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.
Women‘s liberation: lessons from the ‘60s and ‘70s
New Caledonia: the fight for Kanak self-determination
Why supporting Palestine is not antisemitic
COP26: Why capitalism fails the climate
Nuclear power—not safe, not the answer to climate change
The fight for trans liberation
The NDIS: where disability has a market price
Does Australia need an independent foreign policy?
No jab, no job—how should unions and the left respond?
Why NAPLAN is bad for children‘s education
Celeste Liddle: vaccination needs persuasion
The imperialist alliance: Australia, the US and the Asia-Pacific
Palestinian resistance and revolution in the Middle East
COVID and the cops
Malaysia: resistance challenges repression
Palestine and the Unity Intifada
Poverty: Australia's dirty secret
Busting the Liberals' gas myths
COVID and the working class
The struggle today in Aotearoa / New Zealand
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