Home New Trending Search
About Privacy Terms
#
#Left
Posts tagged #Left on Bluesky

The #right & #FarRight spread lies & hatred about us on the #left, but they can all fuck off!

But, one thing that is for sure, we MUST unite to defeat these vile bastards.

1 0 0 0

All parties on the #Left - & NO, this doesn't include #Labour, must unite & work together to defeat the establishment parties & to defeat the rise of the #FarRight.

#GreenParty #PlaidCymru #SNP #YourParty

14 5 1 0

Interesting!

We've all suspected for a while that the remaining #Labour MPs on the #Left could defect to the #GreenParty, but who had the #LibDems defecting on their bingo card??

Could defecting MPs boost the chance of a #Green govt or hinder it?

Hopefully boost, IMHO, depending who they are.

0 0 0 0

youtu.be/1oGwP3YUu2A?...

#LEFT

2 0 1 0
Preview
And the Oscar Goes to … Men Not at Work Our male protagonists – or perhaps men more broadly – are searching for meaning, solace, or glory anywhere but in the workplace. The trend represents a collective ambiguity about the point of work.

And the Oscar Goes to … Men Not at Work

jacobin.com/2026/03/oscars-work-best...

#left #news #vsn #SupportIndependentMedia #DiverseSpectrumOfTheLeft

0 0 0 0
Preview
Working-Class Resistance Forced ICE Out of Minneapolis In Minneapolis, a new generation of activists is challenging Donald Trump, reviving labor militancy, and scoring victories. Next stop: May Day 2026.

Working-Class Resistance Forced ICE Out of Minneapolis

jacobin.com/2026/03/minneapolis-ice-...

#left #news #vsn #SupportIndependentMedia #DiverseSpectrumOfTheLeft

1 0 0 0
Preview
Wordle - A Wordle Alternative Guess the hidden word in 6 tries. A new puzzle is available each day.

#LeftWordle 1,729 3/6 ( #Left #Wordle )

⬛⬛⬛⬛🟩
⬛🟩🟩⬛🟩
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

https://left-wordle.com/

0 1 0 0
Preview
Hasan Piker on Why the US Empire Is in Decline We’re living in the imperial end times, argues Hasan Piker. With Trump entering a quagmire in Iran after having cast off America’s allies, a new era of belligerence, cruelty, and MAGA fascism looms over the home front.

Hasan Piker on Why the US Empire Is in Decline

jacobin.com/2026/03/hasan-piker-empi...

