Doing It.
    • Don't Give The Chump An Inch Without Fighting
    • Donald Trumps' post presidency relationship with Vladimir Putin
    • Elon Musk has gained a concerning level of power over US national security
    • Ex-RNC Chair Rips GOP Listening to Trump: 'Blind Being Led by the Stupid'
    • From Reagan’s October Surprise to Trump’s Big Lie, Jack Smith Highlights the Most Shocking Truth Behind GOP Politics
    • GENOCIDE ARMS DEALERS
    • POLITICS SEPTEMBER 25, 2024 Criminalizing Pregnancy: A Record Number of Women Were Prosecuted the Year After Dobbs
    • Project 2025 Creators Have a Plan to 'Dismantle' Pro-Palestine Movement
    • Project 2025: The right-wing wish list for another Trump presidency
    • State Tax Cuts Lead to Budget Pressures
    • Why Republicans Are “Very Excited” About Dr. Oz
    • “ABSOLUTELY INSANE”: PENTAGON OFFICIALS ON TRUMP’S MILITARY DEPORTATION PLAN
    • A Corporate Poisoner Two-Steps Out Of Its Toxic Liability
    • A Jewish Couple Were Rejected As Foster Parents Because of Their Religion. This Is the Future Project 2025 Envisions
    • A Message from VFW National Commander Al Lipphardt
    • Army Major and Pentagon Officer Resigns Over US Support of Gaza Genocide
    • Bomb Threats - A Racist Misinformation Campaign
    • Bribery Unleashed: The Supreme Court's Wealth-Driven Corruption Crisis
    • Combating the Comstock Act
    • Democrats should run on a progressive economic agenda. Americans are ready
    • From MNSBC com by James Downie, 8/1/24
    • From Virginia to Colorado, MAGA infighting during primaries puts the GOP into disarray
    • His Delusions Lead to Trumpian Dangers
    • Inside Ziklag, the Secret Organization of Wealthy Christians Trying to Sway the Election and Change the Country
    • JD Vance on Trump
    • JD Vance's Audacious Attack: Demands Kamala Harris 'Show Gratitude' to White Male Power?
    • JD Vance’s ‘Elegy’ Grift
    • Journalists and press freedom groups demand Blinken stop US arms sales to Israel as Gaza death toll surpasses 40,000
    • Justice Samuel Alito blames upside-down American flag on his wife
    • Kamala Faces Her First Political Test: Defend Lina Khan, or Buckle to Corporate Power
    • Leaked UN report: Israeli war has killed 366 UN staff and family members as Netanyahu prepares to address Congress
    • Less for Labor Means More for CEOs
    • More Than 260 Ohio Doctors Join the List of People Who Denounce JD Vance
    • Outside spending in 2024 federal election tops $1 billion
    • Pro-Israel Legislators Have Concocted a Dangerous Ruse to Shut Down Nonprofits
    • Republicans Have a Bad Case of Walz Derangement Syndrome
    • Revealed: Trump witnesses received financial benefits from his businesses and campaign
    • Spotlight on Pennsylvania Gun Laws After Trump Shooting
    • The New York Times wants Biden gone — but they seem OK with a convicted felon
    • The Real Issue for Biden: 44,000 Vigilante Vote Challengers
    • The Supreme Court’s Contempt for Facts Is a Betrayal of Justice
    • These Corporations Are the True “Winners” of the War on Gaza
    • Trump’s Shooting Should Not Silence Warnings About His Threat to Democracy
    • U. S. Supreme Court Rulings
    • Watch Undercover Video: Project 2025 Co-Author Lays Out “Radical Agenda” for Next Trump Term
    • Who’s Sari Now? Trump Disses Asian-American Voters
    • Why I will do all I can to elect Joe Biden
    • “No One Is Above the Law” – Really Mr. Biden?
    • Blinken Is Sitting on Staff Recommendations To Sanction Israeli Military Units Linked to Killings or Rapes
    • Can't we get a nationwide gag order against Trump's violent threats?
    • Lawrence Tabak on how Wisconsin got Foxconned
    • Letter from an American - March 13, 2024
    • Letter from an American - September 15, 2023 (Friday)
    • Mark Meadows and Kevin McCarthy: Where do Republicans get these worms?
    • Republican Voices - Mattis, Kelly, and Barr
    • Republicans Voices- Haley's Interview
    • Scultting of Immigration Reform
    • Source Who Revealed How Taxes Steal for the Rich Rewarded With Five Years in Prison
    • State-Level Autocracy
    • Trump on Haley
    • US Lawmakers Received Over $58 Million From Israel Lobby Last Election Cycle
    • Under Trump, IRS Targeted Low-Income Families at Higher Rate Than Millionaires for First Time
    • Wisconsin’s Republicans Went to Extremes in Gerrymandering. Now They’re Scrambling to Protect That Power.
    • ACLU Comment on Fifth Circuit Decision on Mifepristone
    • AND STILL THEY BELIEVE--OR SAY THEY DO!
    • America Is #1 in Gun ownership & Gun Deaths - Time to Wake the Hell Up
    • As Income Inequality Skyrockets, the Rich Are Paying Less Into Social Security
    • Boosting RFK Jr., Murdoch Pushes 2024 Rightward
    • Clarence Thomas’ Billionaire Benefactor Tied To SCOTUS Bombshell
    • DeSantis is gutting Florida public education. The New York Times wants to talk about his 'brand'
    • Dead School Children are a Sign of America’s Trump-Fueled Fascism Problem
    • Democrats Introduce “Desperately Needed” Legislation to Overturn “Citizens United”
    • Do Republicans Worship Poverty, Death, and Disease?
    • Does America Need an Emmett Till Moment to See How Children are Mutilated by AR15s?
    • East Palestine Train Derailment Caused and Worsened by Real Democracy Derailment
    • Florida Rejects Black History AP Curriculum, Saying It “Lacks Educational Value”
    • For the love of guns
    • GOP Megadonor Is Funding a Far-Right Israeli Think Tank — and Establishment Democrats
    • Harvard Injury Control Research Center
    • Here’s The Real Goal Of Supreme Court Corruption
    • How Dark Money Bought A Supreme Court Seat
    • Is Trump's wall working?
    • Letter from an American - April 28, 2023
    • Letter from an American - July 13, 2023
    • Letter from an American - June 13, 2023
    • Letter from an American - June 18, 2023
    • Letter from an American - June 21, 2023
    • Letters from an American
    • Letters from an American
    • Neil Gorsuch is Preparing His Revenge: Gutting America's Protective Agencies
    • Once a fringe theory, "greedflation" gets its due
    • Republicans Accept No Blame For Bank Failures After They Voted To Deregulate Banks
    • Republicans Aim to Sneak Hundreds of Pro-Corporate Riders Into Must-Pass Bills
    • Republicans would rather kids be shot than let them read books
    • Roberts Memo Threatened To Challenge Ethics Rules
    • Saturday Report 7/1/23 - Are lunch counters denying service to Black people next?
    • Seniors’ Medicare Benefits Are Being Privatized Without Consent
    • The Grift is at the Core of the GOP's Existence
    • The Heritage Foundation
    • The monsters of American capitalism
    • Trump’s Former Budget Director Is Advising GOP to Cut Medicaid by $2 Trillion
    • We Ignore Robert F Kennedy Jr’s Candidacy at Our Peril
    • ‘The Court’s Position Is, No One Can Tell Them What to Do’
    • A radical proposal to achieve gun reform
    • Alarm as Koch bankrolls dozens of election denier candidates
    • Australia's 1996 gun law reforms: faster falls in firearm deaths, firearm suicides, and a decade without mass shootings
    • Congressional amendment opens floodgates for war profiteers and a major ground war on Russia
    • Connecting Foreign Policy to Domestic Needs
    • Conservative Activist Poured Millions Into Groups Seeking to Influence Supreme Court on Elections and Discrimination
    • Controversial Texas GOP platform would ‘prohibit’ Palestinian state
    • Corporate Media Want Us to Think Biden “Lost” to Progressives on Infrastructure
    • Fetterman Hits The Ground Running!
    • GOP Is Setting the Stage for a Possible Coup in 2024 While Dems Ignore Threat
    • New Puerto Rico Debt Plan Is a False “Solution” Crafted to Benefit Capitalists
    • Republicans Say Biden’s Plan Taxes the Middle Class. That’s False. Biden’s plan fulfills his campaign promise.
    • Ron DeSantis’s Ousting of Elected Official Sets a Dangerous Precedent
    • Texas Redux
    • The Best Parts of the Inflation Reduction Act Came Out of Progressive Advocacy
    • The Connection Between a Child-Murderer, Reaganism and Today’s GOP
    • The Constitution Isn’t Working And the Supreme Court can’t fix it by itself.
    • We Need Elected Leaders Who Will Ban the Sale of Assault Weapons
    • What Trump Has Taken From Us
    • Why do the media keep saying this election was a loss for Democrats? It wasn’t
    • ‘It’s going to be an army’: Tapes reveal GOP plan to contest elections
    • ‘More Guns, More Gun Deaths—That’s Really It’
    • ‘We do not need a massive increase’: Sanders criticizes Biden’s $813 billion military budget
    • $10,000 Invested in Defense Stocks When Afghanistan War Began Now Worth Almost $100,000
    • Adam Kinzinger: Republicans Are ‘Frigging Crazy’
    • An Open Letter in Defense of Democracy
    • Are the Motives of War Profiteers Driving Us to the Brink of a New Cold War?
    • As Build Back Better Is Gutted, Defense Act Is Deemed a “Must-Pass” Bill
    • Big Panic For a Democracy That Never Was
    • GOP 'Millionaires Caucus' Stands to Benefit From Obstructing Tax Hikes on the Rich
    • How Tucker Carlson Became the Voice for White Grievance
    • January 21, 2022 - Letters from an American
    • Leaked Chats Reveal Evidence of Hate Crimes by U.S. Fascists
    • Merrick Garland Unveils Plan B for Protecting Voting Rights
    • Republican voters don't actually "believe" the Big Lie about January 6 — they're in on the con
    • Senate education committee hears conflicting testimony over who should control school curriculum
    • Supreme Court Rules for Death by Covid
    • The Biggest, Most Dangerous Divide in Politics
    • The Fight for Voting Rights Won’t End
    • The Taliban Surrendered in 2001
    • Why We Need To Spend Four Trillion Dollars by David Brooks (!!!!!!)
    • ‘They Do Not Tell Both Sides of the Inflation Story’
    • LIES AND WAR: From Truman to Rumsfeld and Beyond
    • Critical Race Theory
    • How Far Will the GOP Go to Steal the 2022 Election?
    • The Corporate Sponsors of Voter Suppression
    • 125 Democrats Say Military Aid to Israel Shouldn’t Depend on Human Rights Record
    • 8 Election Takeaways: The Progressive Electorate Has Spoken
    • A Bigotry-Laced 2024 GOP Primary Is Already Breathing Down Our Necks
    • America’s Dangerous Movement Toward Oligarchy, Authoritarianism and Kleptocracy
    • Avoiding War With Russia Over Ukraine Is Not Weakness—It Is the Right Thing to Do
    • Bills Targeting Local Officials Could Allow GOP to Overturn Election Results
    • Boebert, Gosar and Brooks Aided Capitol Attackers, Jayapal Says in Letters
    • Can Peak Gerrymandering by GOP be Challenged by Progressives?
    • City And State
    • Commentary: What a difference a word makes
    • DEEP STRUCTURES, HATE, AND VIOLENCE: The Long Road to Societal Decay (and Renovation)
    • Fulfilling the Constitution's Promotion of the General Welfare
    • Helene unleashes a hurricane of anti-semitism
    • How The NRA Helped Foment An Armed Insurrection At The Capitol
    • How the Build Back Better Act Would Alleviate Inflation and Drive Sustained Prosperity
    • Jill Stein: The Grifter Who May Hand Trump the White House Again
    • Leading money-in-politics data nonprofits merge to form OpenSecrets, a state-of-the-art democratic accountability organization
    • Legal expert tears apart flawed thinking of 'deeply unprincipled' Supreme Court originalists
    • Letters from an American
    • Money Money Money…
