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On the Ground in Haiti: Hell and Hope

On the Ground in Haiti: Hell and Hope

Smoke and flames rose from the sidewalk. A white man took pictures. Slowing down, my breath left me. The fire was a corpse. Leg bones sticking out of the flames. Port-au-Prince police headquarters is gone, already bulldozed. A nearby college is pancaked. Government buildings are destroyed. Stores fallen down. Tens of thousands of structures destroyed; hundreds [...] Read more »

From the IndyBlog

Human Rights Groups Say Israel and Hamas Fail in Investigations - By Alex Kane on 02/08/10 (0 comments)
On the Ground in Haiti: Hell and Hope - By Bill Quigley on 02/04/10 (0 comments)
Africa News Briefs from Global Information Network - By Lisa Vives on 02/04/10 (0 comments)
Soldiers Forced to Choose Between Their Children and the Military Pay the Price in Jail Time - By Dahr Jamail on 02/04/10 (0 comments)
Interview: Haitian Community Activist Jean Montrevil Released from Detention - By Jaisal Noor on 02/03/10 (4 comments)
Obama and Volcker Must Go After the Big Banks - By Nomi Prins on 02/03/10 (0 comments)

Current Articles

National

  • Walking the Dream: Immigrant College Students Push for Reform
    By Karen Yi, in the Jan 29, 2010 issue
    Miami-Dade Community College student Felipe Matos has a new schedule this spring semester. Each day starts with a 5:30 a.m. wake-up call, a big breakfast, a quick stretch and securing his feet with a thick layer of duct tape. Then Matos sets off for a 17-mile walk interspersed by several breaks of singing songs, and later stops to sleep in a different place every night — RVs, churches or even strangers’ homes. (4 comments)
  • The Value of Work: An Interview with Journalist Gabriel Thompson About Immigrant Labor
    By Micah Williams, in the Jan 29, 2010 issue
    Even the most virulently anti-immigrant activists in our country can’t deny that immigrants, documented and undocumented, work hard — very hard. Slaughtering animals at breakneck speed, dodging reckless taxis on bicycle to deliver meals, breaking their backs picking vegetables in far-flung fields: traditional immigrant work is brutal. (1 comment)
  • History Loses One of Its Own HOWARD ZINN DIES, 87
    By Jessica Lee, in the Jan 29, 2010 issue
    Legendary historian, playwright and social activist Howard Zinn likely died just the way he would have wanted — from a heart bursting with love and revolutionary spirit while on a speaking tour highlighting the voices of uncommon heroes in American history. (0 comments)
  • History: Cruelty and Compassion: Howard Zinn In His Own Words
    By Howard Zinn, in the Jan 29, 2010 issue
    In this awful world where the efforts of caring people often pale in comparison to what is done by those who have power, how do I manage to stay involved and seemingly happy? (0 comments)
  • Let’s Break from the Party of War and Wall Street
    By Stanley Aronowitz, in the Jan 8, 2010 issue
    People cannot live without hope. The long night of the eight Bush years was tolerated only because many of us believed it would come to an end. That Obama seized on that belief better than his Democratic opponents is a testament to the high expectations people had that regime change in Washington just might bring about a better life. (2 comments)
  • Waiting for the Rapture
    By Nicholas Powers, in the Jan 8, 2010 issue
    Can it be a year ago that we celebrated Obama’s victory? I danced in Harlem where cars honked like a wild jazz band. A woman climbed on a hood and screamed. People flooded the streets of cities around the world as a great love surged through us and swallowed the planet whole. In the midst of celebration I raised my arms and yelled, “This is who we really are!” A year later, why do we still have faith in him? (4 comments)
  • Hope Has Left the Building
    By Arun Gupta, in the Jan 8, 2010 issue
    If one case encapsulates the disaster that is the Obama administration, it may be the dustup over the A.I.G. bonuses last March. Recall that extreme gambling by A.I.G. Financial Products nearly crashed the world in 2008, necessitating a taxpayer bailout of $182.3 billion (and counting). (8 comments)
  • The Hot Topic: A Growing Climate Change Movement Emerges
    By Bryan Farrell, in the Nov 20, 2009 issue
    (0 comments)
  • Why Seattle Still Matters: 1999 WTO Protests Exposed Deep Flaws in Global Capitalism That Remain Unaddressed
    By John Tarleton, in the Nov 20, 2009 issue
    It was still pitch dark outside and a thin, cold mist was in the air when the affinity groups charged with blockading Sixth Avenue and Union Street met for the last time. Scouts reported that the coast was clear. Sitting in the wooden pews of an old downtown Seattle church we reviewed our target once more. After days of nervewracking preparation, we were ready to do our part to shut down the World Trade Organization (WTO). (1 comment)

