The Democratic Platform Goes After Wall Street
The platform draft shows Democrats are willing to bite the hand that feeds them – but will they follow through?
The platform draft shows Democrats are willing to bite the hand that feeds them – but will they follow through?
Advocates will continue to push for the tax on Wall Street that could raise billions in revenue over 10 years.
“First, do no harm,” Phyllis Bennis tells Campaign For America’s Future. If we want to defeat ISIS, we must “Stop the drone attacks. Stop the air strikes.”
Black Americans will never trust the police without serious measures to reduce police violence and improve accountability.
Clinton is right: Trump would be a disaster on foreign policy. But her refusal to engage with the alternative offered by Sanders says more about her own war-driven approach than anything else.
IPS’s Phyllis Bennis tells the Real News Network that although Clinton rightfully used her national security speech to condemn the bigotry and danger of Trump’s positions, she didn’t lay out a much better alternative.
The average debt for a college graduate is $37,000 and the system is trying to squeeze you harder than any generation before. But it doesn’t have to be this way.
Two decades before Bernie Sanders’ presidential candidacy, the hip-hop artist described the absurdity of inequality in America that continues to get worse today.
The next generation of Koreans could take part in a national revival of South Korea and put the ghosts of the 20th century to rest.
If nothing changes in our tax code, the wealthiest 1 percent will claim half of all U.S. wealth in just 20 years.