    • No Corporate Law and Power Questions for Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson
    • ON DEMOCRACY: “CAN WE TALK”
    • Republicans Are Vocally Opposed to Democracy, From Texas to Myanmar
    • SCOTUS Is Considering A Deregulation Bomb
    • Sanders Is Making Excellent Use of His Power as Budget Committee Chair
    • Santa Claus Is About To Drop a Bomb On Biden
    • THE 28th AMENDMENT
    • The Dark Money Influencing Senator Manchin’s Right-Wing Agenda
    • The GOP And QAnon
    • The rise of domestic extremism in America
    • This Country Is a Living Nightmare
    • Time To Rethink Federalism
    • Trump Tried A Coup In Plain Sight — And Has, So Far, Gotten Away With It
    • Universities Told Students to Leave the Country. ICE Just Said They Didn’t Actually Have To.
    • Welcome to the last years of the American Century: It's been an unmitigated disaster
  • Gaza
    • 300 Gaza Children, Women Killed in One ‘Horrifying Night’ – Haaretz
    • A Mother’s Plea From Gaza to the People of the World
    • Israel Kills Palestinian Journalist Hossam Shabat as US Media Look Away
    • Oscar-winning Palestinian director of ‘No Other Land’ released from Israeli detention after being assaulted
    • STOP the WAR in Gaza
    • Sanitizing Resumption of Genocide as ‘Pressure on Hamas’
    • U.N. Accuses Israel of Targeting Reproductive Health Facilities in Gaza
    • “Deprivation by Design”: Israel Intensifies Mass Killing Campaign in Gaza With Starvation and Daily Strikes
    • An excerpt from a DemocracyNow! interview of December 27, 2024, of Amy Goodman with Gideon Levy, Ha'aretz journalist:
    • Archiving Gaza: The Race to Save Evidence of War Crimes and Mass Destruction
    • How US activists are infiltrating Israeli events selling Palestinian land
    • Israel Loosened Its Rules to Bomb Hamas Fighters, Killing Many More Civilians
    • Israel's "Moral Blindness": Gaza Babies Freeze; Strikes Kill Medical Workers, Reporters
    • Meet State Dept. Official Michael Casey, Who Resigned over Gaza After U.S. Ignored Israeli Abuses
    • Over 20,000 Palestinian Children Orphaned by War in Gaza
    • Reconstruction, Reparations, or Expulsion: the Future of the Gaza Strip
    • The Last Two Weeks Have Been the Most Dire in Gaza War: Hospital Director
    • The latest report on Israeli actions in the West Bank From substack, Drop Site News:
    • Trump's Gaza shock wave stuns Middle East and some in White House
    • UN Says Food Availability Has Hit 'All-Time Low' in Gaza as Forced Famine Takes Hold
    • ‘We Have a Widespread Failure to Properly Name This Plan for Ethnic Cleansing’: CounterSpin interview with Gregory Shupak on Palestine ethnic cleansing
    • “Lawless”: Marwan Bishara on Israel Bombing Syria 800 Times & Expanding Occupation of Golan Heights
    • “You Can’t Buy Paradise With Blood”
    • As Infested Flour Becomes a Staple, State Dept “Still Assessing” Israel’s Aid Restrictions to Gaza
    • Cashing in on the War in Gaza
    • Gaza/Amsterdam
    • Get ready for an extraordinary example of Netanyahu’s wanton corruption
    • ISRAEL’S YEAR OF KILLING, MAIMING, STARVING, AND TERRORIZING THE PEOPLE OF GAZA
    • In Midst of Palestinian Genocide, Late Hamas Leader Scolded for ‘Eradicating’ Israel
    • Israel Deliberately Blocked Humanitarian Aid to Gaza, Two Government Bodies Concluded. Antony Blinken Rejected Them.
    • Israel Is Routinely Shooting Children in the Head in Gaza: U.S. Surgeon & Palestinian Nurse
    • Israeli Attacks Continue on Gaza’s Schools, Killing Displaced Palestinian Children Seeking Shelter
    • Israeli soldiers protest war service – U.S. veterans support them
    • Israel’s War Against the World
    • Massive Israeli Airstrikes in Lebanon Kill Over 180 People, Injure 700+
    • Netanyahu – “Nothing Can Stop Us” – Not Even the Majority of Israelis
    • Netanyahu's Ethnic Cleansing in Gaza Is on Display for All to See
    • On-the-Ground Reporting Dismantles Israeli Claim Bolstering Case for War With Iran
    • Palestinian Journalist Mujahed al-Saadi Violently Arrested by Israeli Forces in Home Raid
    • Save the Children in Gaza: Israel Bombs Polio Vax Site, Bans UNRWA in Attacks on Humanitarian Aid
    • The Most Prominent Historian of Palestine on What the Last Year Has Meant
    • The Palestine Exception to Free Speech: A Movement Under Attack in the US
    • U.N. Says Israeli War in Gaza Has ‘Catastrophic Consequences’ for Children
    • U.S. Jewish Institutions Are Purging Their Staffs of Anti-Zionists
    • We, Israelis, Are Calling for Global Pressure on Israel To Force an Immediate Ceasefire
    • Zionist quagmire – sinking deeper
    • “Absolutely Terrifying”: Israel’s War Comes to Lebanon, Setting Record-Breaking Single-Day Death Toll
    • “Ethnic Cleansing”: Israeli Group B’Tselem Calls for World to Stop Israel’s Siege of Northern Gaza
    • 'Unfathomable': Lancet Study Estimates Gaza Death Toll May Exceed 186,000
    • A Crack in the 75-Year-Old Wall of Impunity: South Africa’s Court Challenge of Israeli Genocide
    • A Letter from Senator Bernie Sanders to YOU:
    • ANTISEMITISM CHARGES ARE USED TO CRUSH DEBATE
    • An American was just shot in the West Bank. The American press can't be bothered.
    • An Israeli Strike Kills the Mayor
    • Does Israel Really Believe It Can Win a War Against Hezbollah?
    • Excerpt from: Video Analysis Shows Israeli Strike Used Bomb That Appeared to Be U.S.-Made
    • Fmr. Israeli Hostage Negotiator Gershon Baskin Slams Netanyahu for Blocking Ceasefire Deal
    • Forget Biden's "pause": Israel is destroying Gaza with a vast arsenal of U.S. weapons
    • In Gaza, Playing “the Beautiful Game” Amidst Slaughter
    • Israeli Human Rights Lawyer Attacked While Documenting Settler Raid on Gaza Aid Convoy
    • Israeli Minister Calls to Reduce Humanitarian Aid as Palestinians Starve in Gaza
    • Israeli Police Detain Palestinian Journalist Attacked by Settler Mob
    • Israeli Whistleblowers Expose Torture of Palestinian Detainees
    • Israeli strikes on schools kill dozens, mostly children
    • Math proves that Israel’s stated goals are an epic lie
    • Palestinian Truck Drivers Face New Risks After Settlers Attacked Aid Convoy in West Bank
    • Rabbi Alissa Wise & Israeli-Born Novelist Ayelet Waldman Arrested Trying to Bring Food to Gaza
    • The Gaza Genocide Deepens: The Reckoning Begins for the Perpetrators
    • We’re fighting to stop a genocide. Slanders against our movements are a distraction.
    • “Criminal Act”: Israel Bans Al Jazeera, Largest Int’l News Org. in Gaza, Ahead of Rafah Invasion
    • “Stop This War Right Now”: U.S. Doctor Who Saved Sen. Duckworth’s Life in Iraq, Now Trapped in Gaza
    • “Terrible Mistake”: Leading Israelis Say Netanyahu’s Invite to Address Congress Rewards Bad Behavior
    • “The Plan Is Genocide”: Palestine’s U.K. Ambassador Decries Israel’s Attack on Gaza & U.S. Complicity
    • 'A Massive War Crime': Israel Announces Total Blockade of Gaza Strip
    • 'Cashing in on Genocide': Israeli Firm Pitches Beachfront Real Estate in Leveled Gaza
    • 'Unprecedented In Modern History': U.S. Aid Experts Warn Gaza Likely Already Experiencing Famine
    • All of Palestine is under attack.
    • Amnesty International: Global Breakdown of Int’l Law Amid Flagrant War Crimes in Gaza & Beyond
    • Bernie Sanders issues scathing statement directed at Netanyahu over campus protests
    • Biden Has the Power to Stop Netanyahu
    • Blinken Is Sitting on Staff Recommendations to Sanction Israeli Military Units Linked to Killings or Rapes
    • For the Safety of Jews and Palestinians, Stop Weaponizing Antisemitism
    • International Court of Justice Rules That Israel Must Stop Killing Palestinians
    • Israel Is Wielding Starvation as a Weapon of War
    • Israel Must Change Its Policy on Humanitarian Aid to Gaza
    • Israel's Day of Reckoning
    • Israeli Army Official Admits Gaza Bombing Campaign Is Focused on 'Damage and Not on Accuracy'
    • Israeli Attacks on Journalists Stifle Reporting on Gaza Horrors
    • It’s not just bullets and bombs. I have never seen health organisations as worried as they are about disease in Gaza
    • Jonathan Glazer’s Brave Oscar Speech Represents the Best of Judaism
    • José Andrés Condemns Israel For Killing Aid Workers: ‘Stop Using Food As A Weapon’
    • My Name Is Rachel Corrie
    • On Yom Kippur, Solidarity With Palestinians Is a Sacred Act
    • Only Outside Pressure Can Stop Israel’s War Crimes
    • Opinion The lesson from the Hamas attack: The U.S. should recognize a Palestinian state
    • REFLECTIONS ON CHANUKAH AND THE WAR ON GAZA
    • Saving Israel and Palestine
    • Senators challenge Biden: Halt US arms to Israel or break the law amid Gaza’s aid blockade crisis
    • Some Facts for the Unconvinced: Why We Need a Gaza Ceasefire Now
    • Stop the Worsening UNDERCOUNT of Palestinian Casualties in Gaza
    • The Companies Profiting from Israel’s 2023-2024 Attacks on Gaza
    • The Iron Dome Is Global – And So Is the Resistance
    • The Middle East Crisis Remains the Same in 2023 (as posted originally in 2009 and updated)
    • The World’s Moral Failure in Gaza
    • The dirty tactics of Zionist censorship against pro-Palestine voices
    • Under Cover of Gaza War, Assault on West Bank Accelerates
    • What Are We Doing??
    • ‘What in the Slaughter of Palestinians Is So Important to the US?’
    • ‘When You’re in a Colonial Situation, the Colonial Power Initiates Violence’
    • ‘Youth Against Dictatorship’: Meet Israel’s new class of conscientious objectors
    • “Efforts to silence us serve Israel’s leaders”
    • “Israelism” on Tour: New Film Examines American Jews’ Growing Rejection of Israel’s Occupation
    • “Nothing Will Stop Us”
    • B’Tselem Accuses Israel Government of Backing Pogrom in West Bank Town of Huwara
    • From Drone Strikes to Settler Attacks, Israel Intensifies Effort to “Completely Take Over Palestine”
    • Israel is a tough sell in the US as it slides toward autocracy - opinion
    • Israeli forces raid Palestinian towns as settlers call for 'burning' of Huwwara
    • Living on a War Planet
    • “The Palestine Laboratory”: Antony Loewenstein on How Israel Exports the Technology of Occupation
    • Amnesty International Defends Report on Israeli Apartheid, Rejecting Criticism from U.S. & Israel
    • Google and Amazon Workers Demand End to Contract That Fuels Israeli Apartheid
    • ICC Wanted to Investigate Israeli War Crimes. Now It’s Caving to US Pressure.
    • In Jenin and Nablus, resistance and despair go hand in hand
    • Israel Authorizes Military to Kill Palestinians With Drones in the West Bank
    • Israeli Attacks on Gaza Kill 44, Including 15 Children. Will Ceasefire Hold?
    • Lift the Siege of Gaza
    • Palestinians as “The Others”
    • The West Worries Too Much About Escalation in Ukraine
    • Tlaib: Biden Must ‘Hold Israel Accountable’ for Raid on Palestine Rights Groups
    • Urgent: Largest Expulsion of Palestinians: Please Protest
    • Israel Lashes Out at Ben & Jerry’s for Boycott in Occupied Palestinian Territory
    • 'Palestinian Lives Matter,' Declares Bernie Sanders in NYT Op-ed
    • 50 Palestinians thrown out of Israeli bus after 3 Jewish settlers refused to travel with non-Jews
    • As a Rabbi Raised in South Africa, I Can’t Ignore Israel Is an Apartheid State
    • Comment: Our View of an Eye for an Eye
    • Dead on Arrival: Israel’s Blowback Genocide
    • End the War? Netanyahu Is Set to Use Sinwar's Death to Keep Himself in Power
    • Faces of heroism in Gaza: Doctors, taxi drivers, journalists
