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Sanctions on Russia may overturn the world economy as we know it
Business & EconomyEconomic expert Ellen Brown talks to Robert Scheer about the financial revolution Vladimir Putin has started and what the global economic future could look like as a result.
Schwarzenegger and Brown: Out of political office, counseling the world
PoliticsAmid the war in Ukraine, former governors Jerry Brown and Arnold Schwarzengger are demonstrating California’s clout on the international stage.
Russia recalibrates war, turns focus to eastern Ukraine
InternationalRussian troops are now focusing on eastern Ukraine. “It seems to be equal opportunity carnage,” says the RAND Corporation’s David Shlapak.
As Inglewood school closes, parents mourn loss of community
EducationInglewood residents are upset about a plan to close a local elementary school. But with enrollment down statewide, communities will likely see more permanent campus shutdowns.
Does Ketanji Brown Jackson’s confirmation mean a bipartisan future?
NationalPanelists discuss Ketanji Brown Jackson’s confirmation to the Supreme Court, whether sanctions can stop Russia’s attacks in Ukraine, and Twitter’s new edit button.
Will the Ukraine war end without destroying all life on the planet?
InternationalVeteran award-winning journalists Patrick Cockburn and Robert Scheer, who met in Moscow in 1987 when Mikhail Gorbachev optimistically promised peace, now fear a descent into nuclear…
Ukrainian band DakhaBrakha tours US, sings for peace and justice
World MusicThe Ukrainian band DakhaBrakha is touring the U.S. “It's very important for us to play a lot because Ukraine can disappear from the newspaper,” says member Marko Halanevych.
Why do we still use the ineffective drug ivermectin for COVID-19?
Health & WellnessArmed with good science that shows the drug is ineffective and dangerous people are still using it and often skipping their vaccines that are proven safe and effective. Go figure.
American dissent on Ukraine is dying in darkness
InternationalWhen it came to the Ukraine conflict, Professor Michael J. Brenner did what he’s done his whole life: question American foreign policy. This time the backlash was vitriolic.