
Fascists at the gate in Greece
Golden Dawn - with its Holocaust denial, its swastikas, and Hitler salutes - makes it look like it inhabits the fringe, but it has roots that make it dangerous.

Greece: debt and memory of war
Memory is selective and therein lies an explanation for some of the deep animosity between Berlin and Athens in the current debt crisis.

Brazil: Amid coup talk, massive demonstrations for and against Dilma
Mass demonstrations took place Mar. 14 in a number of Brazilian cities in support of President Dilma Rousseff of the Workers' Party.

Rise of Joint List's Ayman Odeh shakes up Israeli politics
A politician who wants to build an Arab-Jewish "alliance of the disadvantaged," has emerged as one of the biggest surprises of Israel's election campaign.

U.S. sanctions against Venezuela draw objections worldwide
President Obama said the situation in Venezuela represents a danger to U.S. interests; protests against that statement occurred all over the world.

U.S. escalates tensions with Venezuela
Obama activated sanctions against Venezuela last Monday, which had been approved by Congress and signed by himself.

American people key to normalization of U.S.-Cuba ties
Those who care deeply about peace and friendship between peoples should be part of every key battle ahead.

Syriza’s Greece: whispers of battles past
The negotiations between Greece and the EU bring to mind Themistocles, a man who knew when to retreat and when to fight.

Women fight an uphill battle in El Salvador
A delegation of women recently paid a visit to El Salvador to see what women are doing there to better their lives.

Today in women’s history: Rosa Luxemburg born in 1871
Rosa Luxemburg, born on March 5, 1871, in Zamość, Poland, was a Marxist theorist, philosopher, economist and revolutionary socialist of Polish-Jewish descent.

