After five years of occupation, this 2008 photo from Sadr City in Baghdad shows Iraqi children drinking water from these wrecked pipes. Cholera, a gastrointestinal disease, and typhoid, which had been virtually eradicated in Iraq by 1989, made a comeback under the Western imperialist occupation. Today, the electricity and water supply systems in Baghdad are in even worse condition than in 2008.
A couple million people in the Northeast U.S. have just experienced Superstorm Sandy and the collateral suffering produced by capitalist climate change and neglect of the infrastructure. The poorest and most oppressed have also received the least relief. This has placed them closer to the Iraqis, who have suffered for 22 years from the Pentagon’s direct destruction.
Denver Students set up a tent city on April 26 on the Auraria campus of…
Chicago For decades the Labor Notes conference, organized around the slogan “put the ‘movement’ back…
Sex work is a spectrum, a spectrum consisting of work such as erotic dancing, nude…
Download the PDF. Campus revolts inspire anti-imperialist solidarity Editorial: Behind repression of campus occupations: Follow…
Should anyone have illusions that the United States is a bastion of democracy, those illusions…
Reports from Workers World correspondents, supplemented by social media, give a feel of the breadth…