#left #news #vsn #SupportIndependentMedia #DiverseSpectrumOfTheLeft

1 0 0 0
Preview
A Post-Order World ### As US power declines, it is destroying the norms and institutions that once organized its international projection of authority. While the US is losing its leadership role, no single power is replacing it as a global hegemon. * * * If the international order has now come to an end, it is because consent for US empire has broken down. (Timothy A. Clary / AFP via Getty Images) If there was still any doubt about our coordinates after a decade of shocks to the normal order of things, the disorientating opening of this year has confirmed that we are not in Kansas anymore. A new geopolitics is taking form, particularly evident in the ongoing US-Israeli bombardment of Iran, in the US abduction of Nicolás Maduro from Venezuela, and in the positioning of European troops in Greenland following Donald Trump’s claims on the island. Since the financial crisis of 2007–8, incipient challenges to the primacy of US power, as well as political turbulence within Western capitalist democracies, have provoked the production of a considerable body of angsty writing about the end of things. Much of this writing, as it pertains to the imperial situation now commonly referred to as “international order,” expresses the desire for a “return” to stability. It’s perhaps unsurprising, then, that so many commentators on international affairs, of different political allegiance, have repeated the famous statement on “interregnum” authored by Italian communist Antonio Gramsci: a period in which “the old is dying and the new cannot be born.” Today such anticipation of “the new” in the international system tends to betray a pursuit of partial restoration of “the old,” premised on the idea that order can be a product of the will, of the kind of moral entrepreneurship exercised in previous decades by the cadres of global civil service and the executives of aid agencies and financial institutions. But there is no guarantee that a new order will be established. The concept of international order, as it is generally understood today, describing a global arrangement of governing norms and institutions, is a bequest of the twentieth century, and more specifically of the period of US hegemony. In fact, while usage of this concept increased steadily in the second half of the twentieth century, it spiked dramatically over the last decade and a half, in precisely the moment of putative collapse of international order. But it’s worth exploring Gramsci’s argument a bit more closely. In his thinking, order depends upon hegemony: that is, it depends not only, or primarily, on coercion but on “spontaneous consent.” The interregnum, he argued, is precisely a moment of hegemonic crisis, produced by a loss of authority and “leadership” that leaves only domination. Though Gramsci was concerned with the means through which the ruling class reproduces its power, his definition of hegemony has often been applied to international relations. If the international order consolidated in the aftermath of World War II has now come to an end, it is because consent for US empire has broken down. American hegemony derived from a material structure: initially from the development of an unparalleled industrial base that enabled its projection of economic and military power; and then from the transformation of global trade and finance into mechanisms for the reproduction of this power. This material structure produced an international complex of dependencies upon US empire, which, in turn, nurtured consent to its global leadership among other states and their ruling classes. If they were partially shaped by struggles “from below,” institutions of global governance — those of the United Nations, most obviously — were conditioned by US authority and a sufficient consensus with respect to it. However, the material structure of American hegemony no longer exists. In pursuit of new opportunities for profit, US capitalism evolved over the last quarter of the twentieth century into a neoliberal regime of asset appreciation, partly through deregulation and financialization. Significantly increasing the value of the dollar, high interest rates in the United States provoked an explosion of global debt, cutting short import-substitution industrialization across much of capitalism’s periphery. However, they also accelerated the offshoring of American industry and created opportunity for the rise of national competitors to the United States, among which China eventually emerged as the most important. This competition then fragmented the authority of the United States itself. Conducted without any attempt to formulate a coherent pretext, the attack on Venezuela by the United States provided perhaps the clearest demonstration to date that it is prepared to exercise coercion without consent, or, in the words of Indian historian Ranajit Guha, “dominance without hegemony.” Neither the overextension of US empire through warmaking nor the exhaustion of its propaganda is primarily responsible for the crisis of its hegemony. Rather, the main cause is its creation of conditions for economic challenges to its pursuit of global power, a contradictory consequence of its expansion. Amid the ruins of the old order, however, it is far from clear how the material structure able to sustain a new one might take form. US empire retains much of its might, with the unmatched budget and reach of its military, the global reference of its currency, and the market dominance of its biggest firms. Any prospect of subordinating it in a system instead ordered by Chinese hegemony seems inconceivable without a direct and large-scale military confrontation, involving the possible use of nuclear weapons. And, for all the features that distinguish the Chinese regime of accumulation from US capitalism, it is increasingly suffering from similar pathologies: falling productivity and demand, along with deflationary pressures, suggestive of a secular stagnation exacerbated by industrial overcapacity, rising debt, and a rapidly aging population. It seems likely, then, that we are now entering a time _after order_ , a time of enduring hegemonic crisis. Some might read this situation as a revival of the _status quo ante_ , since, in the long sweep of modern history, the American century was exceptional for the global extent of hegemony exercised by a leading power. However, contrary to the emerging common sense, this does not imply return to a geostrategic dispute managed through “spheres of influence” — a legalistic arrangement associated with the late nineteenth century, through which colonial powers divided mostly distant territories. There is no pact of noninterference between the United States and China; and, while both will most forcefully assert primacy over their respective regions, neither will manage to expel the other. The world after order is giving form to a “zonal geopolitics,” in which different terms of great-power dispute will likely prevail across different geographic zones. This is a more unstable and dangerous interimperial arrangement, and it has significant implications for international governance and cooperation. Those rightly concerned with developing international institutions to protect sovereignty and constrain empire might be well-advised to focus their efforts regionally and on the formation of blocs that can compel great powers to moderate pursuit of their own particularist interests. * * *

A Post-Order World

jacobin.com/2026/03/post-order-us-gl...

#left #news #vsn #SupportIndependentMedia #DiverseSpectrumOfTheLeft

1 0 0 0
Preview
Europe’s Far Right Want to Be American Vassals Europe’s far-right parties have long boasted about putting their own countries’ interests first but now slavishly support the latest US-Israeli war. While they opt for vassalage, antiwar forces have turned out to be the real defenders of sovereignty.

