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Democracy Now!
- "People Have the Power": Patti Smith, Bruce Springsteen, Michael Stipe at Democracy Now! Celebration
Democracy Now! celebrated its 30th anniversary Monday at the historic Riverside Church in New York. The night ended with Patti Smith performing her anthemic hit “People Have the Power,” joined on stage by Bruce Springsteen, Michael Stipe, Hurray for the Riff Raff, the National’s Aaron Dessner and more. Watch the entire event here.
- Patti Smith Remembers Rachel Corrie, Sings "Peaceable Kingdom" at DN!'s 30th Anniversary Event
Over 2,000 people packed into the historic Riverside Church in New York on Monday to celebrate the 30th anniversary of Democracy Now! The program included a reading by legendary singer Patti Smith from her new memoir Bread of Angels, in which she remembered the U.S. peace activist Rachel Corrie, who was killed by Israeli forces in Gaza in 2003 while trying to protect Palestinian homes from destruction. Corrie inspired Smith’s song “Peaceable Kingdom,” which she performed alongside Tony Shanahan on guitar and her daughter Jesse Smith on piano.
- Pentagon Whistleblower Criticizes "Bloodthirst" of Iran War, Says Hegseth Is Enabling War Crimes
As the United States mobilizes thousands more troops for deployment to the Middle East, we speak with retired U.S. Air Force Master Sergeant Wes Bryant, who criticizes the “bloodthirst” of the U.S.-Israeli war against Iran. Bryant led the Pentagon office for civilian harm assessment from 2024 to 2025, before the unit was dissolved under Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. The “wholly illegal war” has been “carried out recklessly from the start and with little regard for the innocent,” Bryant tells Democracy Now! “Pete Hegseth has already directed the committing of war crimes. And unfortunately, our senior military leadership is bending the knee and carrying out whatever he tells them to do.”
- New DHS Head Markwayne Mullin Is "Trump Loyalist, Anti-immigrant, Incompetent": Rep. Delia Ramirez
Markwayne Mullin was sworn in Tuesday as secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, replacing Kristi Noem, who was ousted earlier this month. Mullin has served as senator for Oklahoma since 2023 following a decade in the House of Representatives. He joins the Trump administration amid a partial government shutdown, with Democrats demanding reforms to immigration enforcement before fully funding DHS. “This agency of terror needs to be dismantled,” says Congressmember Delia Ramirez of Illinois. “And whether it is Mullin, whether it is Noem, whether it’s Tom Homan, that agency is dangerous, and every American should say, 'Enough is enough.'” Ramirez also comments on the birthright citizenship case before the Supreme Court, […]
- Headlines for March 25, 2026
Pentagon Reports as Many as 3,000 U.S. Troops Set to Be Deployed to the Middle East, Iran Continues to Launch Retaliatory Strikes Against Gulf Countries, Philippines Declares National Energy Emergency Due to U.S.-Israeli War on Iran, Lebanon Expels Iranian Ambassador from the Country, Russia Launches Nearly 1,000 Drones at Ukraine, NYT: TSA Shared Personal Info with ICE Before Arrests at San Francisco Airport, CNN: Concerns Raised About Safety at LaGuardia Airport Before Deadly Runway Crash, New Mexico Jury Orders Meta to Pay $375 Million for Harming Children’s Mental Health and Safety, Eight Architecture and Cultural Organizations Sue Trump and Kennedy Center Board over Renovations, Democrat Flips Florida State House Seat in District […]
Fair Observer
- Imperial Decline in the Straits of Hormuz: The Iran War as America’s Very Own Suez Crisis
In the first chapter of his 1874 novel, The Gilded Age, Mark Twain offered a telling observation about the connection between past and present: “History never repeats itself, but the… present often seems to be constructed out of the broken fragments of antique legends.” Among the “antique legends” most helpful in understanding the likely outcome… Continue reading Imperial Decline in the Straits of Hormuz: The Iran War as America’s Very Own Suez Crisis The post Imperial Decline in the Straits of Hormuz: The Iran War as America’s Very Own Suez Crisis appeared first on Fair Observer.
- The Road to Quagmire in Iran: Why Arming the Kurds Risks Destabilizing the Region
Just five days into the US-Israeli bombing campaign against Iran, signs of mission creep — a military mission reaching beyond its initial goals — had already begun emerging. What began as a limited military operation now appears to be expanding toward a far riskier objective: destabilizing the Iranian state itself. Reports that Washington is considering… Continue reading The Road to Quagmire in Iran: Why Arming the Kurds Risks Destabilizing the Region The post The Road to Quagmire in Iran: Why Arming the Kurds Risks Destabilizing the Region appeared first on Fair Observer.
