Social

29/05/20
Author: 
Lisa Adkins and Martijn Konings
COVID Life and the Asset Economy

May 27, 2020

27/05/20
Author: 
Sharon Zhang
Construction workers wear protective face masks in the streets of Bushwick, New York, on May 19, 2020.

May 25, 2020

A study published in Nature Climate Change recently found that, in early April, daily global carbon dioxide emissions decreased by 17 percent compared to the 2019 mean levels. Because of shelter-in-place rules and businesses being closed, people have been driving and flying less, leading to lower emissions.

24/05/20
Author: 
Amnesty International Canada    
Amnesty International Canada

RESPECT INDIGENOUS RIGHTS
AT MANITOBA HYDRO'S KEEYASK DAM

24/05/20
Author: 
An Interview with Manuel Bompard
German chancellor Angela Merkel and French president Emmanuel Macron, seen present live via video, speak to the media at the Chancellery during the coronavirus crisis on May 18, 2020 in Berlin, Germany. Andreas Gora - Pool / Getty

Faced with the mounting economic crisis, European leaders have promised aid to the hardest-hit member states. But there’s always strings attached. For France Insoumise MEP Manuel Bompard, the proposals for loans and grants ignore the real scale of the crisis — because they all put debt repayment above the needs of average Europeans.

Category: 
23/05/20
Author: 
Socialists for Retirement Security
Washing our Hands of Financialized Pensions

[Not only are existing pensions too few, too poor, and/or facing increased downward pressure with repeated stock market crashes, but some of our pension funds actually invest in high objectionable businesses. Another needed element of a "green recovery"....Gene McGuckin]

May 21, 2020

22/05/20
Author: 
Claire O’Manique
Parliament & the Planet - Mike Gifford

May 20, 2020

This crisis has reinforced what we already know — our current economic system is leading us down a path of destruction

Economists are cautioning that the Canadian economy has entered one of the deepest recessions in our history. Our country is not alone in this. The impact of COVID-19 has put the global economy on track for a “new Great Depression.”

21/05/20
Author: 
John Clarke
Graffiti adorns a boarded-up restaurant in New York City. Photo by Anthony Quintano/Flickr.

May 17, 2020

One might have hoped that the very severity of the threat posed by the pandemic would compel the elites who manage capitalist societies to behave more responsibly and decently. The return of the pre-neoliberal “nanny state” (however inadequate it was) seemed to some a real possibility. But while the capitalist state may be concerned with maintaining social equilibrium, preserving a basic level of public health and upholding its own legitimacy, it remains utterly devoted to ensuring the conditions in which businesses can function and profits can continue to flow.

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