Archive
Raise the Sub-Minimum Wage
As the fast food workers' minimum wage campaign gains momentum, another group of workers is expanding the fight to address one of the least-known economic outrages. You may not realize it, but the measly $7.25 an hour McDonald's and other fast-food giants pay their...
A Higher Minimum Down Under
Fast-food workers are holding strikes and demonstrations in dozens of U.S. cities. The "Fight for 15" campaign demands a $15 living wage and the right to form a union without interference from employers. Critics say a living wage would drive fast-food restaurants and...
The Stiffing State
My cousin Mona called me the other day about her husband Harry, who had came home from work and said: "We're spending too much money, Mona. It's got to stop. We're going broke." "Really? I thought we were doing OK, sort of." "OK? Look at the stack of bills on my desk....
Going Full Circle Back to the Heyday of Inequality
The future just keeps getting brighter for Americans with unique specialties. Randy Stearns has one such specialty: "home-tech integration." Stearns helps people install and maintain high-tech gadgets. But we're not talking "Geek Squad" agents and hooking up home...
Bossing the Poor Around
I spent a few months on food stamps this year. As a single woman in San Diego, I qualified for $70 a month — less than a dollar per meal. But I'm lucky and I'm unusual because many of my friends are farmers and gardeners and I know how to forage wild foods. Determined...
Abusing Animals to Defend Tar Sands Oil
Both the old and new media agree on is this: If you need a story that's guaranteed to be popular, go with animals. Cute kittens, puppies, porpoises, penguins, and polar bears are all a good bet. Now, corporate shills are tapping this animal ploy to push some of their...
Higher Education Takes the Low Road
College lifts us From the mob, But not all do A nifty job. Before World War II, college was mostly for the rich. Starting with the GI Bill, which gave thousands of WW II vets a shot at getting an advanced degree, education became a more common route for upward...
Tax Houdini
Squeezing More Profits from Crummy Tomatoes
"I'm 98 percent confident we can make a tomato that tastes substantially better," Professor Harry Klee recently exulted to The New York Times. Hmmm. Excuse me, professor, but "substantially better" than what? One of Momma Nature's own heirloom varieties perhaps? No,...
The Syrian Miracle
Considering the recent wave of poor relations between Moscow and Washington, the U.S.-Russian cooperation on Syria seems miraculous and is worthy of the support and encouragement of our people. The fact that both parties have strategic reasons to need a non-violent...