Against the Current, No. 175, March/April 2015
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Women Under the Gun, 2015
— The Editors -
Pushing Back Civil Rights
— Malik Miah -
Vermont Healthcare Justice
— Traven Leyson -
Workplace Violence: Silent Epidemic
— Jane Slaughter -
Studies About Workplace Violence
— Jane Slaughter -
Jobs, Ecology, and Survival
— Lars Henriksson - Defend Reverend Pinkney
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Hillary Clinton and Corporate Feminism
— Kevin Young and Diana C. Sierra Becerra -
The Two-Party System, Part III
— Mark A. Lause -
Bhopal's Fight for Memory
— Sara Abraham interviews Nityanand Jayaraman - Women in Struggle
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A Case of Police Violence Against Women
— Radical Socialist (India) - The Murder of Shaimaa al-Sabbagh
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Honoring the Socialist Mary Marcy
— Allen Ruff -
Bigotry in the Guise of Secularism
— Carmen Teeple Hopkins -
Eslanda Robeson's Journey
— Dayo F. Gore -
Feminism, Marxism: Marriage or Divorce?
— Ann Ferguson -
Marx and the Family Revisited
— Dianne Feeley - Views on Cuba
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Cuba and the USA: A Discussion
— David Finkel, for the ATC Editors -
December 17: Sources, Results & Prospects
— Walter Lippmann -
Beginning a New Era
— Samuel Farber -
A Victory and Some Risks
— statement from the Fourth International - Reviews
-
Fifty Shades of Pulp
— Alan Wald -
China: Rise and Emergent Crisis
— Jase Short - In Memoriam
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Frank Fried (1927-2015)
— Patrick M. Quinn
AS AGAINST THE Current goes to press, an appeal hearing is scheduled for February 24 regarding the imprisonment of Reverend Edward Pinkney of Benton Harbor, MI. The American Civil Leaders Union has filed an “Amicus Curiae Brief” in support of Pinkney.
Pinkney was convicted on a highly dubious charge of “voter fraud” involving alleged forgery (changing a handful of dates) in the handling of recall petitions against Mayor James Hightower of Benton Harbor earlier this year. During the five-day trial, no witnesses said they saw Pinkney change any dates or signatures on the recall petitions.
The all-white jury in St. Joseph, adjacent to the mostly Black impoverished town of Benton Harbor, deliberated for nine hours and delivered the verdict on November 3, 2014. On December 15 Pinkney was sentenced to serve up to ten years in prison, and immediately incarcerated.
Mayor Hightower, a close political ally of Whirlpool Corporation, was the subject of the recall campaign due to his refusal to support a local income tax measure designed to create employment for the people in Benton Harbor, located in Berrien County in the southwest region of the state.
The motion for bond pending appeal comes before the court in the wake of a unanimous decision by Michigan Court of Appeals on October 23, 2014 in a case (People v. Hall) with facts that are legally indistinguishable from the facts of Reverend Pinkney’s case.
According to the defense committee, “If Rev. Pinkney committed a crime in this case, it was at most a misdemeanor punishable by 93 days in jail. In light of the Hall Case, Reverend Pinkney’s likelihood of success appeal in this case is extremely high.”
For more details, see http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/28050-whirlpool-corporation-sentences-edward-pinkney-to-prison-with-no-evidence#. Updates on the case are on the website of Reverend Pinkney’s organization Black Autonomy Network Community Organization in Benton Harbor, http://www.bhbanco.org.
March/April 2015, ATC 175