Europe’s Far Right Want to Be American Vassals

jacobin.com/2026/03/europe-iran-us-m...

#left #news #vsn #SupportIndependentMedia #DiverseSpectrumOfTheLeft

1 0 0 0
Preview
Late Night Musings Late Night Musings Hey Copilot, Philosophically, do republicans live in America whereas democrats live in the United States? That’s a sharp and evocative framing, Protyus—almost poetic in its symbolic contrast. Philosophically speaking, this kind of metaphor taps into deep cultural narratives and rhetorical divides. Let’s unpack it: 🧭 “America” vs. “The United States”: Symbolic Terrain “America” often evokes: Frontier individualism Patriotism rooted in tradition, faith, and military valor A mythic past of rugged self-reliance and moral clarity Emphasis on personal liberty, small government, and national sovereignty “The United States” tends to suggest: …

Hey Copilot, Philosophically, do republicans live in America whereas democrats live in the United States? #america #unitedstates #left #right #conservative #liberal #leftist #centrist #fascist #copilot

0 0 0 0
Redirecting...

BILL MAHER NAILS IT!

US Media are about speaking what their watchers want not deliving information, real and true informatiom. Now are have a bunch of #RightWingMedia bending over filor #Trump or #RightWingNuts, but do.not let #Left off, many do the same
www.facebook.com/share/v/1DVQ...

1 0 0 0
Post image Post image Post image Post image

What is a woman? #politics #lgbt #liberal #conservative #right #left

4 0 0 0
Original post on journa.host

Freedom for Immigrants launches interactive map to track U.S. detention centers and connect families to resources

therealnews.com/freedom-for-immigrants-l...

#news #left #vsn #DiverseSpectrumOfTheLeft […]

