U.S. Military Is No Answer to Narcotraffickers
Ecuador says no to U.S. military expansion.
Ecuador says no to U.S. military expansion.
At COP30, Feleecia Guillen calls on governors who call themselves climate leaders to “prove it.”
“We’ve lost the war on drugs miserably,” Sanho Tree says, and Trump’s Caribbean strikes are creating a “much more dangerous environment.”
Across multiple elections at the state and local government levels, voters chose pro-people and planet agendas over militarism, fossil fuels, and billionaire corporate interests.
The GOP budget bill passed earlier this year includes the largest cuts to SNAP in history. And those cuts are starting now.
Trump claimed immigrants were “taking your jobs.” But during his brutal crackdown, the job market has only gotten worse.
War with Venezuela, military intervention in Mexico, the attack in Iran, the deployment of military force in U.S. cities, a trillion dollar military budget: Trump deserves a Nobel prize, but not for peace.
Putting more money in the pockets of everyday donors can restore fairness and accountability to the nonprofit sector.
Leaders should use this rare multilateral space to advance a more equitable global economy.
Sanho Tree explains how the U.S. is using the “war on drugs” to justify attacks on Venezuela and beyond.