Against the Current, No. 183, July-August 2016
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Political Revolution -- What Is It?
— The Editors -
Muhammad Ali: Free Black Man
— Malik Miah -
Orlando: Home-grown Terror
— David Finkel -
Time for an Independent Party
— Howie Hawkins -
What Is the Next Left?
— Johanna Brenner -
Whither the "Political Revolution"?
— Traven Serge -
Electoral Strategy After Bernie's Campaign
— Neal Meyer -
Converging on Philadelphia
— Robert Caldwell -
Refugees and Capitalism
— Shahrzad Mojab -
Terrifying Prospects
— Noha Radwan -
Rasmea Odeh's Appeal Gains
— David Finkel - An Appeal for Homa Hoodfar
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Reactionary Tide in Latin America
— Michael Löwy -
Rainbows and Weddings
— Mehlab Jameel - Jasmine Richards' Conviction
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Reimagining the Harper's Ferry Revolt
— Ursula McTaggart - Leonard Peltier's Appeal
- Review Essays on World War I
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Fascinating Antifascism
— Alan Wald -
Understanding the Cataclysm
— Allen Ruff - Reviews
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Turbulent 1970s Revisited
— Brad Duncan -
The Domestic Workers' Movement
— Cheryl Coney -
Rape as Colonial Legacy
— Giselle Gerolami -
A Response to Rebecca Hill
— Timothy Messer-Kruse
LEONARD PELTIER, THE Native American activist who has been imprisoned for over 40 years — even though the U.S. government admitted decades ago that it doesn’t know who killed the two federal agents for whose murder Peltier was falsely convicted — has appealed for executive clemency.
Designated a political prisoner by Amnesty International, Peltier is the highest profile American Indian prisoner incarcerated in the United States. James Anaya, United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, visited Peltier two years ago and called for his release.
Peltier has always maintained his innocence. As the International Leonard Peltier Defense Committee explains, “Prosecutors and federal agents manufactured evidence against him…hid proof of his innocence; presented false testimony obtained through torturous interrogation techniques; ignored court orders; and lied to the jury.”
Now 71, Peltier suffers from a number of medical problems including severe diabetes, hypertension, a heart condition, and most recently abdominal aortic aneurysm. As President Obama’s term of office comes to a close, pressuring the White House to provide clemency is essential. For details about Peltier’s case, see http://www.whoisleonardpeltier.info/home/clemency/.
July/August 2016, ATC 183