0 0 0 0
Preview
Defend Cuba From US Efforts to Crush It ### Donald Trump’s efforts to blockade Cuba’s fuel supply aim to create chaos. Now more than ever, Cuba needs practical international solidarity to resist US imperialist bullying. * * * For years, the US establishment has blamed the Cuba’s economic problems on socialism, incompetence, and mismanagement. (Yamil Lage / AFP via Getty Images) US president Donald Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio are seeking regime change in Cuba by the end of 2026. Their actions expose the hypocrisy of US policy toward Cuba over decades — claiming to champion human rights while imposing a blockade that denies Cubans access to vital resources. Trump openly backs the return of Cuba’s old elite and has even suggested a “friendly takeover” of Cuba by the United States. After years of the US establishment blaming the island’s economic problems on socialism, incompetence, and mismanagement, Trump today openly boasts that the US embargo means “there’s no oil, there’s no money, there’s no anything.” If Cuba really were a failed state, as Trump and his predecessor Joe Biden claim, US economic warfare would be unnecessary. This renewed aggression reveals a declining great power losing hegemony, riven by contradictions and internal crises, and desperate to crush all challenges and alternatives in order to preserve its dominance. # Executive Order This January 29, Trump signed an executive order claiming that Cuba constitutes “an unusual and extraordinary threat” to US national security and foreign policy and authorizing tariffs on goods from countries selling or providing oil to Cuba. This followed the December 2025 seizure of tankers carrying Venezuelan oil and, this January 3, the violent abduction of Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores. In response to Washington’s threat of tariffs, Mexico and other countries abandoned oil shipments to Cuba. Trump’s executive order drew on several laws, including the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, which the US Supreme Court ruled on February 20 cannot be used to impose tariffs. Yet this makes little difference: Trump can use other statues to authorize the measures. In any case, no tariffs had been collected, but the threat alone had effectively stopped oil deliveries to Cuba. Trump’s executive order had an immediate impact on the island, which depends on imported fuel to generate half of its electricity needs. Within two weeks, the United Nations Human Rights Office warned that essential services were at risk: > Intensive care units and emergency rooms are compromised, as are the production, delivery, and storage of vaccines, blood products, and other temperature-sensitive medications. In Cuba, more than 80 percent of water pumping equipment depends on electricity, and power cuts are undermining access to safe water, sanitation, and hygiene. > > The fuel shortage has disrupted the rationing system and the regulated basic food basket, and has affected social protection networks — school feeding, maternity homes, and nursing homes — with the most vulnerable groups being disproportionately impacted. Already, Cuban hospitals have canceled nonurgent care, while ambulances lack fuel. Many schools, colleges, and universities have also had to close. Public and private transport and goods cargos are drastically reduced. Workplaces, whether state-owned, private, or cooperative, have drastically cut back activity. Fuel scarcity has disrupted food production, refrigeration, and transport, leading to shortages, price hikes, and long queues for basic goods. Rubbish collection has collapsed, increasing sanitary risks. Persistent electricity blackouts make daily life extremely difficult. Some international airlines have canceled flights because Cuba lacks aviation fuel, and several governments have advised against all but essential travel, further hemorrhaging Cuba’s tourism revenue. "The renewed aggression against Cuba reveals a declining great power losing hegemony, riven by contradictions and internal crises." Mark Weisbrot, coauthor of a recent _Lancet Global Health_ study calculating that unilateral sanctions cause over half a million deaths worldwide every year, wrote of Trump’s oil blockade: “Right now we can see in real time how such deaths happen. . . . The collapse of oil imports has had immediate and life-threatening effects.” In February, Trump told reporters that Rubio was involved in high-level talks with Cuban officials. Cuban leaders denied this, and a _Drop Site News_ report suggested that Rubio was lying so he could subsequently claim that talks failed due to Cuban intransigence and then push for regime change. Rubio will not be satisfied with the so-called Venezuela model of only removing the president in Cuba. Then, on March 13, Cuban president Miguel Díaz**–** Canel announced that, along with Raúl Castro, he was directing talks with US government representatives “aimed at finding solutions through dialogue.” He restated the revolutionary government’s historic position: that Cuba would participate only “on the basis of equality and respect for the political systems of both states, and for the sovereignty and self-determination of our Government.” This followed an announcement the previous day that fifty-one prisoners would be released, with mediation from the Vatican. # Economic Warfare, Aimed at Regime Change Recent measures compound hardships resulting from nearly seven decades of economic warfare. The US “embargo” on Cuba is the longest and most extensive system of unliteral sanctions in modern history. This is not merely a legal or bilateral issue between the two countries but a blockade that obstructs Cuba’s interactions with the rest of the world, violates human rights, and hinders development. Most Cubans on the island have spent their entire lives enduring shortages caused by decisions taken in Washington to garner votes in Miami. In 2025, Cuba’s annual report to the United Nations put the cumulative cost of the US blockade at over US$170 billion. Costs are rising year after year, reaching $7.6 billion from March 2024 to February 2025 alone. The objective of US policy was long ago set out in a 1960 memorandum by US diplomat Lester Mallory titled “The Decline and Fall of Castro,” which proposed economic warfare “to bring about hunger, desperation and overthrow of government.” Sanctions are part of this tool kit. During his first administration, Trump adopted a policy of “maximum pressure” against Cuba, introducing more than 240 new sanctions and coercive measures to cut the country off from global trade and the international financial system. This coincided with the COVID-19 pandemic and hit Cuba hard: electricity blackouts returned, goods and medicines became scarce, inflation and emigration soared, foreign investors fled, and international reserves were drained. Life was already extremely tough for Cubans before Trump returned to office in 2025, with Rubio — his career built on hard-line opposition to Cuban socialism — as the new secretary of state. # Can Cuba Survive? “Cuba is on the brink of collapse,” the mainstream media proclaims in unison. Yet decades of research and lived experience in Cuba counsel skepticism toward such headlines. The demise of Cuban socialism has been foretold more times than the assassination of Fidel Castro was attempted. As I wrote in a book on how revolutionary Cuba survived the collapse of the Soviet-led bloc, this revolution wrote the rulebook on resilience. Beyond the assertion of national sovereignty, it argued, the creation of an alternative model of development was key to this. One chapter examined the Energy Revolution of 2006, which launched Cuba’s shift to a renewable energy matrix. Faced with today’s onslaught on the oil supply, this shift is proving vital. Already in 2024, the Cuban government announced plans to install ninety-two solar panel parks by 2028 with credit and technology from China. These will have an installed generation capacity of two gigawatts daily. Half of the planned parks are already installed, contributing around one gigawatt hours daily, around 20 percent of Cuba’s electricity needs. Another 30 percent is derived from domestically produced fossil fuels. "The demise of Cuban socialism has been foretold more times than the assassination of Fidel Castro was attempted." There remain serious