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Albert: Dignified Work
Commentary, February, 27 2000
Michael Albert
Albert's ZSpace page
The issue of Dignified Work has two primary components: (1) what is a just division of tasks for each person; and (2) what division of tasks do we need to adopt in order to have our work foster self-management?
Bond: Workers of the world, transcend the wedge!
Commentary, February, 24 2000
Patrick Bond
Bond's ZSpace page
Divide-and-conquer is an all too familiar gambit of a ruling elite under stress. Thus Seattle demonstrators, together with a growing international movement struggling in the same spirit in many other sites, have found themselves subject to both re...
Albert: A Program Seeking Self Management
Commentary, February, 20 2000
Michael Albert
Albert's ZSpace page
Agreeing that self-management, or decision making input in proportion as one is affected, is a core goal for a participatory economic movement, what demands can we fight for today that will help move us toward self-management tomorrow?
Schechter: At the Top of the World
Commentary, February, 09 2000
Danny Schechter
Schechter's ZSpace page
When demonstrators packed the streets of Seattle last December to scuttle the World Trade Organization meeting and shout about their dissatisfaction with economic globalization, some journalists described them as "politically correct" activists.
Peters: Progressive Causes Provide Marketing Opportunities
Commentary, February, 07 2000
Cynthia Peters
Peters's ZSpace page
What happens when corporations take on progressive social and political issues? We've all had the opportunity to roll our eyes at the marketers who co-opt feminist principles in order to sell their products. "Take Control" hair gel and "Stay Free...
Albert: A Program Seeking Just Rewards
Commentary, February, 06 2000
Michael Albert
Albert's ZSpace page
Suppose we agree that people ought to be paid only according to how hard they work and how onerous their work conditions are. To attain these Just Rewards we must reduce and ultimately eliminate reward for property, power, and output; reduce and f...
Barsamian: Monopolies, NPR, & PBS
Zmag Article, February, 01 2000
David Barsamian
Barsamian's ZSpace page
Robert McChesney is Professor of Communications at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He is a leading critic of corporate media. He is the author of Telecommunications, Mass Media and Democracy. His latest book is Rich Media, Po...
Smith: Politics in Russia
Zmag Article, February, 01 2000
Jim Smith
Smith's ZSpace page
Boris Kagarlitsky is a Moscow-based writer, academic, and democratic socialist political activist. He was a leader of the Party of Labor, which was outlawed by Boris Yeltsin in the aftermath of the 1993 presidential coup that res...
Albert: Internet Commercialism?!
Commentary, January, 15 2000
Michael Albert
Albert's ZSpace page
There is an old economic saying that "there is no free lunch." To get something out of an economy you have to put something in. Contrary to rumors, this holds for the Internet as well as for factories. To provide internet content takes labor, tool...
Hartmann: What's In A Word?
Commentary, January, 08 2000
Betsy Hartmann
Hartmann's ZSpace page
Conservative anti-immigrant and population control forces are once again threatening to take control of the Sierra Club, one of the nation's most influential environmental organizations. A September 26 resolution by the Board of Directors changed ...
Marable: Civil Rights or Silver Rights
Commentary, January, 03 2000
Manning Marable
Marable's ZSpace page
More than a century ago, conservative black educator Booker T. Washington proposed a strategy for black advancement within capitalism. The founder of both Tuskegee Institute and the National Negro Business League, Washington cautioned African Amer...
Zinn: Notes for a Gathering
Commentary, January, 02 2000
Howard Zinn
Zinn's ZSpace page
I have been asked to imagine this situation: "The progressive third party movement has captured the White House, 60% of Congress and 30 Governorships. What do we do now?"
Sargent: 37.7 Seconds, Part II
Zmag Article, January, 01 2000
Lydia Sargent
Sargent's ZSpace page
Lydia Sargent As I said in Part I, the title 37.7 seconds refers to the average amount of time fathers spent each day communicating with their babies during the first three months of life, according to a 1971 study quoted in Has Feminism Chang...
Carter: The Indigo Girls & Rage Against the Machine
Zmag Article, January, 01 2000
Sandy Carter
Carter's ZSpace page
Carter When the Atlanta, Georgia-based duo the Indigo Girls signed on with Epic Records in 1988, the mainstream music market was getting on the bandwagon of a new "folk revival" trend triggered by the surprising breakthroughs of Trac...
Albert: A Q & A on the WTO, IMF, World Bank, and Activism
Zmag Article, January, 01 2000
Michael Albert
Albert's ZSpace page
A Q & A on the WTO, IMF, World Bank, and Activism
Bacon: Will A Social Clause In Trade Agreements Advance International Solidarity?
Zmag Article, January, 01 2000
David Bacon
Bacon's ZSpace page
David Bacon On November 30 the AFL-CIO mobilized thousands of union members to demonstrate in Seattle outside the meeting of trade ministers of the World Trade Organization. The labor federation called for incor...
Berkowitz: Talk Radio's Laura Schlessinger
Zmag Article, January, 01 2000
Bill Berkowitz
Berkowitz's ZSpace page
Berkowitz Over the past several years Dr. Laura Schlessinger has taken talk radio to new heights with her extraordinarily popular and controversial advice program. She has adapted the call-in format to her own special brand of schticka n...
Gonsalves: The liberal media and the feds
Commentary, December, 30 1999
Sean Gonsalves
Gonsalves's ZSpace page
In my last column, I quoted espionage expert Phillip Knightly. "An intelligence service thrives on threat," he wrote in "The Second Oldest Profession." The same could be said about the rest of the defense industry.
Solomon: A PRo-Democracy Movement
Commentary, December, 26 1999
Norman Solomon
Solomon's ZSpace page
It's a pro-democracy movement. And it's global. The vibrant social forces that converged on Seattle -- and proceeded to deflate the WTO summit -- are complex, diverse and sometimes contradictory. Yet the threads of their demands form a distinct w...
Albert: Building Solidarity
Commentary, December, 24 1999
Michael Albert
Albert's ZSpace page
Social struggle will never be perfectly choreographed but we can at least have broad norms regarding movement process that benefit all involved constituencies.