    • In the Face of Israel’s Violence, Being a Good Parent Means Fighting Colonialism
    • Israel Isn’t Signing ‘Peace’ Deals
    • Israel’s War Against Press Turns More Literal
    • States Have No Inherent ‘Right to Exist’—but It’s a Media Fixation on Israel/Palestine
  • Education
    • 20 University of Utah international students see visas revoked by Trump admin
    • China calls for protections for students in US after congressional panel demands data from colleges
    • From Public Citizen, March 13, 2025
    • Johns Hopkins laying off more than 2,000 workers after dramatic cut in USAID funding
    • The U. S. Department of Education
    • There’s a bleak historical explanation for why Columbia’s capitulation to Trump is so concerning
    • Trump Is Cracking Down on the Colleges That Cave to Him
    • What Do We Tell Our Grandchildren?
    • 'Have to fight:' IPS school board strongly opposes bill that would dissolve district
    • America's college chaos
    • Council on American-Islamic Relations Brands Harvard a “Hostile Campus”
    • Exposing ties between MIT and Israel’s army
    • From Diane Ravitch in NY Review of Books:
    • PNS Story: Rural Students’ Educational Choices Shrink As Colleges Slash Majors
    • Research on a Device To Stop Bleeding? Too ‘Woke’ for Ted Cruz
    • School Choice Is Not What It Sounds Like
    • Trump Pulled $400 Million From Columbia. Other Schools Could Be Next.
    • Trump orders schools to adopt 'patriotic education' in the classroom
    • Trump vowed to leverage federal money to fight antisemitism. He’s starting at Columbia
    • “Half My Students Were Gone”: How Trump’s Immigration Agenda Is Disrupting Education
    • Public Citizen: Free Online Tool
    • Time, Place, Manner
    • America’s Billionaires Are Teaching Your Kids To Cheat Taxes
    • COLUMBIA CUTS DUE PROCESS FOR STUDENT PROTESTERS AFTER CONGRESS DEMANDS HARSHER PUNISHMENT
    • Hoosier families face financial aid setback with new FAFSA delay
    • IS THE RIGHT TO VOTE EXPEDITIOUSLY A PART OF CIVIC LITERACY
    • In Defense of the Right to Free Speech and Peaceful Protest on University Campuses
    • Israeli teachers who criticize the war have been yanked from the classroom — and thrown in jail
    • New IN law requires five-year tenure reviews of professors
    • The MAGA Vendetta Against Arts And Education
    • Vic’s Statehouse Notes #386 – Accountability is key for publicly funded schooling
    • AG Rokita digs in on the ‘Eyes on Education’ portal amid growing opposition
    • Academic app supplements college admissions information
    • Colleges see big drop in foreign-language enrollments
    • HELP OR HARM? AG Rokita’s new webpage
    • IN nonprofit wants to strengthen teachers' impact on students
    • Skipping School: America’s Hidden Education Crisis
    • Speaking Of Higher Education
    • Student Protests for Gaza Targeted by Pro-Israel Groups for Alleged Civil Rights Violations
    • Teachers worry about safety and privacy of Attorney General Rokita's new parent portal
    • The McCarthyist Attack on Gaza Protests Threatens Free Thought for All
    • The War on Education—in Gaza and at Home
    • U.S. students' math scores plunge in global education assessment
    • Universities should be a place for discussion and debate: Oppose Political Meddling
    • n Win For Free Expression, Judge Rules Lawsuit Challenging Escambia County, FL Book Bans Can Move Forward
    • ‘Egregious:’ A legal perspective on Columbia University’s mass arrests
    • ‘Moms’ Radical Attack on Public Education
    • “Kill All Arabs”: The Feds Are Investigating UMass Amherst for Anti-Palestinian Bias
    • 'Outrageous': Education Secretary blasts House Republicans who benefited from student debt relief
    • 1961 Dr. Seuss book offers lesson on racism too advanced for Ohio school district official to allow
    • Defunding public libraries: Republicans' war on reading goes nuclear
    • Expanding voucher program would be bad for kids, bad for Indiana
    • Fact Sheet: Diversity & Inclusion Activities Under Title VI
    • Humanists All - What is lost in the precipitous decline of the arts and humanities
    • IN College Applications On Decline as High School Grads Delay Higher Ed
    • Indiana School Tailors Program for College Students with Autism
    • Krach: 'We're creating a national security movement'
    • Letter from an American - June 29, 2023
    • Muzzled by DeSantis, Critical Race Theory Professors Cancel Courses or Modify Their Teaching
    • New research underscores widespread, pandemic-fueled learning loss in Indiana
    • North Dakota Anti-LGBTQ Bill Would Imprison Librarians for Not Removing Books
    • Targeting the Freedom to Teach and Learn
    • Texas A&M suspended professor accused of criticizing Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick in lecture
    • The Meaning of African American Studies
    • Unbelievable! Georgia teacher fired for reading children's book
    • Utah School District Bans the Bible for “Vulgarity” and “Violence”
    • Vouchers could accelerate shift away from public schools
    • What Just Happened at West Virginia University Should Worry All of Us
    • 'Goes beyond ignorance' Historians slam DeSantis' claims about American slavery
    • A surgeon explains why AR-15-style rifles are so deadly
    • A tiny, largely unknown Christian college is at the epicenter of today's dark conservative movement
    • Adjunct and Tenured Faculty Must Unite to Resist Pandemic Opportunism on Campus
    • An Open Letter to Chuck Hockema
    • DEFENDING ACADEMIC FREEDOM AND DISCUSSIONS OF RACISM, SEXISM, AND THE FUNDAMENTALS OF THE ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL SYSTEM
    • Dictating Civics: How the Purdue Civics Literacy Requirement Was Imposed by Trustees and Administrators
    • Education bill dies in the Indiana Senate
    • Experts Highlight Importance of Awareness in Bullying Prevention
    • Fear-Based “Parental Bills of Rights” Are a Right-Wing Siege on Public Education, Advocates Say
    • Higher education's sea change
    • How a diverse coalition in a red state shut down anti-CRT legislation
    • IN House Passes Bill Targeting "Critical Race Theory"
    • IUPUI to Split Into 2 Universities
    • In the Shadow of the Ivory Tower
    • Indiana Struggles with Ongoing Teacher Shortage
    • Most-Banned Author in America Calls BS on Parents’ ‘Concern’
    • National hypersonic ground test facility to be built in Purdue Aerospace District
    • New wave of teachers’ strikes rolls across US
    • Purdue English’s Uncertain Future
    • Ralph Nader: Students, Campuses and Dominant Corporate Power
    • Report Details Methods to Address IN Declining College Enrollment
    • Right-Wing Book Censorship Is an Attack on the Minds of Children
    • Right-Wing “American Birthright” Curriculum Pushes Christianity, Obscures Racism
    • The Military-Student-Debt Complex
    • U.S. schools pull more than 1,000 book titles in 'unparalleled' censorship bid, report finds
    • Virginia’s Governor Mansion Tour No Longer Includes Mention of Enslaved People
    • We don't need no education: Now Arizona says teachers don't require college degrees
    • ‘Everything on the table’ as IPS addresses enrollment decline and too many schools
    • 'Sounds Like Fascism': DeSantis Signs Law to Collect Political Views of Professors
    • A choice for the University of Florida: Academic freedom or government stooge | Editorial
    • Bradley-Funded Attacks on Schools Are Really an Assault on American Democracy
    • COMMERCIAL UNIVERSITY SELLS OFF FOOD SERVICES, CREATES A NEW DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL STUDIES
    • Colleges Still Obsess Over National Rankings. For Proof, Look at Their Strategic Plans.
    • In win for Indiana teachers unions, federal judge temporarily blocks new state law
    • Koch Network Infiltration of Public Schools 'Harms Students, Teachers, and Our Democracy': Report
    • Letter to the editor: 'Ultimate insider' has hope in English department's 'dark time'
    • Letter to the editor: Why our English department deserves more respect
    • RETHINKING THE UNIVERSITY IN AN AGE OF EDUCATIONAL CRISIS: LOOKING BACK AND MOVING FORWARD
    • Submitted Opinion Piece: Koonin's inclusion in the Presidential Lecture series 'isn't courageous;' It feeds public disinformation
    • Tennessee Rejects “Moms for Liberty” Complaint Over Lessons on MLK
    • The Rise of the UniverCity
    • The Secret Corporate Memo Behind Today's Guerilla War on Campus Progressives
    • UNIVERSITIES, FOREVER WARS, AND THE NEW COLD WAR
    • UPDATE: CLA Dean blames English department for budgeting problems
    • Valparaiso University denies wrongdoing but will close Confucius Institute
    • Where are all the women?
    • ‘A For-Profit Company Is Trying to Privatize as Many Public Libraries as They Can’
    • 'On our own terms': How scholars of color are correcting the narrative of national tragedies
    • A Century after the Tulsa Race Massacre, Oklahoma is Locked in a Battle over how to Talk about it
    • A Pro-Israel Lawyer Is Weaponizing Public Records Law Against Palestinian Activists
    • ACLU of Indiana Files First Amendment Challenge to Firing of Porter County Educator
    • As states cut budgets, racial funding gaps between districts could widen
    • Critical Race Theory
    • Discovery Park District on Purdue campus attracting those who can live, work from anywhere
    • Doctors: Mask Up in Schools, Get Vaccine to Protect Hoosier Kids
    • Faculty Compensation Survey Results
    • Feb. 24, 1969: Tinker v. Des Moines Case Wins Free Speech Rights for Students
    • Fewer Student-Aid Applications Could Mean Less College Enrollment
    • For-Profit Charter Schools Provide an Entryway for Private Investors to Exploit Public Education
    • Guest Blog: Where Does the Bizarre Hysteria About ‘Critical Race Theory’ Come From? Follow the Money!
    • Headline: Exposing the Motive for the Sudden Wave of Attacks on Schools That Teach Critical Race Theory
    • Higher Education Is Now a Battlefield Between Workers and Corporatization
    • Higher Education and Economic and Political Elites: The Harvard Mode
    • If the Fed Can Bail Out Wall Street, It Can Rescue Public Education
    • In an Era of Pandemic and Protest, STEM Education Can’t Pretend to Be Apolitical
    • It’s About More Than Banning Books And Distorting History
    • Lafayette school trustee: Who benefits from school choice?
    • Lafayette school trustee: Who benefits from school choice?
    • MITCH DANIELS CRITICIZES THOSE WHO ARE OUTRAGED BY BOMBING HOSPITALS, KILLING CHILDREN, AND STARVING A MILLION PEOPLE
    • New Indiana law is meant to protect free speech at universities. It may do the opposite.
    • Pandemic Could Worsen Educational Inequity for Indiana Women
    • Purdue Must Restore Its English Program
    • Purdue responds to Daniels' letter
    • Some Newark schools face laptop shortages, leaving families to find their own devices
    • THE CONTRADICTIONS FACING 21St CENTURY HIGHER EDUCATION: THE CASE OF “CIVIC LITERACY” AT PURDUE UNIVERSITY
    • THOUGHTS ON HIGHER EDUCATION: 2021
    • Teachers Singled Out in Indiana Union Membership Bil
    • The Appalling Indiana Statehouse…
    • The Dark History of School Choice
    • The Invisible Hazard Afflicting Thousands of Schools
    • The LynnBerk37 Scholarship
    • Underrepresentation of high-achieving students of color in gifted programs
    • Universities, we have a problem we are afraid to speak of
    • Where next for local teacher pay, after it hits new state $40K minimum?
