
Dr. Hansen's Climate Warning: It's Worse Than We Thought
YouTube‘Self-termination is most likely’: the history and future of societal collapse
https://lemmy.world/post/35500552
‘Self-termination is most likely’: the history and future of societal collapse - Lemmy.World
Lemmy
Kate Raworth Introduction to Doughnut Economics
https://lemmy.world/post/35439122
Kate Raworth Introduction to Doughnut Economics - Lemmy.World
Lemmy
A Revolution Betrayed, Part 1: Sudan and the Imperial Negation of a People's Aspirations
https://lemmy.world/post/35241056
A Revolution Betrayed, Part 1: Sudan and the Imperial Negation of a People's Aspirations - Lemmy.World
(a year ago) >April 15, 2024 marked the one year anniversary of the current
civil war in Sudan. Largely ignored and underreported in the US media, the civil
war has created the largest current humanitarian crisis on earth with over 8
million people displaced, with over 2 million people having fled the country
according to the United Nations. The civil war comes in the wake of a glorious
democratic revolution in 2018-2019 that was led by a broad multi-ethnic people’s
movement that ended a 30 year dictatorship. However, the people’s movement was
denied the full fruit of its sacrifices by the Sudanese military and its US,
European, and Arab benefactors who wanted to limit or outright deny the
democratic aspirations of the people to retain control over the Sudan’s
strategic resources and geo-political positioning, and to deny the African and
Arab worlds of a present day example of direct democracy and liberation. >A
Revolution Betrayed will be a discussion about the Sudanese revolution,
counter-revolution and civil war and its global implications and impact. We will
be holding this discussion with renowned Sudanese-American journalist Isma’il
Kushkush. >Isma’il Kushkush is a Sudanese-American journalist who has
contributed to the New York Times, the Washington Post, New Yorker, The
Atlantic, Granta, Smithsonian, The Nation, Guernica, and others. He was based in
Khartoum for eight years, and was acting bureau chief for The New York Times in
East Africa based in Nairobi, Kenya. He received a bachelors of arts degree in
history and international relations from the University of California, Davis,
with a focus on Africa and the Middle East and a master of arts degree in
journalism from Columbia Journalism School in New York with a focus on politics
and global affairs. He was a Samuel I. Newhouse Foundation Fellow at the
Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture and an Ida B. Wells Fellowship
recipient with Type Investigations.
A report tied Iowa’s water pollution to agriculture. Then the money to promote it mysteriously disappeared
https://lemmy.world/post/35239194

A report tied Iowa’s water pollution to agriculture. Then the money to promote it mysteriously disappeared - Lemmy.World
cross-posted from: https://sh.itjust.works/post/45106875
[https://sh.itjust.works/post/45106875] > Don’t worry Iowa, if you’re short on
cash I’ll help promote your study!
Nature and other dangerous words: Marx, method and the proletarian standpoint in the web of life
https://lemmy.world/post/35031398
Nature and other dangerous words: Marx, method and the proletarian standpoint in the web of life - Lemmy.World
Lemmy
Unequal exchange is not primarily about monetary value
https://lemmy.world/post/35025416
Unequal exchange is not primarily about monetary value - Lemmy.World
>Ecologically Unequal Exchange (EUE) theory reframes trade as asymmetric
transfers of biophysical resources from South to North, rejecting monetary value
metrics. It challenges both mainstream and Marxian economics by emphasizing
material flows over money-based interpretations of global inequality.
Facing the Anthropocene: Comparative Education as Sympoiesis
https://lemmy.world/post/34818129
Facing the Anthropocene: Comparative Education as Sympoiesis - Lemmy.World
Lemmy