Against the Current, No. 195, July/August 2018
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Endless War, Swirling Chaos
— The Editors -
A New COINTELPRO?
— Malik Miah -
Just Transition: Let Detroit Breathe!
— a talk by William Copeland - Breathing in Detroit
- Rev. Edward Pinkney Freed After 30 Months
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State of the UAW
— Dianne Feeley - #FreeSiwatu!
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Letter to the Editors
— Dan Georgakas - Karl Marx at 200
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A Birthday Bash for Marx
— The Editors -
Marx, Our Contemporary
— Tony Smith -
Gender, Race and Marx's Whiskers
— David Roediger -
Exploitation, Alienation and Oppression
— Abbie Bakan -
Marx and Organization
— Mark A. Lause -
India's Freedom Struggle Influenced by Marxism
— Prasenjit Bose - Marx's Capital
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On Economic Madness
— Luke Pretz -
Transformation Problem Unraveled
— Paul Burkett - Russia & World Revolution
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Communism and Self-Management
— Catherine Samary -
The Soviets and Tsarist Debt
— Eric Toussaint - Review Essay
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BDS Versus Settler-Colonialism
— Alan Wald - Reviews
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Understanding Appalachia Inside and Out
— Bob Hutton -
Revising Class: Lumpen in Literature
— Keith Gilyard -
The Making of C.L.R. James
— Jason Schulman -
Disabling Barriers
— Giselle Gerolami - In Memoriam
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Myron Perlman, Z"L: Working-Class Jewish Radical
— Benjamin Balthaser
• The incinerator is a health risk for a community that is already overburdened by air pollution.
• A Detroiter is three times more likely than other Michigan residents to be hospitalized for asthma, with children living near the incinerator five times more likely. The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services calls Detroit the “epicenter of asthma.”
• The Detroit municipal waste incinerator on the city’s near east side receives trash from 10 Michigan counties as well as Illinois, Ohio and Canada.
• Almost 77,000 children live within five miles of the incinerator. Within a mile of the incinerator, 87% of residents are persons of color; 60% live below the federal poverty line.
• Detroit pays approximately 66% more than other cities to send its trash to the incinerator. Pollution from the DRP facility causes $2.6 million in health costs each year.
• The incinerator violated the federal Clean Air Act 379 times in 2015-16. These violations included failure to monitor sulfer dioxide, carbon monoxide and nitrous oxide as well as exceeding the limits of allowed carbon monoxide emissions and failure to effectively capture particulate matter.
—“Detroit Incinerator Fact Sheet” issued by Breathe Free Detroit (https://bit.ly/2M8rIrO).
July-August 2018, ATC 195