    • Zionist Groups in US Operate Campaigns to Quash Palestine Solidarity on Campus
    • ‘A Watershed Moment’ for Shared Governance
    • “Campus Reform” Is Funneling Koch Money to Groom Right-Wing “Journalists”
  • Labor
    • Burrito economics: Republican claims about price rises are so much hot air
    • 24 hours in the life of American workers
    • ‘We Need to Stop Taking Employers’ Viewpoint as Gospel’
    • After Hundreds of Meatpacking Workers Died From COVID-19, Congress Wants Answers
    • Amazon Is Paying Consultants Nearly $10,000 a Day to Obstruct Union Drive
    • Amazon “Broke the Law”: Union Seeks New Election After Alabama Warehouse Organizing Drive Fails
    • Amazon’s Anti-Union Bullying Shows Why We Need the PRO Act
    • Arconic workers walk the picket line
    • CWA: Time to Stop Rewarding Contractors That Send Good Jobs Overseas
    • Crediting Xenophobia—Rather Than Organizing—With Raising Workers’ Wages
    • Despite Defeat, Sanders Calls Those Behind Amazon Union Drive an 'Inspiration to Workers' Nationwide
    • In What Universe Is a $15 Wage “Too High”? Joe Manchin’s.
    • Judge Orders T-Mobile to Disband Illegal Workplace Organization
    • Latinx Farmworkers Risking Their Lives During COVID Struggle to Access Vaccines
    • Millions of jobs probably aren’t coming back, even after the pandemic end
    • New Zealand Law Granting Paid Leave for Miscarriage Sparks Organizing in US
    • Not Far From Bessemer, Over a Thousand Alabama Coal Miners Are on Strike
    • Pensacola State College faculty demand protection
    • Reclaiming Paul Robeson in the Time of COVID-19
    • Republicans Won Blue-Collar Votes. They’re Not Offering Much in Return.
    • The Shocking Reality of a Future of Shrinking Jobs
    • Washington, DC Lawsuit Claims Amazon Violates Antitrust Laws by Inflating Prices
    • Workers and Communities vs Amazon
    • ‘Proposition 22 Is a Backlash to Victories Workers Have Had’
    • "They Actually Had a List”: ICE Arrests Workers Involved in Landmark Labor Rights Case
    • Airport security: Musk’s chainsaw clashes with union steel
    • Department of Labor appeals decision to block overtime rule
    • Firing NLRB Board Member Gwynne Wilcox
    • Trump's Executive Order Eliminates Biden-era Minimum Wage Increase
    • Trump’s Factory Fantasy: The Middle Class Won’t Rise Without Unions. Full stop.
    • Federal Workers, Stay in Your Jobs and Help Resist the Trump-Musk Takeover
    • Trump’s Government of Billionaires
    • Biden’s labor report card: Historian gives ‘Union Joe’ a higher grade than any president since FDR
    • ‘STRIKES WORK!’ BOEING UNION WORKERS WIN TENTATIVE CONTRACT WITH 35% WAGE INCREASE
    • Shawn Fain: “Trump Doesn’t Give a Damn About Working-Class People”
    • Testimony prepared for the U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Economic Policy for a hearing titled “Banning Noncompete Agreements”
    • The UAW’s federal monitor twice pressured the union to back off its call for Gaza ceasefire, then launched an investigation
    • With Few Workplace Safety Protections, Latino Worker Deaths Are Surging
    • 2023: Annual Report on Black Unemployment
    • 75,000 Kaiser nurses, pharmacists and other workers have walked off the job
    • How Kroger's Merger Push Leads Back To Alleged Human Trafficker
    • How Reagan's Embrace of “Greed is Good” Brought Us Broken Airplane Doors & Being on Hold for Hours...
    • Indiana Community Action Poverty Institute
    • Millions of workers now have stronger overtime pay protections
    • Tennessee Volkswagen employees overwhelmingly vote to join United Auto Workers union
    • The Era of Abundant Labor Reporting Is Coming to an End
    • The Right Has a New Playbook to Crush Unions and Enshrine Corporate Power
    • YOU LOVE TO SEE IT: Electric Vehicles Will Be Union Made
    • ‘A Minimum-Wage Increase Can Benefit the Whole Economy’
    • ‘You Are an Inspiration,’ Sanders Tells Hotel Workers
    • As Starbucks Stalls Negotiations, Workers Use New Tactics to Push for Contract
    • Class and Race in the USA Labor Movement: The Case of the Packinghouse Workers
    • Damar Hamlin Nearly Died on the Job. Too Many Workers Face Similar Threats.
    • Dr. King and the Civil Rights-Labor Alliance
    • For a Just Transition, Recruit More Women Electricians
    • Mother Jones Organized Against Child Labor 120 Years Ago: Let’s Resume Her Fight
    • Telling the Story of Female Electricians
    • The Union Membership Rate Has Dropped to a Historic Low. It Doesn't Have to Be This Way.
    • The federal program that can protect workers when foreign trade kills their jobs
    • UAW seeks Washington backing to pressure Detroit Three automakers in labor talks
    • What Unionized Starbucks Workers Think of Howard Schultz’ Testimony to Bernie Sanders
    • Workers Fighting Union-Busting May Have a New Legal Tool at Their Disposal
    • ‘The Thing That’s Made the Union Strong Is to Privilege the Lowest Paid’
    • A Tax Credit Was Meant to Help Marginalized Workers Get Permanent Jobs. Instead It’s Subsidizing Temp Work.
    • April 28 - Workers Memorial Day
    • At a Massive Union Rally, the Promise of a Better South
    • Chicago mandated contracts for domestic workers—and the results have been life changing
    • Companies That Illegally Fire Workers Will Now Have to Pay for Debts Incurred
    • Damning Report Shows Unions Have Plenty of Money to Organize—They Just Don't Spend It
    • Home Depot Workers Have Filed to Form the First Union at the Retail Behemoth
    • How Congress starved the agency that protects workers
    • IU Bloomington graduate workers, supporters push back on administration's response
    • Inflation Is Too High to Settle; We Want a Good Contract!
    • Low-wage Workers Access to Sick Days
    • More US Employers Are Trapping Workers in a New Form of Indentured Servitude
    • NLRB Is Understaffed and Underfunded at Critical Moment for Labor Moveme
    • Nearly Half of All Warehouse Injuries in 2021 Happened at Amazon Warehouses
    • New York Amazon Workers Vote to Form Union in Historic First
    • President Biden’s first 18 months
    • Ron Johnson Suggests That Federal Minimum Wage Should Be Eliminated
    • Stakes Are High for Workers, So Unions Are Mobilizing for Midterms
    • Starbucks Workers Are Facing Down One of the Most Intense Union-Busting Campaigns in Decades
    • Trump Judge Allows Starbucks to Assail Press Freedom
    • YOU LOVE TO SEE IT: Amazon’s Anti-Union Campaign Backfires
    • "We Are Emptying Out Their Shelves": Nabisco Workers’ 5-Week Strike Won by Shutting Down Business as Usual
    • A Landmark Win for Domestic Workers Lurks in the Reconciliation Bill
    • A Unionization Wave Is Reshaping Museums and Cultural Institutions Across the US
    • Alabama Amazon Workers May Get Another Crack at a Union
    • Approval of Labor Unions at Highest Point Since 1965
    • At Least 27 Million US Workers Can’t Afford All the Basic Necessities of Life
    • Biden Promised a Workplace Safety Rule. Industry Got Him to Issue a Narrow One.
    • Facing wage theft? Here’s what you should know.
    • Poverty Is A Policy Choice
    • Rare Unionizing Opportunity in Big Box and Retail Chains
    • Starbucks workers at a Buffalo store unionize in a contentious vote.
    • Student Workers of Columbia Are Running the Biggest Ongoing U.S. Labor Strike
    • The Climate Crisis Is Coming for Undocumented Farmworkers First
    • Union Wins Election at a Second Buffalo-Area Starbucks
    • Workers Deserved Bernie’s Build Back Better, But They’ll Likely Get Manchin’s
    • America Is Breaking the Bargain It Made For Labor Peace
    • Amid Labor Shortage and Supply Chain Disruption, Workers Have Historic Leverage
    • Automakers Hand Billions To Shareholders While Stiffing Workers
    • Despite Intimidation, Union Voices Get Louder for Ceasefire in Gaza
    • If You Care About Free Speech, Make It Harder to Fire People For Unpopular Opinions
    • Museum Workers Are Joining the Growing Labor Movement
    • November 5, 2021
    • Rail Workers Group Supports Public Ownership and Control of the Rail Industry
    • We Can Thank a Union Reform Caucus for the Militant UAW Strike
    • ‘This victory is historic’: Massachusetts Trader Joe’s becomes first to unionize
    • ‘We Need to Transform What It Means to Be an Academic Worker; the Status Quo Is Untenable’
  • Justice
    • "When you start picking on the most vulnerable people ... and you get away with it, then you take the next bite.”
    • A Conservative Judge Just Issued a Dire Warning About the Abrego Garcia Case
    • A Statement from Constitutional Law Scholars on Columbia
    • All about Mahmoud Khalil
    • Civil Rights
    • From NY Times, OpEd by Mohsen Mahdawi
    • I.R.S. Agrees to Share Migrants’ Tax Information With ICE: NY Times, April 8, 2025, Andrew Duerhen
    • Jackie Robinson's Army history removed from Defense Department sites
    • Judges stand firm as Trump ramps up attacks on judiciary
    • NAACP lawsuit says Department of Education is ‘intentionally discriminating’ against Black Americans with anti-DEI orders
    • Note to Self: Trump’s Incitement of Anti-Trans Hatred Is a Disgrace
    • Robin Hood in Reverse
    • She Devoted Her Life to Serving the US Then DOGE Targeted Her—Joy Marver, disabled veteran and “laid-off” federal worker
    • Taking down Jackie Robinson reveals what the fight against DEI is all about
    • The ongoing influence of slavery and Jim Crow means high poverty rates and low economic mobility in the South
    • Trump Administration Abruptly Cuts Billions From State Health Services (Breaking News Announcement)
    • Why not tyranny? JD Vance says he's fine with the "inevitable errors" of abandoning due process
    • ‘I Am a Political Prisoner’: Mahmoud Khalil’s Letter From Jail
    • ‘The Fact That She Had That Miscarriage Was Enough to Justify Arresting Her’:
    • DOJ to Stop Prosecuting Most People Who Unlawfully Block and Harass Abortion Clinics and Patients
    • Elon Musk spreads falsehoods about Social Security, calling it a ‘Ponzi Scheme’, to justify cuts
    • Going to H&R Block’: CounterSpin interview with Portia Allen-Kyle on tax unfairness
    • Iowa Enacts Bill Ending Civil Rights Protections for Transgender People
    • The Infrastructure of Racial Justice Is Under Attack. We Must Fight for It
    • Trump Blames Diversity for Aviation Disaster in DC
    • Georgia judge strikes down six-week abortion ban in landmark ruling, citing women’s rights and public health concerns
    • Progressives demand federal action as airlines and hotels exploit hurricane evacuations for profit
    • There Is a Global War on Children
    • When Lights Go Out in Cuba, Media Blame Communism—Not US Sanctions
    • Frederick Douglass on July 4th – a Timeless Critique of Democracy in This Country (Full Speech)
    • Hospital Screening of Pregnant Patient
    • White Poverty: How Exposing Myths About Race and Class Can Reconstruct American Democracy
    • ‘The Problem Is, There’s No Place for Anyone to Go’:
    • 'Inclusive Democracy Act' would expand ballot access for people in prison
    • Advocates: Ease of access to contraception could lower accidental pregnancies
    • Defining Free Speech
    • Here's The Political Conversation We Overlooked This Week
    • Idaho Banned Abortion. Then It Turned Down Supports for Pregnancies and Births.
    • Pay Equity Day measures salary gap between working women, men
    • The Growing Jewish Resistance to Israel’s War on Palestine
    • 'Clearly defined body count': Florida and Ohio Republicans experienced 43 percent more COVID deaths than Dems
