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    June 2026June 2026
    Standards of Care
    The Sun InterviewBy Naomi PittsStandards of CareRolonda Donelson on Bias and Anti-Science Attitudes in Medicine

    The reason Black women were used to develop the field of gynecology was because they were no more than property. They weren’t seen as people; they were just seen as things. The controlling of Black women’s bodies started with chattel slavery, but it continues today.

    Milk
    Readers WriteBy Our ReadersMilk

    Pumped for an infant, spilled at the dinner table, used as a tear gas antidote

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Globalization - Page 3

  • Body and Mind
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    Browse Topics

    Globalization

    Globalization

      The Sun Interview

      An Offer They Can’t Refuse

      John Perkins On His Former Life As An Economic Hit Man

      The goal of the economic hit men is to cheat countries around the globe out of trillions of dollars for the sake of corporate profits. Their job, you could say, is to create a global empire, and they’ve done just that. Not only does the U.S. control world commerce, but we influence world culture: The language of diplomacy and business is English. People all over the planet watch Hollywood movies, eat American fast food, and adopt American styles of clothing. We have no significant competition.

      By Pat MacEnultySeptember 2005
      An Offer They Can’t Refuse
      The Sun Interview

      Resurrecting The Revolutionary Heart Of Judaism

      An Interview With Michael Lerner

      Jews jumped from the burning buildings of Europe and landed, unintentionally, on the backs of the Palestinians. Because our pain was so great from the Holocaust, we didn’t notice the pain we caused them.

      By Arnie CooperApril 2004
      Resurrecting The Revolutionary Heart Of Judaism
      The Sun Interview

      Biting The Hand That Feeds: How Globalization Cripples Small Farms

      An Interview With Vandana Shiva

      This year farmers started to commit suicide in Uttar Pradesh, the richest agricultural state in India. Some of the most fertile soil in the world can be found there, and the region has never had agricultural problems. But the first rule of globalization says, “Don’t grow food for yourself; grow export crops.” So the farmers there all grew potatoes. And then potato prices collapsed. The potato-chip makers have walked off with super profits, and the farmers have been left with huge debts.

      By Arnie CooperFebruary 2004
      Biting The Hand That Feeds: How Globalization Cripples Small Farms
      The Sun Interview

      Driven By Desire

      George Draffan On Why the Global Economy Won’t Satisfy Us

      How can I be a responsible citizen while participating in an international market? Even if my intent is to do good, I can have only the slightest knowledge of the impacts of my consumption. I can’t know what injustice or ecological destruction the manufacture and purchase of my computer, for example, has wreaked. I’ve had no contact with the women in Thailand who will get cancer from putting hard drives together. It is impossible to understand all the social and environmental impacts of a computer made in a dozen different countries.

      By Derrick JensenDecember 2001
      The Sun Interview

      The New Slavery

      An Interview With Kevin Bales

      Slaves are so cheap that they’re not even seen as a capital investment anymore: you don’t have to take care of them; you can just use them up and throw them away. Human beings have become disposable tools for doing business, the same as a box of ballpoint pens.

      By Derrick JensenOctober 2001
      Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

      The One Who Steals The Fat

      At century’s end, we’re consumers, not gatherers or producers. We’re at the mercy of dimly understood industrial processes and long lines of supply. Being at such removes — practical, geographic, and technological — from our sustenance, most of us are ignorant of the source of our tap water and the provenance of our food.

      By Stephanie MillsJanuary 2001
      Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

      Skeleton Woman In Seattle

      When I was able to open my eyes, I saw lying next to me a young man, nineteen, maybe twenty at the oldest. He was in shock, twitching and shivering uncontrollably from being tear-gassed and pepper-sprayed at close range. His burned eyes were tightly closed, and he was panting irregularly. Then he passed out. The sidewalk was wet from the water that a medic had poured over him to flush his eyes.

      By Paul G. HawkenApril 2000
      Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

      Excerpts From Path Without Destination

      Possessions are signs of status, success, position, and power. It’s no wonder that our modern society has been called the consumer society. Unlimited economic growth has become the ideal of every nation in the world. In order to achieve such growth, we have destroyed lives, families, the social fabric, and our relationship with the natural world. We have passed the point of increasing human well-being by increasing material wealth.

      By Satish KumarAugust 1999
      The Sun Interview

      The Common Good

      An Interview With Noam Chomsky

      If a true democratic society were allowed to function, it’s extremely unlikely that the things now called “inevitable results of the market” would ever be tolerated. These results certainly concentrate wealth and power and harm the vast majority. There’s no reason for people to tolerate that. These so-called inevitabilities are really public-policy decisions designed to lead to a certain kind of highly inegalitarian society. Talk about the inevitable processes of the market is almost entirely nonsensical, in my opinion. And if we did have a functioning democracy, we would solve the problem as Aristotle suggested: by reducing poverty and making sure that almost everyone had “moderate and sufficient property.”

      By David BarsamianNovember 1997
      Essays, Memoirs & True Stories

      To Raze A Village

      The Modernization Of A Thousand-Year-Old Culture

      Ladakh is a high-altitude desert on the Tibetan Plateau in northernmost India. To all outward appearances, it is a wild and inhospitable place. In summer the land is parched and dry; in winter it is frozen solid by fierce, unrelenting cold.

      By Helena Norberg-HodgeFebruary 1997
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    Globalization - Page 3

    • Body and Mind
      • Abortion
      • Addiction and Recovery
      • Aging
      • Alcoholism
      • Altered States
      • Alternative Medicine
      • Cancer
      • Consciousness
      • Death
      • Dementia
      • Diet
      • Disability
      • Dreams
      • Exercise
      • Fear
      • Grief
      • Happiness
      • Healing
      • Identity
      • Medicine
      • Meditation
      • Mental Health
      • Physical Health
      • Psychology
      • Sexuality
      • Sleep
    • Culture and Society
      • Animal Rights
      • Art and Creativity
      • Cities
      • Counterculture
      • Crime
      • Education
      • Energy
      • Feminism
      • Food
      • Gender
      • Healthcare
      • Incarceration
      • Indigenous Culture
      • The Internet
      • Media
      • Oppression
      • Privacy
      • Race
      • Science and Technology
      • Sexual Violence
      • Social Justice
      • Sports
      • Sustainable Living
      • Travel
      • Vocation
      • Writing
    • Economics
      • Capitalism
      • Consumerism
      • Corporations
      • Employment
      • Globalization
      • Industrialization
      • Poverty
    • Family and Relationships
      • Adolescence
      • Adoption
      • Childhood
      • Companion Animals
      • Divorce
      • Domestic Violence
      • Elder Care
      • Friendship
      • Infidelity
      • Marriage
      • Parenting
      • Parents
      • Pregnancy and Childbirth
      • Romantic Love
      • Siblings
    • The Natural World
      • Agriculture
      • Biology
      • Climate Change
      • Ecology
      • Plants
      • Pollution
      • Wildlife
    • Politics
      • Civil Liberties
      • Democracy
      • Diplomacy
      • Government
      • Nonviolence
      • Pacifism
      • Propaganda
      • Socialism
      • Terrorism
      • War
    • Religion and Philosophy
      • Afterlife
      • Astrology
      • Atheism and Agnosticism
      • Buddhism
      • Christianity
      • Compassion
      • Ethics
      • Evangelism
      • Fundamentalism
      • Hinduism
      • Islam
      • Judaism
      • Prayer
      • Spirituality
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