Local

International

  • Same Old Interests Have Plan for ‘New Haiti’
    By Isabel MacDonald, in the Jan 29, 2010 issue
    In the wake of the earthquake that has killed almost 200,000 people in Haiti, the foreign ministers of several countries calling themselves the “Friends of Haiti” met on Jan. 25 in Montreal to discuss plans for “building a new Haiti.” (0 comments)
  • Haiti: How to Turn Disaster into Catastrophe
    By Arun Gupta, in the Jan 29, 2010 issue
    Since 1950, Port-au-Prince’s population has exploded from 144,000 to about 2.5 million. While the wealthy capital-area suburb of Petionville was largely spared, with few homes destroyed, poor people packed in shoddy housing, bore the brunt of the death and destruction. The underdevelopment of Haiti is the underlying cause. (7 comments)
  • Remittances to Haiti Fill Funding Fractures
    By Jaisal Noor, in the Jan 29, 2010 issue
    Despite suffering a fractured vertebrae and a chest contusion, Leigh Carter feels lucky. “I always imagined an earthquake would start as a tremor,” she says of the magnitude 7.0 earthquake that ravaged Haiti Jan. 12. But “we were at 7.0 very suddenly, being thrown violently around the office with everything moving, falling and crashing around us.” (0 comments)
  • Haiti in Aftershock
    By Nicholas Powers, in the Jan 29, 2010 issue
    PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti—Walking through the tent cities of Port-au-Prince, one sees in the hobbling amputees, skull-faced children and hungry people the aftershocks of “The Event.” (0 comments)
  • Gaza, One Year Later
    By Alex Kane, in the Jan 29, 2010 issue
    BEIT HANOUN , Gaza Strip—One year after Israel’s ferocious assault, Dr. Mustafa El-Hawi, a professor at Al-Aqsa University, traveled by bus to attend a protest against the continuing Israeli siege of Gaza. (0 comments)
  • Gaza Freedom March: Full Text of Cairo Declaration in the Dec 31, 1969 issue
    End Israeli Apartheid Cairo Declaration January 1, 2010     We, international delegates meeting in Cairo during the Gaza Freedom March 2009 in collective response to an initiative from the South African delegation, state:   In view of:   o   Israel’s ongoing collective punishment of Palestinians through the illegal occupation and siege of Gaza; o   the illegal occupation of the West Bank, including East [...] (0 comments)
  • Honduras’ Crossroads
    By Belén Fernández, in the Dec 11, 2009 issue
    Adapted from reports by Belén Fernández. Photos by Tim Russo. (1 comment)
  • The Fog of War
    By Arun Gupta, in the Dec 11, 2009 issue
    As Obama commits 30,000 more troops to Afghanistan, reporter Anand Gopal makes sense of a war without end. (2 comments)
  • Clock is Ticking in Copenhagen
    By Jessica Lee, in the Dec 11, 2009 issue
    The COP-15 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Dec. 7–18 is generating huge amounts of news coverage in the mainstream media but little of it is adding to the public’s understanding of the issues involved. (4 comments)

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