- Private Credit Turned Out to Be an Illusion. What’s Next?
The global financial system has a way of reminding us that liquidity is often just a polite word for an illusion. For years, investors have poured trillions into private credit, lured by the promise of higher yields and the comforting narrative that these loans were safer than volatile public stocks. But that comfort has vanished.… Continue reading Private Credit Turned Out to Be an Illusion. What’s Next? The post Private Credit Turned Out to Be an Illusion. What’s Next? appeared first on Fair Observer.
Anthropocene
- For at least one species, cigarettes might actually be good for health.
The Eurasian blue tit has been seen lacing nests with cigarette butts. It might be acting as a weapon against parasites.
- What happens to obsolete oil rigs in a green future? This study has a smart answer.
Recycling the copper and steel of old oil rigs into wind and solar infrastructure could cut billions of tons of emissions—and save $11 trillion.
Black Agenda Report
The Guardian
The Marshall Project
Aeon
- Being in the world: technology and humanity
If technology threatens to flatten our humanity, artists can deepen it. Hear how, from a flamenco musician and a juggler- by Aeon VideoWatch on Aeon
Unicorn Riot
- Protesters Fill Minnesota Capitol, Read Letters from Children Held in Immigration Custody
Saint Paul, MN — More than 100 people filed into the Minnesota State Capitol on Feb. 26 to protest the prolonged detainment of children in Immigration and Customs Enforcement facilities around the country. The crowd, led into the capitol building by the immigrant rights-oriented nonprofit… The post Protesters Fill Minnesota Capitol, Read Letters from Children Held in Immigration Custody appeared first on UNICORN RIOT.
The Conversation
Inter Press Service
- EXCLUSIVE: Water Laureate Kaveh Madani on Arrest, Exile and Fight for Science
It was hope that kept me going. – Professor Kaveh Madani
- A World Order in Crisis: War, Power, and Resistance
Article 2(4) of the United Nations Charter prohibits member states from using threats or force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state. Violating international law, the United States and Israel attacked Iran on February 28, 2026. The ostensible reason for this unprovoked aggression was to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon.
- As East Africa’s Migratory Fish Vanish, a Food Security Crisis Surfaces
By the time the auction begins at Nangurukuru fish market in Tanzania’s southern Lindi region, the crisis is already visible. Wooden canoes that once returned from the Rufiji River with heavy catches now bring only a fraction of what they used to. Traders scan for the long-whiskered catfish that once defined the market but find
Sludge
Yale Environment 360
Inside Climate News
Amnesty International
Grist
- The frantic, high-tech fight to stop climate-fueled dengue fever
Scientists in Brazil and Peru may have found a way to beat mosquitoes at their own game. The U.S. may soon need to do the same.
- Fiber optic cables reveal a serious problem at the heart of modern farming
Tilling helps farmers control weeds and boost soil fertility. But that also degrades a field's ability to hold water and carbon.
- Trump’s $1B payoff to stop offshore wind is even stranger than it sounds
The government is paying TotalEnergies to halt a wind farm it isn’t building, in exchange for fossil fuel investments it’s already making.
Truthout
Labor Notes
The World – PRI
- Fighting between political factions edges South Sudan toward civil war
As Sudan's civil war rages on, the United Nations is warning that a roiling political feud in neighboring South Sudan could escalate into another fractious conflict. The World's Host Marco Werman speaks to Yashovardhan, the head of mission for the humanitarian aid group Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) [Doctors Without Borders]. He joined the show from the South Sudanese capital Juba.
- China's economy buffeted by Iran war, but seeks opportunities in crisis
Roughly half of China’s imported oil comes from the Middle East. Still, it has managed to insulate itself from just the sort of energy crisis the war in Iran has set in motion. Council on Foreign Relations fellow Zongyuan Zoe Liu talks with The World’s Host Marco Werman about how exposed China’s economy is to the worldwide economic disruption the war has caused.
- A new species has been discovered in Cambodian caves
It's a story of dark Cambodian caves and bat guano (poop). This very unique environment created by the bat poop seems to spawn new species, including geckos and micro-snails. The World's Hosts Carolyn Beeler and Marco Werman tell a tale that's not for the faint of heart.
19th News
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