Slave to Fashion: Q&A with author Safia Minney
It is shocking how little people know about how their clothes are made and the inhumanity of the fashion industry.
It is shocking how little people know about how their clothes are made and the inhumanity of the fashion industry.
May is unable to learn from history as she rushes towards a collision between illusion and reality.
Jeff Goulding explains why he’s supporting Jeremy Corbyn as a true custodian of Labour’s socialist values.
The values that Theresa May invokes are so glaringly at odds with what her government is actually doing.
David Wilson reviews Brexit Boris by Heathcote Williams and is appalled by what he learns about the British foreign secretary.
Trump is probably a deranged psychopath who ought to struggle even to get a firearms license – let alone run the world’s only superpower.
Trump has become a figure worthy of respect and admiration, simply because he ordered 59 tomahawk missiles to be fired.
Out of their depth on Brexit with no idea what they’re doing, it’s no suprise that the Tories are talking up war with Spain.
The new British future is already beginning to emerge out of the fog of government incompetence, lies and fading promises.
Bliss was it to be alive: who will ever forget the glorious day when the UK finally threw off the yoke of the European Union?
Matthew Crampton’s book of narratives and songs sheds new light on the horrific cost of emigration, slavery and transportation
We cannot allow bigots to use this atrocity for their own ends and whip up precisely the kind of hatred that its perpetrators undoubtedly seek.
There is nothing good whatsoever about the decision that was taken on Thursday 23 June 2016 and the politics that made it possible.
The elite is not governed by the rules that govern the rest of us, it exists only for itself, in order to enrich its members, says Matt Carr.
We have allowed this government to pander to bigotry, prejudice and intolerance and to scapegoat minorities, writes Matt Carr.
Forensic and passionate, eloquent and polemical, Heathcote Williams’s meticulous prose roars with righteous anger – Jeremy Hardy