- January 14, 2013
The Final Call
Visit the publisher's websiteBill Fletcher, Jr. long-time labor activist, and senior scholar with the Institute for Policy Studies recently authored a book titled “They’re Bankrupting Us - And 20 Other Myths About Unions” argues that unions are necessary for democracy and to ensure economic and social justice.
. . . “We have to build a new labor movement,” Mr. Fletcher explained to The Final Call. “We need a leadership that understands the labor crisis from the ground up—not this top-down module now in existence.”
- January 1, 2013
USA Today features article “The fiscal cliff ... of '32”
Visit the publisher's website • See the article - December 13, 2012
Unionosity features article “In Fact, Fairly Taxing the Rich Won't Scare Them Away”
Visit the publisher's website • See the article - December 12, 2012
The Albany Tribune features article “In Fact, Fairly Taxing the Rich Won't Scare Them Away”
Visit the publisher's website • See the article - December 7, 2012
The (Prestonsburg, KY) Floyd County Times features article “For Pete's Sake, What's Happened to Our Democracy?”
Visit the publisher's website • See the article - December 7, 2012
Counterpunch features article “For Pete's Sake, What's Happened to Our Democracy?”
Visit the publisher's website • See the article - December 3, 2012
Nation of Change features article “To Move Forward, We Must Learn from Our Progressive Past”
Visit the publisher's website • See the article - November 30, 2012
The (Russellville, KY) News-Democrat & Leader features article “To Move Forward, We Must Learn from Our Progressive Past”
Visit the publisher's website • See the article - November 14, 2012
National Catholic Reporter features report “Executive Excess 2012: The CEO Hands in Uncle Sam's Pocket”
Visit the publisher's website • See the reportThe Institute for Policy Studies’ “Executive Excess 2012” reports that in 2010 and 2011 a quarter of America’s 100 highest-paid CEOs took home more in pay than their corporations paid the U.S. in taxes. Two of those firms were Citigroup and AIG, both bailed out by taxpayers. In total, these 25 corporations have 533 subsidiaries in tax havens such as the Cayman Islands, Bermuda and Gibraltar.
The CEOs’ hands in Uncle Sam’s pocket -- to use the institute’s neat phrase -- mean that “the four most direct tax subsidies for excessive executive pay cost taxpayers $14.4 billion per year -- $46 for every man, woman and child,” who, in effect, buy a CEO lunch, with a glass of wine, once a year.
- November 13, 2012
The Sidney (MT) Herald features report “Inequality Report Card: Grading Congress on Inequality”
Visit the publisher's website • See the reportWe awarded “A+” grades to the 12 House members who did the most to narrow America’s economic divide over the past two years. Eleven of these lawmakers won.
Three of the five senators who nailed top marks for their legislative actions to reduce inequality in America were up for re-election. They all won: Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I.
Of the 45 [one-percent-friendly representatives] who were up for re-election, two lost. One was Rep. Nan Hayworth, R-N.Y., who was the lead sponsor of a bill to repeal a provision in the Dodd-Frank financial reform law that requires corporations to disclose the ratio between what they pay their CEO and their workers.
This new metric could encourage a narrowing of the staggering inequality gaps within companies. In the midst of Hayworth’s two-year crusade against that provision, the SEC has failed to implement it.






Sarah Byrnes
Chuck Collins
Carlos Espinoza-Toro
Salvatore Babones
Sam Pizzigati