The island of Guam has been dubbed the US’s “unsinkable aircraft carrier”. Its size and strategic location in the west Pacific gives it great value to US war plans. The military owns one third of the land, demolishes sacred sites and pollutes the environment. But Indigenous people are resisting. We talk to Maria Hernandez, an Indigenous Chamoru environmental, women's and cultural rights activist, about the fightback.
Jabiluka: When Aboriginal people took on a mining company and won
Is human nature a barrier to socialism?
Why the ”two-state solution” is no solution
Music and politics: Lessons from Paul Robeson for the politics of the present
Who are Hamas?
Fighting apartheid: from South Africa to Israel
Imperialism and revolution in the Middle East
Nuclear is no solution to climate crisis
Music and politics: Iran, hip hop and anti-militarism
Free Palestine: why it’s right to resist Israel
Climate and catastrophe: is it too late to save the planet?
Labor, imperialism and the politics of war
Material Girls: why trans rights is class struggle
Sexism, sport and nationalism
Strategies for revolution: why Trotsky matters
White Australia and the labour movement
Ben Abbatangelo on the Voice
Socialists, war and revolution
No to war: lessons from the Vietnam Moratoriums
What’s the alternative to the Voice?
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