obstacles, however: investments and construction are hindered by Trump’s oil blockade; the photovoltaics need to be connected to the national grid; there is a lack of storage capacity for the energy produced, so it only contributes during daylight; and while electric vehicles have entered Cuba in recent years, most of the transport fleet is fuel-dependent. If Trump and Rubio’s oil blockade remains unbroken, how long can Cuban socialism, and indeed, the Cuban people survive? # The World Needs Cuba This is no mathematical calculation or intellectual puzzle; it is a human crisis that should concern us all. But what would we lose if Trump achieved what twelve of his predecessors failed to do — the destruction of Cuban socialism? For any of its flaws, Cuba has demonstrated that after centuries of colonialism and imperialist domination, a subjugated people can take control of their land and resources and chart their own path in development, international relations, and values. The historic commitments to sovereignty and social justice by Cuban revolutionaries link the nineteenth-century wars of independence with the 1959 Revolution, the adoption of socialism, and the struggle against imperialism and underdevelopment. They also underpin Cuba’s symbolism for the Global South. Leftists who criticize the Cuban system are mistaken to dismiss the remarkable gains the Revolution brought to the Cuban masses — in education, health care, housing, sports, culture, participative democracy, science, and economic and social justice — while also making bold strides in confronting racism, sexism, and class oppression. This is what inspires people across the Global South, where some 85 percent of the world’s population live. Cuba is a small island that defied an empire and brought its own version of socialism to the western hemisphere, forged through its own revolutionary process, not imposed from outside. Emerging from the ragtag Rebel Army, the Cuban Revolutionary Armed Forces humiliated the United States at the Bay of Pigs in 1961. Cuba has been a permanent thorn in the side of US imperialism: supporting national liberation and guerrilla movements around the Global South and punching above its weight in geopolitical terms. This was the small country that sent 400,000 soldiers to Angola to defend it from the invading forces of apartheid South Africa. It has consistently contested US hegemony in the Americas and imperialism worldwide, sending military and medical personnel to what President George W. Bush once called “any dark corner of the world.” In turn, Cuba has survived relentless aggression from the world’s dominant power, whether through overt and covert military actions; sabotage and terrorism by US authorities and allied exiles; economic warfare; or international isolation. It has undermined Cuba by promoting dangerous emigration, including by unaccompanied minors (Operation Peter Pan, 1960–62) but also Cuban doctors (the Cuban Medical Professional Parole Program, 2006–17) while obstructing remittances, family visits, and visas. This is topped off by lucrative funding for regime-change programs. Not least in this context, the Cuban Revolution has achieved a great deal. It has demonstrated to the Global South the benefits of welfare-centered development under a socialist planned economy with a participative democracy. The revolutionary state improved development indicators to rich-country levels within one generation. Its free, universal public health care system achieved the highest ratio of doctors per person in the world. It slashed infant mortality, raised life expectancy, and eliminated diseases. Its universal public education system is free for all, including at the highest levels, elevating Cubans to among the most literate and cultured people in the world. It invested in art, culture, and sporta, endorsing them as human rights. It invested in science and technology for social development. "Cuba has demonstrated to the Global South the benefits of welfare-centered development under a socialist planned economy with a participative democracy." It created a unique state-funded, state-owned biotechnology sector producing the world’s first meningitis B vaccine, the first therapeutic lung cancer vaccine, a treatment for diabetic foot ulcers that reduces the need for amputations by over 70 percent, and the only COVID-19 vaccines created in Latin America and the Caribbean. Even now, it is trialing promising new drugs for Alzheimer’s disease. Cuba is world-leading in sustainable development and agroecology and has a unique long-term state plan to confront climate change, known as Tarea Vida. A 2022 study by Jason Hickel and Dylan Sullivan found that between 1990 and 2019 neoliberal policies caused 15.63 million excess deaths worldwide from malnutrition that could have been prevented with Cuba-style policies, including 35,000 in the United States. In a world where 1.1 billion people live in acute multidimensional poverty, two billion lack clean drinking water, and 3.5 billion lack sanitation, Cuban socialism offers a viable alternative. This force of example is the only sense in which it poses “an unusual and extraordinary threat” to the United States. As Fidel Castro warned before the Bay of Pigs invasion, Cuba would not be forgiven for carrying out “a socialist revolution right under the nose of the United States!” Revolutionary Cuba has also mobilized the world’s largest international humanitarian assistance program, from health care professionals to technical specialists and construction workers. Guatemalan researcher Henry Morales calculated that between 1999 and 2015, Cuba’s overseas development aid equaled 6.6 percent of its GDP, compared to the European average of 0.39 percent and 0.17 percent from the United States. Since 1960, over 600,000 Cuban medical professionals have served in 180+ countries, saving and improving millions of lives, especially in underserved populations in the poorest countries. The US government is actively sabotaging Cuban medical internationalism with lies, manipulations, and threats against recipient countries. Under pressure from Trump, some governments have sent Cuban medics home, directly harming their own citizens who are left without health care. Regime change would not only devastate Cuba but hurt millions of people around the world who rely on Cuban assistance. # Reject Calls on Cuba to Make a Deal This Trump administration has shown utter contempt for international law. It has conducted extrajudicial killings in the Caribbean and Pacific Ocean, hijacked oil tankers, kidnapping crews and seizing the oil. It has abducted Venezuela’s president and his wife and threatened invasion, even of its own NATO allies, while reviving and expanding the Monroe Doctrine and violating human rights and national self-determination. In this context, calls on Cuba to “make a deal” with Trump amount to veiled threats against its sovereignty. Instead of dispensing advice to the besieged island, intellectuals and analysts should make demands of the US government, holding it accountable for its crimes. Academics should not legitimize the idea that Trump has the right to carry out regime change, as Florida International University’s new academic initiative does in seeking to “steer Cuba towards freedom and democracy, to support transition.” A recent online petition, “Scholars in Solidarity with Cuba,” condemns the US government’s policy of asphyxiation and defends Cuba’s right to self-determination and socialist development. We urge scholars and students globally to sign it. Beyond petitions, we need concrete action to defend Cuba. International bodies like the UN, BRICS, EU, and Group of 77 and China must oppose Trump’s bullying by sending fuel and the other essential goods to Cuba. But we cannot wait for them. We can donate funds and resources now. Let Cuba Live! is purchasing solar panels; the Saving Lives Campaign and Global Health Partners are procuring medical equipment; and the Hatuey Project provides cancer medicines for Cuban children. We can support or join the Nuestra América Convoy to Cuba, led by Progressive International, which urges people from around the world to travel to Havana by land, air, and sea for a mass mobilization on March 21. Whatever we do, we must act now. Cuba has shown unparalleled solidarity with the world. Now the world must stand with Cuba. * * *

