When ordinary Americans seek care for their health, they come up against a most peculiar system. The U.S. has some of the most advanced medical science in the world. It spends more of its resources on health care than any other country in the world. Yet Americans’ health is rated near the bottom of developed countries. In some of the poorest countries in the world people live longer and fewer die in infancy than in the U.S. Americans spend nearly twice as much as Japanese on health care, but Japanese live on average four years longer.
SIGNS OF LIFE: GREEN ECONOMY
May 22, 2008 By Tim Costello, Brendan Smith & Jeremy Brecher The organization Green for All, which unites green jobs advocates from disadvantaged communities around the country, drew 1,000 people to a conference in Memphis on the 40th anniversary of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination. Under the name “The Dream Reborn,” the conference… Read More »
LABOR’S WAR ON GLOBAL WARMING
March 10, 2008 By Tim Costello, Brendan Smith and Jeremy Brecher This week GLS staff will be attending the Blue-Green Alliance’s “Good Jobs, Green Jobs: A National Green Jobs Conference” scheduled for March 13-14 in Pittsburgh. We will be covering the event for The Nation.com and in preparation have published the following article. We… Read More »
POLICY ISSUES FACING THE “GREEN JOBS” ALLIANCE
February 29, 2009 (fourth in a series on labor and global warming after Bali) Combating climate change requires unprecedented economic and social change. The world has never done anything like cutting greenhouse gasses before. While the need to do so is now certain, the policies that will be required to do so are not. … Read More »
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 10
- 11
- 12
- 13
- 14
- …
- 20
- Next Page »