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PDF of November 20 print issue


PDF of November 20 print issue

Download the PDF Venezuela Resist U.S. war moves! Disability rights! Starbucks workers strike Defend Iran vs pinkwashing Miss Major, ¡Presente! Remembering Leslie Feinberg Democratic Party eats dirt Vets for Peace on Venezuela Athletes accused of misconduct National Day of Mourning Dockworkers’ power Around the World Venezuela, Jamaica, Cuba Sudan  COP30 . . .

Continue reading PDF of November 20 print issue at Workers.org


COP30: Fossil fuel profits vs. Indigenous people


COP30: Fossil fuel profits vs. Indigenous people

One of the boats traversing the Amazon River basin carrying delegates to the People’s Summit in Belém, Brazil, November 2025. The United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP30) opened in Belém, Brazil, on Nov. 10 to a storm of controversy and little hope that this annual gathering will be any different . . .

Continue reading COP30: Fossil fuel profits vs. Indigenous people at Workers.org


Starbucks workers launch countrywide strike


Starbucks workers launch countrywide strike

Brooklyn, New York, Nov. 13, 2025. Red Cup Day, Starbucks’ busiest day of the year, was the day Starbucks Workers United (SBWU) launched an Unfair Labor Practice (ULP) strike, hitting 65 stores in 45 cities. The strike began with 1,000 union workers walking out, but more of the 12,000 SBWU . . .

Continue reading Starbucks workers launch countrywide strike at Workers.org


Behind the catastrophe in Sudan


Behind the catastrophe in Sudan

At the end of October, the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), backed by the United Arab Emirates (UAE), overran the western Sudan city of el-Fasher. This city had been a refugee center controlled by RSF’s opponent, the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF). The blood spilled on the ground by the massacres carried . . .

Continue reading Behind the catastrophe in Sudan at Workers.org


Miss Major, ¡Presente!


Miss Major, ¡Presente!

Our beloved Miss Major Griffin-Gracy passed away Oct. 13 in Little Rock, Arkansas. Her enduring legacy is a testament to her resilience, activism and dedication to creating safe spaces for Black trans communities and older trans people. We are eternally grateful for Miss Major’s life, her sacrifices and her contributions . . .

Continue reading Miss Major, ¡Presente! at Workers.org


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