The grassroots opposition to President Donald Trump is hitting the streets everywhere.
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Protecting Consumers, California Bypasses Feds to Regulate Toxic Chemicals
The state's new Safer Consumer Products Regulations are a first in the country, in which published lists of threatening chemicals will lead to their removal from consumer products — an action EPA regulators have failed to take.
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Groundbreaking Report Reveals High-Scale Damage From Fracking
A new study found that 280 billion gallons of toxic wastewater and 450,000 tons of air pollution was generated by hydraulic fracturing in 2012 alone.
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Jersey Shore: Hubris on a Sea Coast Battlefield
On the Jersey Shore, a unified vision to withstand a surging, energy-fed climate of storms and rising seas remains a pipe dream. Message to Gov. Chris Christie: you can't saddle climate change with hubris and repeated rebuilds.
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How America Can Replace Wall Street Financing With Public Banks
Germany, China, Japan and India have thriving public banking systems. In America, we are so used to big banks that many of us don't even recognize we can create the same alternative.
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Occupy Banking: Yes, Please
The Occupy Money Cooperative is rolling out a prepaid debit card to offer the most basic financial services that most people need for the lowest possible price.
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Piracy Charges Could Mean 15-Year Sentences for Greenpeace Activists
Russia charged 14 Greenpeace activists with piracy on Wednesday for their peaceful demonstration last month scaling a Gazprom oil platform in the Arctic.
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"Fight for 15" Strikes Demand Higher Pay
Nationwide "Fight for 15" strikes calling for higher pay have spurred a debate over what constitutes a living wage and helped shift the labor movement toward direct action.
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How Oregon's "Pay It Forward" Bill Tackles Student Debt
Oregon's new Pay It Forward bill will delay tuition being paid by any student attending any state school until after s/he graduates and gets a job.
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Britains Remember Their Victims of Austerity
10,000 white flowers were placed on the green before the U.K. Parliament, each flower representing a person with disability who died within three months of assessment by Atos, a private British healthcare assessor.
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Millions Mobilize For March Against Monsanto - Again
Following the two-million-strong global March Against Monsanto in May, citizens worldwide are gearing up for the second stage showdown next Saturday.