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Published on Tuesday, 02 August 2016 09:45
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Exclusively in the New Print Issue of CounterPunch
The Criminalization of Black Life
Yvette Carnell on the murders of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile; Lawrence Reichard tells the story of the wrongful conviction of Gary Tyler; and Christopher Ketcham on the unfettered power of prosecutors. Work and Suicide in France: Sarah Waters explores the economic forces driving the rise of workplace suicides in France; Dan Glazebrook on the neo-colonialism of offshore tax havens; David Macaray on the inglorious history of the Secret Service and Andrew Smolski dissects the biases of the New York Times' coverage of Mexico. PLUS: Jeffrey St. Clair's epitaph for the Sanders Revolution; Mike Whitney on the low interest con-job; Chris Floyd on the consequences of a permanent State of Emergency; Daniel Raventos and Julie Wark on Brexit and the Spanish elections; Lee Ballinger on the zealots of recycling and Kim Nicolini on the surrealist films of Yorgos Lanthimos.
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NEWS UPDATE
7-21-2016
Money Talks
Jonathan Cook reports how Trump made a u-turn on Israel.
Cashing in on a Failed Coup
Vijay Prashad explains how the Turkey coup allows Erdogan to push his agenda.
From Nice to the Middle East
Ramzy Baroud on the only way to challenge ISIS.
Donald Trump is the Loneliest Man
John Eskow unloads on The Donald.
The Future of the European Union
Dean Baker on Brexit and austerity.
Notes From Cleveland
Russell Mokhiber says that with Trump and Hillary, the more we see the less we like.
Mike Pence and the Flat Earth Society
Sam Husseini on Pence and Israel's nuclear weapons.
Neoliberal Police
Andrew Levine on neoliberal cops run amuck.
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Quote of the Day
James Baldwin: "The situation of the Black American 'minority' connects with the situation of the so-called 'emerging' or 'Third World' nations. These existed, until only yesterday, merely as a source of capital for the 'developed' nations. The 'vital' interests of the Western world were the riches extorted from these colonies; without this worldwide plunder, there could have been no Industrial Revolution. The colonies also had a therapeutic value for the colonizing societies in that these societies could, and did, dump their unruly youth and all their other misfits and rejects overseas, thus lessening the tensions or possibilities of rebellion on the mainland, and particularly in the newly industrialized and vulnerable metropoles. No colonizing power voluntarily surrendered this arrangement, and 'independence' (like 'integration') merely set in motion a complex legal and political machinery designed to camouflage and maintain the status quo."
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