    • 7 things people who say they're 'fiscally conservative but socially liberal' just don't understand
    • A power disconnection crisis: In 31 states, utilities can shut off electricity in a heat wave
    • ACLU Comment on Court Decision Blocking Approval of Mifepristone, a Medication Used in Half of Abortions in the United States
    • Atlanta’s Attack on Cop City Protesters Should Be a Warning to Us All
    • Clarence Thomas’ Latest Criminal Justice Ruling Is an Outright Tragedy
    • Congress just passed $858 billion military budget, but GOP is blocking $12 billion to fight child poverty
    • Following in MLK’s Footsteps Means Resisting Christian Nationalism
    • How Title Lending Works
    • Mapping Attacks on LGBTQ Rights in U.S. State Legislatures
    • Poverty
    • Reaffirming the Progressive Project in 2023
    • Right a Wrong
    • School gun violence torments America's youngest generation
    • Supreme Court Rebuffed Democrats’ Call for Thomas Probe With Just One Sentence
    • The COVID follies continue - Florida's Surgeon General tells people to avoid COVID booster vaccines
    • The Freedom to Vote Act
    • WSJ Celebrates Making It Harder for Poor People to Access Food
    • When 3 Men Richer Than 165 Million People, Sanders Says Working Class Must 'Come Together'
    • Yet another of the Supreme Court's 'religious liberty' cases proves fraudulent
    • ‘The Water Crisis Is a Manifestation of Jim Crow Politics’
    • A fascinating story of a determined fighter against the KKK in Muncie, Indiana
    • Abusing Immigrants
    • Alito’s ‘Dobbs’ Opinion Overturning ‘Roe’ Is Judicial Activism at Its Most Self-Deceptive
    • As the South Cracks Down on Abortion Access, Tax Dollars Flow to Fake Clinics
    • Black Is a Disease’: Racist Posts Roil Arkansas University
    • COVID-19 Relief Spending Pushed Poverty To Record Low In 2021
    • Christian Grievance
    • DEADLINE TO SIGN IS JULY 7!
    • DeSantis’ Migrant Stunt Is Kidnapping by Another Name
    • Esther Jackson, 105: Life Reflected the 20th Century Struggle for Equality
    • Federal judge blocks Biden's directives to protect LGBTQ people from discrimination
    • GOP Candidates in MI AG Race Say They Oppose Precedent on Right to Birth Control
    • Greg Abbott Rejects Biden’s Plea to Pardon Texans With Marijuana Convictions
    • Guns have become the leading cause of death for American kids
    • How Much Do You Care?
    • Hundreds 'March for Life' as Indiana lawmakers hold off on major abortion legislation
    • INTERVIEW WITH ROBIN D.G. KELLEY (edited transcript)
    • In Rural California, Farmworkers Fend for Themselves for Health Care
    • LOCAL RESIDENTS ASK U.S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE TO INVESTIGATE POLICE DOG MAULING IN LAFAYETTE, INDIANA
    • Media’s Crime Hype and Scapegoating Led to Crackdown on Unhoused People
    • News from the States EVENING WRAP
    • Of Course the Constitution Has Nothing To Say About Abortion
    • Purdue announces resolution to Feb. 4 police incident
    • Real Estate Investors Sold Somali Families on a Fast Track to Homeownership in Minnesota. The Buyers Risk Losing Everything.
    • Religious Chutzpah
    • Report Reveals Stark Racial Disparities in IN Bail Costs
    • Republicans Are Coming For Your Birth Control
    • Several US Cities Have Increased Policing of Palestine Solidarity
    • The End of “Roe” Will Lead to More Family Separation and Child Disappearance
    • The Racism, and Resilience, Behind Today’s Salmon Crisis
    • ‘We are being hunted’: One year after Atlanta spa shootings, Asian Americans are more scared now than ever
    • BOOKS / Progressive Giants : Celebrating Paul Robeson and Anne Braden
    • By Taxing the Pandemic Profits of Billionaires, We Could Vaccinate Everyone on Earth
    • Demand an End to Racist Policing at Purdue
    • Former Student Sues Westfield Washington Schools after Relentless Racist Abuse
    • Judge Tied to Chevron Sends Lawyer Who Sued Oil Giant to Prison for 6 Months
    • Kyle Rittenhouse, white supremacy, and the privilege of self-defense
    • More Than 46,000 US Children Have Lost at Least One Parent to COVID
    • More inmates sue Miami Correctional for 'horrific' conditions
    • Now evangelicals want to depict "social justice" as un-Christian: I hope God will forgive them
    • Our massively unfair tax system: How do the ultra-rich get away with it?
    • RACISM ON THE CAMPUS: THE STRUGGLE CONTINUES
    • The "soft" overturn of Roe v. Wade exposes how far-right John Roberts has let the Supreme Court go
    • The Supreme Court Just Allowed the Executions of Two Disabled Black Men
    • Three Children Attacked a Black Woman. A Sheriff’s Deputy Arrived — and Beat Her More.
    • What’s “in the Damn Bill” for Families? Bernie Sanders Wants You to Know.
    • When Police Dogs Attack: Why Some K-9 Units Are Under Fire for Biting Suspects
    • Women's labor force participation still lagging
    • “Feel-Good” News Story or Poverty Propaganda?
    • Free Speech
    • 800,000 Low-Income Households May Have Had Electricity Disconnected Amid COVID
    • A Republican's damning admission offers a dark preview of the future
    • ACLU's Most Recent Interviews with Abortion Providers
    • America Isn’t Ready to Truly Understand the Buffalo Shooting
    • America's hardest places to grow up
    • Before COB on the first workday of 2023, CEOs will make more than the average annual pay for all US workers
    • CMUs: The Federal Prison System’s Experiment in Group Segregation
    • COVID Relief Packages Dramatically Reduced Poverty. They Should Be Permanent.
    • Communities of Restoration
    • Corporate America scrambles to get behind voting rights
    • Drilling Down on Systemic Racism in Sports
    • Early freedom riders, including pioneering Jewish activist, get justice after 75 years
    • Environmental racism is poisoning America’s waters
    • FBI Has Found No Evidence of Antifa Involvement in Capitol Attack, Says Director
    • First on Axios: Baltimore's powerful new tool to fight illegal guns
    • Florida Judge Exposes the Chaotic Nightmare Facing Felons Who Want to Register to Vote
    • GOP Lawyer Admits to SCOTUS That Voting Rights Disadvantage Republican Party
    • Gun manufacturers quietly target young boys using social media
    • How Do You Spell Despicable?
    • New Report Calls on the Biden Administration to Put an End to Close-to-Slavery Conditions of the H-2A Guest Worker Program
    • New Study: Militarizing the Police Doesn’t Reduce Crime
    • November 3, 2021
    • Predatory Banks at Walmarts Made Over 100 Percent of Profits From Overdraft Fees
    • Report Finds Over 100 Rebellions in Jails and Prisons Over COVID Conditions
    • Rosie Could Be a Riveter Only Because of a Care Economy. Where Is Ours?
    • Self-Determination Has Been Wrenched Away From Half the US Population
    • Supreme Court rules kids can be thrown away
    • The Janes is a call to action
    • The Lies and Dangers of Efforts to Change Sexual Orientation or Gender Identity
    • The Pandemic Could Set Women's Pay Back a Generation
    • The school to prison pipeline, explained
    • They Aren’t Even Pretending Anymore
    • US Founders Demonized Indigenous People While Coopting Their Political Practices
    • US hunger crisis persists, especially for kids, older adults
    • What Prisoners Eat
    • Who are the 1 in 4 American women who choose abortion?
    • f the Biden Administration Is Serious About Protecting Voting Rights, Here's What It Should Do Immediately
    • ‘Raising the Minimum Wage Has Direct Implications for Black Families’
    • ‘This Is America. That’s the Kind of Trial Mumia Abu-Jamal Had.’
    • “If Everybody’s White, There Can’t Be Any Racial Bias”: The Disappearance of Hispanic Drivers From Traffic Records
    • “New Group Seeks Accountability from Lafayette Police Department”
  • Environment
    • Breaking News from the Washington Post
    • Constraints on weather reporting from the NY Times, April 16, 2025
    • An excerpt from NY Times Opinion piece by Dr. Peter Kalmus, Climate Scientist, 1/10/25,
    • Staff at the office drastically reduced
    • Trump Moves to Increase Logging in National Forests
    • Amazon and its Climate Pledge
    • Bottled water’s rising toll on planetary and human health
    • The flood-protection rule that Trump repealed
    • How Harold Hamm is bankrolling Trump’s 2024 campaign to advance Big Oil’s agenda
    • Paul Watson Nabbed in Greenland
    • The Great Salt Lake is Disappearing… So Utah Bans Rights of Nature.
    • AN APOSTOLIC EXHORTATION - TO ALL PEOPLE OF GOOD WILL ON THE CLIMATE CRISIS
    • Coal Byproduct, Other Pollution Sources at Waukegan and Michigan City Power Plants Face Strict Regulations Under New EPA Rules
    • Cop28 president says there is ‘no science’ behind demands for phase-out of fossil fuels
    • Purdue University still without carbon neutral plan
    • Purdue University touts research on environmentally safer adhesive
    • To cut global emissions, replace meat and milk with plant-based alternatives
    • Water, Water, Everywhere…
    • YOU LOVE TO SEE IT: Building A Greener Tomorrow Today
    • A Letter from an American - April 21, 2023
    • Amid Heat Wave, GOP Adds Climate Denial To Spending Bills
    • BEATEN, BOMBED AND BURIED - The decades-long persecution of Forest Defenders
    • How Global Warming Makes it Freezing Cold
    • How will a Hotter Climate Impact Agriculture in Indiana?
    • IU Researchers Make Medical “Breakthrough" with Anxiety Blood Test
    • Initiative Helps Hoosiers Get Environmental Resilience Funding
    • Maui Fire Coverage Ignored Fossil Fuel Responsibility
    • Oil Lobby Prompts Right-Wing Media to Save Whales—From Wind Power
    • Supremes Declare War on Wetlands
    • YOU LOVE TO SEE IT: Youth Climate Activists Turn Up The Heat
    • “Forever Chemicals” Makers Hid Dangers for Decades
    • Abandoned mines and poor oversight worsened Kentucky flooding, attorneys say
    • After February’s Dire IPCC Report, the Green New Deal Is More Urgent Than Ever
    • Almost Every Square Inch of the US Is Being Battered by Climate Change Today
    • Hoosiers' Attitudes and Opinions about Environmental Issues
    • How Chevron Polluted the Amazon and Fought Environmental Lawyer Steven Donziger
    • Impact of Supreme Court's climate ruling spreads
    • New Jersey sues five oil companies, alleging decades of ‘concealment’ and ‘public deception’ on climate change
    • Report: Nearly All Indiana Coal Power Plants Polluting Groundwater
    • Supreme Court restricts the EPA's authority to mandate carbon emissions reductions
    • The Window to Adapt to Climate Change Is ‘Rapidly Closing,’ Warns the IPCC
    • Tougher EPA Methane Regulations Could Improve Indiana Air Quality
    • West Virginians Gear Up for “Coal Baron Blockade” at Joe Manchin’s Coal Plant
    • Biden Faces Mounting Pressure To Yank Line 3 Oil Pipeline Permits
    • Degrowth Policies Cannot Avert Climate Crisis. We Need a Green New Deal.
    • Mirror, Mirror 2021: Reflecting Poorly
    • Opinion: This climate change contrarian gives us an important reminder about science in general
    • Over 800 Water Protectors Have Been Arrested Since Line 3 Pipeline Was Approved
    • The Anti-Environmental Bill, HB 1100
    • The Myth of the Managed Wildfire: How US Forest Service Policies Perpetuate Deadly Wildfires
    • There Is Little Doubt the Climate Crisis Is Here—Now What Do We Do About It?
