How the Media Failed to Tell the Truth on the Climate Crisis, and What’s Still Possible

Brush Fire in Australia. Photo from The New York Times. Looking back at climate coverage in 2013 from the vantage point of 2020, it seems like there’s been real progress — coverage of the climate crisis is much better then when I wrote this piece for Project Censored. Still, the deniers are as brazen as… Read More How the Media Failed to Tell the Truth on the Climate Crisis, and What’s Still Possible

9 Ways to Use the Midterm Elections to Build Sustainable Local Power

Note: Building long-term power in our communities is what PeoplesHub.org is about. New online trainings and workshops launch April 2, designed to get local groups working strategically and inclusively, building power that is independent of any political party. It’s no secret that many voters are ticked off with the Democratic Party. By more than two… Read More 9 Ways to Use the Midterm Elections to Build Sustainable Local Power

Forgiving Medical Debt: How Occupy, John Oliver, Nurses, and High School Students Made It Happen

It has become an all-too-familiar sight—websites, posters, collection jars with photos of children, mothers, young people who need medical care they can’t afford. Some will not receive life-saving treatment without this help. All too often, the bills will saddle the family with a debt burden that will follow them for years—sometimes for life. Getting sick,… Read More Forgiving Medical Debt: How Occupy, John Oliver, Nurses, and High School Students Made It Happen

What I Got Wrong About the Rural–Urban Divide

Wisconsin dairy farmers reminded me not to allow Fox News and the NRA to define groups of people. I thought I knew something about Wisconsin politics. I assumed the state was neatly divided between blue cities, like Madison and Milwaukee, and solidly red rural areas that twice elected Governor Scott Walker, one of the nation’s… Read More What I Got Wrong About the Rural–Urban Divide