Vermonters Protest Racist Arizona Law and Racial Profiling

On a May 29th national day of action, Burlington, Vermont residents came together to protest SB 1070, a racist law in Arizona that allows and encourages racial profiling. This act requires law enforcement officials to check the documentation of any and all persons who look suspicious and or look like immigrants. Protest participants in Burlington wore signs, chanted and publicly spoke out against the Arizona law.

No Picture

How Can The War on Drugs Succeed If Prohibition Failed?

Source: The Independent

Since we first prowled the savannahs of Africa, human beings have displayed a few overpowering and ineradicable impulses—for food, for sex, and for drugs. Every human society has hunted for its short cuts to an altered state: The hunger for a chemical high, low, or pleasingly new shuffle sideways is universal. Peer back through history, and it’s everywhere. Ovid said drug-induced ecstasy was a divine gift. The Chinese were brewing alcohol in prehistory and cultivating opium by 700 A.D. Cocaine was found in clay-pipe fragments from William Shakespeare’s house. George Washington insisted American soldiers be given whiskey every day as part of their rations. Human history is filled with chemicals, come-downs, and hangovers. read more

Video Report: Vermont Responds to Israel’s Flotilla Massacre

The humanitarian aid ship, Mavi Marmara, set off toward Gaza from Cyprus on Sunday, May 30, to deliver much-needed aid supplies. The following day, the Israeli military violently seized the ship in international waters. The Israeli government said the ship was embarking on "an act of provocation" against the Israeli military, stating the flotilla would be breaking international law by landing in Gaza. In response to this assault, dozens of people gathered in Burlington, Vermont on May 31 to express their sadness and outrage over Israel’s blatant lack of respect for international law.

Image

Cuba Provides a Model For Health Care Reform in the US

Cuban Community Clinic
US President Barack Obama made passage of health care reform a major effort of his first year in office. He claimed that the cost of health care in the US was rising so rapidly that it was threatening the whole economy. The president is certainly correct in saying that the cost of health care in the US is high. In 2006, for example, the cost of health care in the US was 15.33% of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), or $6,714 per capita. This high expense does not lead to relatively good healthcare.