    • Indiana Republicans join the new Conservative Climate Caucus. Here's what that means
    • A Petition to Protect the Cedar Grove Wildlife Corridor
    • Applause for Perseverance Ignores Plutonium Bullet We Dodged
    • As climate change disrupts supply chains, American life is poised to change drastically
    • Biden May Approve Logging an Old-Growth Forest, Heightening Climate Risks
    • Biden’s Climate Law Is Ending 40 Years of Hands-Off Government
    • Democratic Leaders Are Finger-Wagging Over the IPCC Report. They Should Look To Themselves.
    • EPA Considers Gutting Regulations on Lead Contamination
    • Feeding the World Better: WithoutFactory Farms:
    • If We Don’t Act Now, the Entire US Could Become a “Cancer Alley”
    • New Details Emerge About Coronavirus Research at Chinese Lab
    • Ocasio-Cortez says we need World War II-scale action on climate. Here’s what that looks like.
    • Opinion: Mitch Daniels’ interview of Steve Koonin
    • State Sells Public Forest Timber for a Song
    • The Coal Plant Next Door
  • Media
    • 'Trump Became President' by Bombing Syria
    • As Israel Openly Declares Starvation as a Weapon, Media Still Hesitate to Blame It for Famine
    • Decades of Media Myths Made Social Security Vulnerable to Political Attack
    • Failing to Rise to the Constitutional Crisis
    • Fox News Can’t Admit Jewish Identity of Anti-Israel Protesters
    • Guest column: Lake County prosecutors must drop charges against photojournalist
    • Ideology–or Were They Bought?
    • With Section 230 Repeal, Dems and Media Offer Trump New Censorship Tools
    • As Trump II Begins, Bezos Swaps Scrutiny for ‘Storytelling’
    • Counting the Victims of Israel’s War on Gaza Is Low on Media’s Priority List
    • Covering Attack on USAID as if Constitutional Restraints Were Up for Debate
    • Democracy Dies at “The Washington Post”
    • Jeff Bezos Is Scared to Have an Open Debate on Economics
    • Media Obscure Message of Oscar-Winning Documentary No Other Land
    • The New York Times Ignored Source’s Doubts About Hamas Docs Provided by Israel
    • To Thwart Trump’s Tyranny, the Media Must Cover Resistance by Civic Groups and Unions
    • Trump's FCC chief opens investigation into NPR and PBS
    • Trump’s Protest Threat Reflects Belief That Free Speech Belongs to Some
    • What We Talk About When We Don’t Talk About Genocide
    • ‘Media Institutions Have Played a Direct Role in Undermining Democracy’: Transcript of The Best of CounterSpin 2024
    • CNN’s Tapper Smears Tlaib With Baseless Charge of Bias
    • CPB Funds Ideological Overseers at NPR in Response to Right-Wing Criticism
    • Delivering the Election
    • Demonizing Hezbollah to Legitimize a US/Israel Onslaught on Lebanon
    • Despite History of Fabrication, Press Uncritically Covers IDF-Provided Documents on Hamas
    • Double Standards and Distortion: How the NYT Misreports Sexual Violence in Israel/Palestine
    • Fossil Fuel Interests Are Working to Kill Solar in One Ohio County. The Hometown Newspaper Is Helping.
    • Israel’s detainment of reporters must stop
    • It’s the Economic Reporting, Stupid
    • Media Coverage of Amsterdam Soccer Riot Erases Zionist Hatred and Violence
    • Media Throw Everything But the Facts Against Harris’s ‘Price Control’ Proposal
    • New Yorker Sides With Right Against Childless Cat Ladies
    • Public-Interest Groups Defend FCC's Broadcast-Ownership Rules Promoting Competition, Diversity and Localism on Air
    • The Rampant Spread of Hurricane Disinformation Is a Preview of the Lies We Will See as the Nation Votes in November
    • Trump’s Mental Decline
    • White Men Get Short End of Stick—in NYT Chart, if Not in Reality
    • ‘Western Press Obscured the Sheer Terror of What Israel Had Carried Out’:
    • A Bookstore Brouhaha Confuses Whose Speech Is Being Curtailed
    • Censorship at a Jewish School Part of a Crisis for Free Expression
    • Freedom of the Press
    • GOP Grilling NPR Is a Tired Ritual That Needs to Be Rejected
    • How Corporate Media Helped Lay the Groundwork for Israel’s Genocide in Gaza
    • Journalists and Media Workers are being Killed in Gaza
    • Media Scorn Gaza Protesters for Recognizing Corporate Reporters Aren’t Their Friends
    • NYT Editor Denies His Paper’s Role in Setting the Agenda It Reports On
    • NYT Not Much Concerned About Israel’s Mass Murder of Journalists
    • NYT Uncritically Reported Israel’s Version of Golan Bombing
    • Phil Donahue Changed My Life—and Millions of Others
    • Pundits Push for Regional Escalation in the Wake of Israeli Assassinations
    • Students Left Out of Discussions About Student Gaza Protests
    • The NYT’s One True Subject Is the One Percent
    • US Media Coverage of Anti-Vax Disinformation Quietly Stops at the Pentagon
    • When Israel Burned Refugees Alive, Establishment Media Called It a ‘Tragic Accident’
    • ACTION ALERT: Friedman’s Vermin Analogies Echo Ugly Pro-Genocide Propaganda
    • ACTION ALERT: NYT’s War on Words: Avoid ‘Palestine,’ ‘Genocide,’ ‘Ethnic Cleansing’
    • Europe’s Largest News Aggregator Orders Editors to Play Down Palestinian Deaths
    • Hyping Ukraine Counteroffensive, US Press Chose Propaganda Over Journalism
    • In the Wake of Santos’ Lies, Media Double Check Records of Potential Replacements
    • Media Obsession With Inflation Has Manufactured Discontent
    • NYT Engages in Front-Page IDF ‘Womenwashing’
    • NYT Reported Japanese Internment as ‘Pioneering Chapter in US History’
    • Shielding US Public From Israeli Reports of Friendly Fire on October 7
    • The Real Reason Israel Is Attacking Gaza’s Hospitals
    • UN Tells Israel: Cease Fire; NYT Says: If You Want
    • Unconfirmed ‘Beheaded Babies’ Report Helped Justify Israeli Slaughter
    • WSJ Speaks Out Against Threat of Politicians Responding to Voters
    • ‘Brutal’ Is a Word Mostly Reserved for Palestinian Violence
    • ‘Punishments for Corporations and CEOs Are Just Paltry’:
    • 20 Years Later, NYT Still Can’t Face Its Iraq War Shame
    • Covering (Up) Antiwar Protest in US Media!
    • Dowd’s Newsroom Nostalgia Is Management Propaganda
    • Fox Settlement Shows Press Freedom Isn’t Incompatible With Accountability
    • In AI Regulation Coverage, Media Let Lawmakers off the Hook
    • Israel’s Hard-Right Turn Fails to Raise Alarm in US Media
    • Major US Outlets Found Hersh’s Nord Stream Scoop Too Hot to Handle
    • Media Matters
    • Murdoch Uses Nashville to Stoke Anti-Trans Hate
    • NYT Reluctant to Fault Israel for West Bank Aggression
    • Right-Wing Media’s ‘Grooming’ Rhetoric Has Nothing to Do With Concern for Children
    • Sanders Proposes 'New Deal for Journalism' to Ensure Media Serves Public Interest
    • The "copaganda" epidemic: How media glorifies police and vilifies protesters
    • The Indiana Citizen joins coalition of news organizations in newly launched Indiana Local News Initiativ
    • The New York Times Is Diminishing Itself
    • Under Musk, Twitter Continues to Promote US Propaganda Networks
    • ‘We Live in a New World Where Accountability Barely Exists’
    • A Socialist in WaPo’s Suburbs
    • ACTION ALERT: Big Media Want Gigi Sohn Kept Off FCC Board
    • Antisemitic Threats to Florida Judge Should Be Bigger Story
    • Corporate media accused of 'cheerleading' US escalation in Ukraine
    • Documenting the Struggle Against a Hedge Fund Stripping Journalism for Parts
    • Exclusive: Billionaires back new media firm to combat disinformation
    • Fox News dangerously declares war on teachers: Calls for violence, accusations of 'inclination' to pedophilia
    • How Much Less Newsworthy Are Civilians in Other Conflicts?
    • How a Company Called BlackRock Shapes Your News, Your Life, Our Future
    • Israel Killed Reporter Abu Akleh—but US Media Disguised the Facts
    • Mainland Media Fail to Ask Why Puerto Rico Requires ‘Resilience’
    • Media Spin Lula Victory as Defeat
    • Media Trust, Polling and the Big Lie
    • NPR Devotes Almost Two Hours to Afghanistan Over Two Weeks—and 30 Seconds to US Starving Afghans
    • Objectivity Versus Balance
    • PBS and BBC Team Up to Misinform About Brazil’s Bolsonaro
    • Prioritizing Fortunetelling Over Reporting Poses a Danger to Democracy
    • Russian TV Uses Tucker Carlson and Tulsi Gabbard to Sell Putin’s War
    • Selling Albright as a ‘Feminist Icon’: Was the Price Worth It?
    • Support State and fact-based local Journalism
    • The Local Journalism Initiative: a proposal to protect and extend democracy
    • ‘What Alex Jones Has Peddled Is Now Nearly Indistinguishable from Right-Wing Talking Points’
    • A Secretive Hedge Fund Is Gutting Newsrooms
    • Another record year for press-freedom violations in the US
    • As US Broils and Europe Floods, Media Dismiss EU Climate Plan as ‘Ambitious’
    • Beijing’s Movie War Propaganda—and Washington’s
    • Cherry-Picking Polls to Hide Public Support for Biden’s Spending Plan
    • Corporate Media Harms Not Only Through Omission, But Also by Distortion
    • How Buffalo News Helped Keep a Socialist out of City Hall
    • Jen Psaki Shocks FOX News Hack Peter Doocy with Trump's Deadly Record of COVID Mismanagement
    • Media messes up coverage of voting rights, blames Biden for GOP's racism
    • New era for local journalism
    • Politico’s Staff Must Toe New Owner’s Line—Including Endorsing Israel
    • Saab Case Shows Western Media’s Casual Acceptance of US Atrocities
    • TV Reports on Manchin and Sinema Leave Out Their Financial Conflicts
    • The Media Myth of ‘Once Prosperous’ and Democratic Venezuela Before Chávez
    • What We Lost When Gannett Came to Town
    • When this hedge fund buys local newspapers, democracy suffers
    • ‘The Commercial System Isn’t Providing the Local News We Need’
    • Exposing the “‘pink slime’ journalism” of Journatic
    • Fears for future of American journalism as hedge funds flex power
    • How we can save local news
    • POLITICAL NEWS IS A COMMODITY: WHAT SELLS IS LEGITIMATE
    • WaPo Obscures Republican Role in Killing Equal Pay
    • We are pioneering a new model for web journalism.
    • Jeff Bezos’ Fake News in the Newspaper He Really Owns
    • Pushing Consumers to Amazon Is Baked In to NYT’s Business Model
    • 'Are you kidding me?' Reporters criticized for panning Joe Biden's anti-fascism speech
    • 'Sometimes to Tell the Truth, You Have to Take a Stand'
    • A New Book Calls For Fundamental Media Reform — And The Pandemic May Give Those Ideas A Boost
    • A year of change threatens the future of journalism
    • AP Firing Shows Right-Wing Hypocrisy, Illusion of ‘Objectivity’
    • Americans Rarely See the True Face of Israel’s Bombing of Gaza
    • Bezos’ Declaration of Neutrality Confirms: Billionaires Aren’t on Your Side
    • Biden’s Multi-Billion Afghan Theft Gets Scant Mention on TV News
    • CHALLENGING IDEOLOGICAL HEGEMONY: TAKING ON THE MEDIA
    • Corporate Media Begin to Acknowledge GOP Coup Attempt
    • Corporate Media Stays Silent as US Air Strikes Kill at Least 20 in Somalia
    • Election 2020
    • GANNETT CHAIN OWNS 250 NEWSPAPERS (INCLUDING THE JOURNAL AND COURIER) AND SHAPES POLITICAL CONSCIOUSNESS
    • How Vermont’s Media Helps Keep the State Together
    • How the media’s ‘cancel culture’ debate obscures direct threats to First Amendment
    • Israel Raids and Shuts Down Al Jazeera Ramallah Office Amid Intensifying West Bank Attacks
    • It’s Aggression When ‘They’ Do It, but Defense When ‘We’ Do Worse
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  1. Media
  2. How Vermont’s Media Helps Keep the State Together

