A collaboration with The New School & the European Democracy Institute
 
Year: <span>2025</span>

Resisting in Washington DC: For Our Unhoused Neighbors

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I live in Washington, DC and I am the Policy Director for a homeless services agency called Miriam’s Kitchen. Since Trump won the election, we have been involved in organization efforts to both plan for and then defend potential threats that the Trump Administration poses across numerous issue areas. The week after the election last November, I attended the first convening of Defend DC, a loose coalition of organizations that …

Will Trump Betray Taiwan?

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Time to Get Serious About Defending Democracy in the Indo-Pacific On July 31, 2025, news erupted that Taiwan’s President “William” Lai Ching-te had been denied entry to the United States by a Trump administration eager to curry favor with China. As his predecessors had done with regularity, President Lai planned to stop-over in America enroute to visiting allies in Latin America, but the Trump White House slammed the door …

Fatigue-Resistant Resistance

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If the upending of democratic society by the Trump administration were a literal nightmare, then it would be plausible to expect to wake up to a reasonably sane reality. The dream could be shaken off. Or if the venomous ideology of this administration could be understood as performative, dystopian theater of the absurd, then it would be possible to laugh, however nervously, at the ridiculousness of its palpable lies and its self-serving manipulations of public policy, the legislature, the courts, the armed services, and foreign relations.

The Far Right Alternative for Germany (AfD): Another Crack in the Firewall

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“Democracy is not so much a form of government as a set of principles.” —Woodrow Wilson February 2025: It was my third year serving on one of Berlin’s integration advisory boards, an appointment I had eagerly sought as a way to help residents in my district who had fled their homelands for a safe haven in Germany. But my enthusiasm at being appointed to my first German advisory …

Empathy as Resistance

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Lynn Feinerman is the producer of Women Rising Radio, which she describes this way: Women Rising Radio project had its first broadcast in 2003, profiling visionary women in leadership across the globe for all the critical issues of today, including human rights, democracy and civil society, ecology and sustainability, and all the freedoms. Based in California, we’ve been syndicated on over 200 radio stations in the USA, and in …

Valentine for the Planet

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Photo: artwork by Sarah Jane Lapp I reproduce my paintings as jigsaw puzzles to invite dialogue and delight, joy and justice, maybe some jokes, too. My producing partner, Rani MacNeal, and I produce several public art-oriented resistance initiatives under the rubric of Puzlkind Jigsaw Puzzles. Our most popular event, “Puzzical Chairs & Pie with Live Music,” asks strangers to puzzle together despite partisan politics. In a public space we …

“I Did Not See”–A Bit of Weimar Cabaret Revisited

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Dan Shore is an opera composer and the author of Freedom Ride, an opera set in New Orleans in 1961. The opera tells a story of the Freedom Riders, young civil rights activists who risked their lives to desegregate interstate travel. The opera premiered in February 2020 with Chicago Opera Theater, directed by Tazewell Thompson, conducted by Lidiya Yankovskaya, and starring soprano Dara Rahming. The opera was inspired by …

Poland’s Presidential Election, and the Dangerous, Uncertain Future

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So how to make sense of last Sunday’s (June 1) Polish presidential elections, in which the candidate of the far-right, Karol Nawrocki of the Law and Justice Party (PiS), defeated the liberal mayor of Warsaw, Rafal Trzaskowski, from Civic Platform? I had a sense this would be the result, after first-round voting gave the combined far-right parties a near majority total.