Fanon’s Rainbow: The Lithium Under Appalachia

Appalachia has been here before. Not the lithium part, but the part where something valuable gets discovered underneath people who have been poor for a very long time. Coal built fortunes, just not locally. Timber came through like a haircut. Tobacco kept the Carolinas and Virginia in a kind of indentured agricultural grace for generations until the lawsuits arrived and the companies discovered that contrition, properly structured, is also profitable. Each boom followed the same basic script: outside capital arrives, extracts, departs, leaves behind a workforce with damaged lungs and a political class grateful for the attention. More

“Neighborism” Is Not Having “a Moment”

Earlier this year, when ICE invaded Minneapolis in a horrific siege that is no longer discussed but is absolutely ongoing, my home in the heart of “flyover country” was again thrust into the national and international spotlight, as it was after George Floyd’s murder. And again—as if the Twin Cities’ vibrant literary community is somehow unequipped to write about the happenings of their home with the nuance necessary for reporting that’s not only accurate, but actually sophisticated—the parachute reporting laced with intellectually lazy observations and pedestrian analyses from publications that are somehow still considered prestigious began. More

The End of Hansel Valley and the Beginning of a Post-Industrial Dark Age

The final blow for our beloved landscape of Hansel Valley came with news of a fast-tracked 40,000-acre industrial AI park to be built in the very heart of a place that had become a part of me.  The Boxelder County Commission had been given but two weeks by the State of Utah to give final approval.  Our good governor assured us that we were no longer safe in our own land and this was good for our military preparedness. It would also bring hundreds of millions of dollars to the state and use twice as much power as the entire state’s current use.  We would be in the industrial, Make America Great Again, big leagues.  Hurry was necessary.  Time is money. No time to lose.  A non-elected paramilitary/governmental shell agency called MIDA was brokering the deal.  No mention was made of the effort to protect the Great Salt Lake from drying up and perhaps making northern Utah uninhabitable.  Pathetic an effort as it might be, it seemed that I owed the land at least the presence of one more body in protest of this very insidious plan. More

A Force for a Livable Planet: Mitchel Cohen’s Unwavering Sense of Direction

Someone told me nobody knew Monsanto like Mitchel Cohen with the No Spray Coalition. I called him up. We talked. Well, Mitchel talked and I scribbled notes on legal pads. I called again. Took more notes. I kept calling, Mitchel kept answering and giving me an activist’s very informed view of the political machinations of one the world’s most malevolent corporations, a corporation that Mitchel and his colleagues beat the hell out of for the next 20 years, eventually forcing the embattled, litigation-hobbled enterprise to be sold to Bayer, which swiftly dropped its sullied name, if not all of its toxic products, like Round-Up.  More

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THIS WEEK IN

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No Option But Sabotage w/ Thomas Zietzoff

On this episode of CounterPunch Radio, Joshua Frank and Erik Wallenberg are joined by Thomas Zietzoff to talk about his new book, No Option But Sabotage
The Radical Environmental Movement and the Climate Crisis. 

No Option But Sabotage explores how far activists are willing to go to defend the planet in the face of repression and the escalating climate crisis.

Thomas Zeitzoff is a professor in the School of Public Affairs at American University. His research focuses on political violence, social media, and political psychology. He is also the author of Nasty Politics: The Logic of Insults, Threats, and Incitement.

You can find the debate between Murray Bookchin and Dave Foreman discussed in this episode here.

An Image of Total Liberation w/ Dr. Shahd Abusalama

On this episode of Counterpunch Radio, Rebecca Maria Goldschmidt speaks with Dr. Shahd Abusalama, Palestinian academic, writer, and artist, born and raised in Jabalia Refugee Camp, in northern Gaza. Shahd discusses her book, Between Reality and Documentary: A Historical Representation of Gaza Refugees in Colonial, Humanitarian and Palestinian Documentary Film, published in 2025 by Bloomsbury and SOAS Palestine Studies, and reflects on her recent book and film tour in Japan. Recorded during the opening days of the recent War on Iran, Shahd reflects on the ramifications of the war for Gaza, historical lessons from her time in Hiroshima, and her image of what true liberation could look like for the Palestinian people.

Before the Flood: A Tale From Gaza w/ Ramzy Baroud

On this episode of CounterPunch Radio, Erik Wallenberg and Joshua Frank welcome back Ramzy Baroud to discuss his new book, Before the Flood, a profound exploration of Palestinian history and resilience through the personal stories of his family—the al-Badrasawis. Beginning with intimate details of village life in Beit Daras prior to the Nakba. They also talk about the ongoing war in Iran and Israel’s larger strategy for the region.

You can catch Ramzy Baroud on the road this spring and summer.