How Vermont’s Media Helps Keep the State Together



Person delivering newspapers in Burlington Vermont.
A man delivers newspapers in Vermont, where various local media outlets provide different and complementary ways of understanding the state.Photograph by Spencer Platt / Getty

 

An extensive analysis conducted in 2020 by ProPublica and the Times Magazine ranked nearly all the United States’ more than three thousand counties on the basis of how much they are likely to suffer as the climate continues to change. The four that emerged least scathed are all in my home state of Vermont; in fact, all but one of the state’s fourteen counties wound up in the top fifty. Earlier in the summer, news came that Vermont’s decades of population decline had reversed: apparently, the fact that the state had the lowest COVID death rate in the nation—roughly a third of the average—sent people here. Similar demographic shifts elsewhere are imaginable: a McKinsey report found that “20 to 25 percent of the workforces in advanced economies could work from home between three and five days a week. This represents four to five times more remote work than before the pandemic and could prompt a large change in the geography of work.” But, should a rush of the climate-stricken, the precautionary, and the Zoom-enabled descend on other far-flung locations, it’s not at all clear that they’d be able to handle it. Vermont reportedly has, for instance, the lowest rental-vacancy rate in the country, a practical difficulty that might outweigh its clear lead in breweries per capita as people calculate their landing spots. There is an important piece of infrastructure, however, that’s working reasonably well in Vermont and that might offer an instructive example to other states: its media network. Thanks to some remarkable people, and some good luck, Vermont has new and legacy Web sites, radio stations, and newspapers that keep the state not just informed but knit together. That luck may not hold indefinitely, but for the moment it shows that the decline of serious local journalism is not as inevitable as some imagine—and that “serious” means several different things.

Vermont has been no more fortunate than other states when it comes to keeping its daily papers intact and healthy. It has one real city—Burlington is the hub of a metro area of two hundred and twenty thousand people, about a third of the state’s population—and the Burlington Free Press was long the state’s flagship paper. But that publication now sells fewer than six thousand copies on any given weekday, down from more than thirty thousand a decade ago, and it does not have a full-time reporter to cover the State House or the city hall. Owned by Gannett, the Free Press still produces most of the content itself, but it also cross-posts articles from its sibling publication USA Today. (Last month, Gannett, carrying $1.3 billion in debt from a 2019 merger, undertook another set of layoffs at papers across the country.) The dailies in towns such as Rutland and Montpelier have been shedding reporters for years, too, although the Valley News, covering the region along the Connecticut River, remains a lively presence.

