In the U.S., seventeen million people, across multiple generations, have a shared personal identity based on their past military service. About…
Last June, a tenant organizer named Cea Weaver wrote an article…
This is my most complete piece of work since prison. I’ve…
The United States did not invent the concept of bombing civilians…
Zohran Mamdani has energized the US Left and offered a potential…
A broad national coalition, including Indivisible, MoveOn Civic Action, the American…
As the Senate voted to advance a War Powers Resolution on…
There is one crucial argument that the climate justice movement carried…
Yesterday [January 7] an American citizen in Minneapolis was gunned down…
Renee Nicole Good’s murder by an ICE agent in Minneapolis has left millions…
On January 3, 2026, without provocation, cause, or legal justification, the…
What happened in the early hours of January 3 in Caracas…
As Donald Trump proclaimed a “forever peace” in the region last…
The arrest of the Venezuelan President—an act executed with the precision…
But why, in these dark times, attach so much importance to…
When does permissible strategic competition become illegitimate coercion, and when does…
America’s close partnership with Israel has been costly. Tel Aviv’s expansionist…
Late Friday night into early Saturday, I watched the news and…
From Ukraine to Venezuela, claims of sovereignty often conceal strategic self-interest,…
Even with a couple of months’ distance, Zohran Mamdani’s election still…
We’ve been here before when it comes to the Trump administration’s…
Jeremy Brecher’s newest report, co-published by the Labor Network for Sustainability and Z, addresses the increased authoritarian threat under Donald Trump and the MAGA movement, characterized by executive overreach, suppression of dissent, and the use of state and vigilante violence.
In response, Brecher asserts that the country must look beyond conventional means and consider social strikes — large-scale, nonviolent withdrawal of cooperation, which has brought down authoritarian regimes around the world. He defines social strikes as mass actions that make society ungovernable by disrupting not just workplaces, but all political and social structures that enable tyranny. By citing international and US examples, the report outlines how such strikes have been organized, what tactics they use, and how they might serve as a last line of defense if democratic institutions are further eroded.
While success is never guaranteed, understanding these methods is essential to resisting a potential MAGA dictatorship.
Ecocide and genocide are two faces of empire.
Join Caracol DSA for an online panel and discussion. Watch the recording.
A podcast that asks what do we want & how do we get it.
31 authors & 6 orgs invite you to consider 20 Theses for Liberation, a living document to engage with in a collective process.
Join & share
Real Utopia: Foundation for a Participatory Society exists to establish an international network of activist-organizers who are inspired by Participatory theory, vision, and strategy.
In the U.S., seventeen million people, across multiple generations, have a shared personal identity based on their past military service. About…
Last June, a tenant organizer named Cea Weaver wrote an article…
This is my most complete piece of work since prison. I’ve…
The United States did not invent the concept of bombing civilians…
Zohran Mamdani has energized the US Left and offered a potential…
A broad national coalition, including Indivisible, MoveOn Civic Action, the American…
As the Senate voted to advance a War Powers Resolution on…
Jeremy Brecher’s newest report, co-published by the Labor Network for Sustainability and Z, addresses the increased authoritarian threat under Donald Trump and the MAGA movement, characterized by executive overreach, suppression of dissent, and the use of state and vigilante violence.
In response, Brecher asserts that the country must look beyond conventional means and consider social strikes — large-scale, nonviolent withdrawal of cooperation, which has brought down authoritarian regimes around the world. He defines social strikes as mass actions that make society ungovernable by disrupting not just workplaces, but all political and social structures that enable tyranny. By citing international and US examples, the report outlines how such strikes have been organized, what tactics they use, and how they might serve as a last line of defense if democratic institutions are further eroded.
While success is never guaranteed, understanding these methods is essential to resisting a potential MAGA dictatorship.
Ecocide and genocide are two faces of empire.
Join Caracol DSA for an online panel and discussion. Watch the recording.
A podcast that asks what do we want & how do we get it.
31 authors & 6 orgs invite you to consider 20 Theses for Liberation, a living document to engage with in a collective process.
Real Utopia: Foundation for a Participatory Society exists to establish an international network of activist-organizers who are inspired by Participatory theory, vision, and strategy.
What is commonly known as the labor market remains an inevitable feature of an economic system that converts everything into a commodity. Not surprisingly, the economist who…
Translated article from the Swedish publication Magasinet Konkret. Organizing is – or should be – the core business of every labor union. That’s how ordinary workers become…
When labor activist Brandon Johnson upset Paul Vallas in Chicago’s 2023 runoff mayoral election, the Left had good cause for optimism. One of their own, a former…
Although Donald Trump’s Department of Labor announced in April 2025 that “Trump’s Golden Age puts American workers first,” that contention is contradicted by the facts. Indeed, Trump has taken…
Paul Wines helped to kick in the door of the warehouse and heard a sound like a freight train crashing through town. A blaze fueled by leather…
Gary Cunningham remembers sitting at the dining room table as a boy, listening to his father relate stories about his work as a union grievance chairman. One…
In recent years, more people around the world have begun to encounter images of Congo’s suffering on their phones: a child emerging from a cobalt mine, a…