Defend Cuba From US Efforts to Crush It

jacobin.com/2026/03/us-cuba-socialis...

#left #news #vsn #SupportIndependentMedia #DiverseSpectrumOfTheLeft

1 0 0 0
Post image

‘People are fleeing the state’: Kansas is not safe for trans people

therealnews.com/people-are-fleeing-the-s...

#news #left #vsn #DiverseSpectrumOfTheLeft #SupportIndependentMedia

0 1 0 0
Preview
Wordle - A Wordle Alternative Guess the hidden word in 6 tries. A new puzzle is available each day.

#LeftWordle 1,728 4/6 ( #Left #Wordle )

🟨⬛⬛⬛⬛
⬛🟩⬛🟩🟩
⬛🟩🟩🟩🟩
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

https://left-wordle.com/

0 2 0 0
Preview
Don’t Expect Kristi Noem’s Departure to Change Anything Donald Trump fired Kristi Noem for embarrassing him on TV, not for the civil rights catastrophe she oversaw at Homeland Security. Her replacement, Markwayne Mullin, is a loyal Trump ally who promises more of the same egregious overreach and abuse.

Don’t Expect Kristi Noem’s Departure to Change Anything

https://jacobin.com/2026/03/dhs-ice-noem-mullin-trump/

#left #news #vsn #SupportIndependentMedia #DiverseSpectrumOfTheLeft

2 0 0 0
Preview
The Democratic Party Has Made a Religion of Curated Facts Centrist Democrats claim to be the bearers of hard facts, dismissing leftist dissent as emotional and naive. But their “facts” are often a mishmash of consultant data, selectively interpreted focus groups, and big donor priorities.

