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.
One year on: What’s the point of Labor?
Imperialism and Ukraine: NATO’s proxy war in Europe
Music and politics: Hip hop, hippies and the homeless
Climate, capitalism and catastrophe
No to war: Australia, China and the new imperialism
Has enterprise bargaining killed the right to strike?
Music and politics: the protest song
The Palestine Laboratory
Is Putin all-powerful?
In defence of drag queen story time
Music and politics: dance music
Inflation, crisis and the world economy
Spain 1936: when anarchism failed
Why universities should boycott Israel
Red in the rainbow – sex, gender and the system
Labor’s climate cover-up
Trotsky and the Chinese revolution
Crisis and revolt in the Middle East
Unions: building rank-and-file power
Art and revolution
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