But, fairly early in this process of decline, something interesting happened. Anne Galloway was editing a Sunday edition jointly published by the Barre-Montpelier Times Argus and the Rutland Herald, each more than a century old. She told me, “In 2009, the company that owned them let go about twenty people, which for two small organizations was quite a bit.” She also felt ready to try something less regional and to concentrate, she said, on “investigative and iterative news stories about the most important issues in the state. So I gave it a shot.”


That year, with some sixteen thousand dollars in foundation grants, and using WordPress blogging software, she launched a nonprofit news Web site, VTDigger. At first, the site focussed almost entirely on covering the State House; a year later, it merged with the Vermont Journalism Trust, a nonprofit formed by local philanthropists, which became Digger’s publisher. The site now employs fourteen news reporters and eight editors, and it has become the go-to source for state and local news. (It got a bump of almost a million unique visitors a month during the pandemic, as Vermonters checked in each morning to see how many—really, how few—cases of COVID had appeared overnight.) In addition, many view VTDigger as a model for new journalism enterprises—it has won a steady stream of awards and, just as important, it has won an audience. The visitor count has declined since the height of the pandemic, but Galloway says that the site still gets six hundred thousand unique visitors a month, forty per cent of them from out of state. Richard Tofel, the former president of ProPublica, who has worked with nonprofit newsrooms around the country, told me that only the Texas Tribune may rival VTDigger when it comes to their standing in their respective home states.

VTDigger, which is based in Montpelier, the state capital, devotes considerable time and energy to investigative reporting; it established itself journalistically, in 2014, by uncovering and then relentlessly dogging (in more than two hundred and fifty stories over the following three years) a byzantine scandal that involved securing permanent-resident visas for foreigners in exchange for investments in a ski resort, an affair that has sent some of the perpetrators to jail. “It put us on the map,” Galloway said. It’s worth noting, though, that the story was not only wonderfully reported but also mind-numbingly complicated and somewhat anomalous, showing both the strengths and the limitations of that kind of journalism in a place like Vermont. The state is by no means perfect, but the crime rate is low and the number of scandals it produces is, from a hardcore reporter’s point of view, distressingly small. As I’m writing this, for instance, the lead story on the Digger site is “Questions Raised about Charlotte Selectboard’s Closed-Door Meetings,” detailing how a small town considered whether to replace its volunteer fire service with professionals.

Post-Woodward and Bernstein, investigative reporting garnered a lot of the glamour, but it’s not the only kind that matters, and Vermont has some remarkable legacy outlets that provide different and complementary ways of understanding the state. Seven Days, a free weekly based in Burlington, was started, in 1995, as an “alternative” rag in the tradition of the Village Voice. While most of its brethren across the country have struggled, Seven Days has flourished. It features some investigative journalism, but it also offers the most extensive and engaged arts coverage in the state and, in a place obsessed with what to eat next, its food pages are eagerly scanned. Its political coverage is gossipy, pointed, and nuanced, yet its true specialty is high-calibre long-form journalism, marked not just by careful reporting but by literary flair—as in a story this spring on what it’s like to be incarcerated during the COVID crisis. In an old state, the weekly covers young people; in a white state, it covers people who aren’t. If VTDigger is the meat and potatoes of Vermont news, Seven Days is the hoisin sauce, the charred brussels sprouts, the pint of highly hopped pale ale, the molten chocolate cake.

The state is also lucky in its broadcast journalism. Vermont Public provides excellent local news coverage on both television and radio; in per-capita terms, its radio station is among the most listened-to public stations in the country, and its weather forecast, “Eye on the Sky,” is legend. (Full disclosure: my son-in-law is a producer for the podcast “Brave Little State,” which offers abundant reporting on such topics as whether moose-crossing signs really reduce automobile accidents.) But there are deeper legacy operations that may do even more to build the state’s high level of social trust, because they cut across economic and cultural lines in profound ways. Vermont’s main independent radio station, WDEV, turned ninety last year, and it sounds the way that radio used to. Its days begin at 5 A.M., with local news, followed by the ever-popular “Trading Post” (“I have four snow tires, and I want a hundred and twenty dollars for them”) and a check on the current price for a hundredweight of milk. The station has its own bluegrass band, the Radio Rangers, which plays on Saturday mornings, right after WDEV’s signature program, “Music to Go to the Dump By.” It carries Red Sox games and stock-car races from Thunder Road (“the nation’s site of excitement”), and girls’ high-school basketball. But the core of the station’s programming is “Vermont Viewpoint,” which broadcasts weekday mornings from nine to eleven—it’s talk radio centered on information, not controversy. In recent weeks, the host, Ric Cengeri, has interviewed a birding expert about “properly identifying those confusing fall warblers”; caught up with a farmer who, six months earlier, had lost many of his cows in a barn fire; and broadcast live from an antique-car show. It’s not all sweetness and sentiment: “Vermont Viewpoint” covers elections and climate change and crime. But the show and the station itself are reminders that journalism, in addition to uncovering malfeasance, should also uncover the bonds that hold communities together.

 

A functioning community, almost by definition, is a place where people take an interest in things that don’t directly affect them, where they worry about the schools even if they don’t have kids. That interest can be shown in divisive fashion—attacking “woke” school librarians—or it can be done gently. If the former reduces community trust, the latter, right down to broadcasting high-school hoops, increases it. It’s true that Vermont’s partisan divisions are less shrill than in other parts of America—its Republican governor held the highest approval rating of any governor in the country for much of the pandemic, and its socialist senator is the third most popular Democrat in the country, trailing only Jimmy Carter and Barack Obama, even though he’s officially an Independent—and that tradition of tolerance is reflected on WDEV. “Vermont Viewpoint” is followed for an hour every day by “Common Sense Radio,” a talk show presented by the conservative Ethan Allen Institute. WDEV used to carry Amy Goodman’s left-leaning show, “Democracy Now!,” and, although that arrangement has ended, her brother David, a Vermonter, hosts a weekly progressive interview show, sponsored by VTDigger.

Many Vermont media outlets have done something else that strengthens social ties—with the advent of the pandemic, they started shutting down online comment forums. (Seven Days and VTDigger cited a need to avoid medical misinformation.) They still run letters to the editor, but those tend to be constructive, not nihilistic; it’s a tough state in which to be a sorehead. You can see the focus on serving the community even more clearly in Vermont’s remaining local weekly newspapers. I live in Addison County, the heart of the Champlain Valley and the home of Middlebury College. It’s held together by the Addison Independent, founded in 1946, a paper of the kind that once appeared in most American towns but now is something of a rarity. The Addy Indy has a newsroom staff of seven, who manage to produce remarkable quantities of useful reporting. Want to read about the outcome of local elections? Or about where Snoop Hog and Justin Bieberque placed in the county-fair pig races? Or about how to remove invasive species, or about a festival for aspiring playwrights, or about a workshop on how to protect yourself in an active-shooter situation, or the story of an octogenarian who swam across Lake Dunmore, or the Vergennes police log (“a dog was locked in a car on Main Street in 85 degree weather at 9 p.m. The officer told the driver of the car to take the dog out of the vehicle”), or a guide to blueberry picking (“I looked up to see the rump of a black bear not 30 yards away”), or about a select-board decision to lower the speed limit, or about the drivers in the local demolition derby, or about the local little-league team that won three games in the state championship, or about the Taco Tuesday fund-raiser for the community center? If you live here, you should, because you get a constant sense of who your neighbors are (and were—the obituaries are long and detailed).

“If you go to the digital world, they know what you’re looking for, and they feed it to you,” Angelo Lynn, the Independent’s longtime editor, told me. “But if you pick up the newspaper you flip through every page and you read things you had no idea you’d be interested in. You’re not interested in horseshoe pitching, but ‘Isn’t that the granddaughter of so-and-so?’ You get this holistic sense of the community—eighty per cent of it doesn’t apply to most readers, but they read it anyway.” And people do read it—the paper has six thousand print subscribers in a county with fewer than fifteen thousand households, and its Web site gets between fifty and seventy thousand unique visitors a month, even though the Independent has a paywall. But meeting a need is not the same as making a payroll, and the Indy—as well as small papers in places such as Randolph and St. Albans—are having a hard time of it. Their classified-ad business has decamped to the Internet (some of it to a popular neighborhood-level bulletin board called Front Porch Forum), and advertising in general has been hurt by a decline in local retail. “We could, of course, cut two people out of a six-person news staff,” Lynn said. “But we have twenty-three towns to cover, and four school districts. I don’t want to do that.”

Another way to survive would be to become a nonprofit, as VTDigger did, or at least to establish a nonprofit arm—an idea that the Indy and Seven Days have both explored. By year’s end, Lynn hopes to find a way for potential donors to be able to deduct contributions. He said, “I have people and foundations that would give us ten thousand dollars at a whack, but they want a tax writeoff.” He noted that if communities “expect newspapers to do this job—preserving democracy—the public is going to have to ante up somehow. Donations, foundations, higher subscription fees.” An influx of just seventy-five thousand dollars a year, he told me, would have been enough to save a recently folded paper in the northern Vermont town of Hardwick, and he added that, “if you multiply that for the twenty or so community papers that are here, that’s not a lot of money.” Such amounts might not be impossible to raise, especially if the various parts of Vermont’s journalism patchwork coöperated by, say, sharing resources between well-funded operations, such as the public-broadcasting system, and independent ones, such as the Indy or WDEV.

Coöperation, of course, is never easy—as VTDigger’s Galloway says, “Competition is really important; it’s what gets journalists out of bed in the morning.” And what she calls “news fever” can extend to business operations, too. Last year, VTDigger asked the state legislature to end a monopoly that local print newspapers, including the Indy, currently enjoy on legal notices that state agencies must issue by law; if that monopoly disappeared, digital-only publications could benefit by publishing the notices, too. (Some print editors argued that the change would deliver them a financial body blow, and the proposal was rejected.) That’s not to say that Galloway discounts collaboration. “It is essential,” she told me, pointing out that VTDigger has bolstered several local Vermont outlets by offering them its State House coverage at reduced rates. Lynn, who recently stepped down as the chair of the New England Newspaper & Press Association, said, “Across western Connecticut and western Mass, in Maine and New Hampshire, the communities really want these papers to survive. I do think, at this point, the public understands the problem, and they don’t want to lose them.” So that’s the news from Vermont—that and, also, a new rocking chair has been donated to an Addison County library, four-packs of the state’s favorite beer will now come in plant-based rings rather than plastic, and Burlington’s bocce club is booming. ♦

 
Bill McKibben is a founder of the grassroots climate campaign 350.org and a contributing writer to The New Yorker. He writes The Climate Crisis, The New Yorker’s newsletter on the environment.

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