The Democratic Party Has Made a Religion of Curated Facts

jacobin.com/2026/03/democrats-centri...

#left #news #vsn #SupportIndependentMedia #DiverseSpectrumOfTheLeft

0 0 0 0
Preview
Neocons Have Shaped Washington’s Iran War Plans As the US attacks Iran, Donald Trump is following a blueprint laid out by a long-standing force in US foreign policy: the neocons who backed the Iraq War more than 20 years ago.

Neocons Have Shaped Washington’s Iran War Plans

jacobin.com/2026/03/iran-war-neocons...

#left #news #vsn #SupportIndependentMedia #DiverseSpectrumOfTheLeft

0 0 0 0
Preview
Artificial Intelligence Is Already Making War More Horrific AI-assisted warfare extends a logic with roots in the industrial warfare of the 20th century: a cold distance that turns humans into points in a dataset.

Artificial Intelligence Is Already Making War More Horrific

jacobin.com/2026/03/artificial-intel...

#left #news #vsn #SupportIndependentMedia #DiverseSpectrumOfTheLeft

0 0 0 0
A Message for Iran Regime Apologists
A Message for Iran Regime Apologists YouTube video by The Free Press

#Elica #LeBon, an #Iranian attorney & activist,
explains how the #far #right and #far #left found
common cause & how this convergence is shaping
the global #information-war around #Iran &
privilege of living in a liberal democracy,
how that can cloud people’s judgment about
#dictatorial #regimes.

2 0 0 0
Preview
Keir Starmer Wasted His Chance to Stand Up to the US The US bombing campaign in Iran relies heavily on British military bases. For a moment, it seemed Keir Starmer might refuse Washington access, but he has proved too cowardly to make even this basic stand for human rights against imperial war.

Keir Starmer Wasted His Chance to Stand Up to the US

jacobin.com/2026/03/starmer-us-milit...

#left #news #vsn #SupportIndependentMedia #DiverseSpectrumOfTheLeft

2 0 1 0

Since #RightWing & #FarRight shill Bruce has been presenting #BBCQT, the programme has been unwatchable for me.

Never mind that the r/w guests far outnumber those on the #left, she doesn’t even try to hide her bias.

Totally unprofessional.

3 0 1 0
Preview
How Adults Took Over YA By treating young adult fiction as a laboratory for professional-class moralizing, the publishing industry has effectively abandoned actual teens.

How Adults Took Over YA

https://jacobin.com/2026/03/how-adults-took-over-ya/

#left #news #vsn #SupportIndependentMedia #DiverseSpectrumOfTheLeft

0 0 0 0
Preview
Abolish Travel Teams Youth sports should be about fun and fair play — not turning kids into anxious investments for parents and private equity.

Abolish Travel Teams

https://jacobin.com/2026/03/abolish-travel-teams/

#left #news #vsn #SupportIndependentMedia #DiverseSpectrumOfTheLeft

0 0 0 0
Preview
The Devil’s Music Years and years before gangster rap, satanic lyrics, glam rock, and Led Zeppelin’s groupie antics, good old-fashioned rock ‘n’ roll — the chosen music of the postwar youth — roused nothing less than a full-blown moral panic across America. Here are the songs most responsible.

The Devil’s Music

https://jacobin.com/2026/03/the-devils-music/

#left #news #vsn #SupportIndependentMedia #DiverseSpectrumOfTheLeft

0 0 0 0
Preview
The View From the Arena Dystopian teen films will remain popular as long as they keep reflecting truths about young people’s prospects under capitalism.

The View From the Arena

https://jacobin.com/2026/03/the-view-from-the-arena/

#left #news #vsn #SupportIndependentMedia #DiverseSpectrumOfTheLeft

0 0 0 0
The bluesky left should be against Marathon not for it.
The bluesky left should be against Marathon not for it. YouTube video by Kythra the suntamer

www.youtube.com/watch?v=FFb9... #marathon #left #politics #political

0 0 0 0
Preview
What’s on a Leftist Teenager’s Bookshelf? We surveyed 1,789 socialist teens. Here’s what they’re reading before prom.

What’s on a Leftist Teenager’s Bookshelf?

jacobin.com/2026/03/whats-on-a-lefti...

#left #news #vsn #SupportIndependentMedia #DiverseSpectrumOfTheLeft

0 0 0 0