Clear It with Sidney | Hillman Foundation

Clear It With Sidney

The best of the week’s news by Lindsay Beyerstein

Clear It with Sidney

Sidney's Picks: Unelected Elon Musk Lays Waste to Federal Government

Photo credit: 

USAIDRwanda Reconciliation and Reintegration Project, Creative Commons

The Best of the Week’s News

Sidney's Picks: Air Traffic Control Understaffed During Potomac Crash

Photo credit: 

U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Creative Commons.

The Best of the Week’s News

Sidney's Picks: Trump's War on Birthright Citizenship

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Chris Cowan, Creative Commons.

The Best of the Week’s News

Sidney's Picks: Meatpacking Giants to Pay $8 Million Child Labor Settlement

Photo credit: 

Gage Skidmore, Creative Commons.

The Best of the Week’s News

  • Meatpacking giants agree to pay $8 million for hiring migrant children to work in slaughterhouses. (NYT)
     

  • Donald Trump’s allies waged a campaign of witness intimidation to confirm Pete Hegseth. (New Yorker)
     

  • Texas pays anti-choice “crisis pregnancy centers” $14 to hand out a box of donated diapers. (ProPublica)
     

  • Manhattan construction company accused of stealing tens of thousands of dollars in wages from immigrant workers. (Gothamist)
     

  • Tech billionaires’ “war on woke” is a war on workers. (Salon)

Sidney's Picks: He Infiltrated the Oath Keepers

Photo credit: 

Michael Tefft, Militia members, Illustration only, Creative Commons.

The Best of the Week’s News
 

Sidney's Picks: NYC's Fastest-Growing Union is Management-Friendly

Photo credit: 

EllenM1Creative Commons.

The Best of the Week’s News
 

  • NYC’s fastest-growing union is management-friendly and some members don’t even know they belong. (The City)
     

  • Amazon and Starbucks workers walk off the job in several major cities, with Starbucks workers seeking their first union contract. (VNY)
     

  • As reforms slash the cost of prison phone calls, telecom companies pivot to predatory pricing for tablets. (Prism)
     

  • Amazon tried to hide its sky-high warehouse injury rates, senate report finds. (WaPo)
     

  • Remembering John Lewis writing fellow, Janie Ekere (1998-2024).
     

  • Corporate rehabs are luring addicts with free housing and sham treatmentwith disastrous consequences. (NYT)

Hello Servitude? Meal kit company investigated for child labor

Photo credit: 

OsseusCreative Commons.

The Best of the Week’s News

  • The feds are investigating a subsidiary of the HelloFresh meal kit service after getting reports of teens working dangerous late-night jobs. (NYT)
     

  • The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau announces new overdraft protections that could save Americans $5 billion a year. (CNBC)
     

  • Hillman Prize-winner Sean Morrow got a surprise call from TMZ after authorities suggested he might be the UnitedHealthcare shooter because of his critical coverage of the insurance industry. (WaPo)
     

  • Beloved Montana oncologist exposed as a quack after a spate of suspicious deaths, including one chemo patient who didn’t have cancer after all. (ProPublica)
     

  • New moms are getting their babies taken away because they tested positive for drugs the hospital gave them in labor. (Marshall Project)

Sidney's Picks: Hegseth's Confirmation Prospects Dim

Photo credit: 

Gage SkidmoreCreative Commons.

The Best of the Week’s News

  • Pete Hegseth’s confirmation prospects dim as his secret history comes to light. (ABC, NYer, WaPo)
     

  • Amazon drivers don’t officially work for Amazon, but California Teamsters are trying to change that. (LAist)
     

  • Wisconsin court restores collective bargaining rights for public employees. (PBS)
     

  • Penis pills and raw milk: Meet RFK Jr’s scam army  (Nation)
     

  • Unmasking the anonymous neo-Nazis of X. (Texas Observer)

Sidney's Picks: 11th Hour Legislative Push to Protect Journalists

Photo credit: 

Tina ReynoldsCreative Commons.

The Best of the Week’s News

 

  • Texas’s abortion ban killed a third woman, a 35-year-old mother who suffered a miscarriage in 2023. (ProPublica)

     

  • Inside the last-minute legislative scramble to protect journalists before Trump’s second term. (TPM)
     

  • Trump is blowing up the rules-based order of North American trade with threats of illegal tariffs. (Conversation)
     

  • AIDS prevention drugs known as PrEP should legally be free, but insurers are charging patients anyway. (WaPo)
     

  • Make Amazon Pay: Amazon workers on strike from Black Friday through Cyber Monday (ABC)

Sidney's Picks: Undocumented Workers Power Our Economy

The Best of the Week’s News

  • Protesters push Joe Biden to act fast on deportation protection for exploited workers. (The City)
     

  • US regulators push the courts to break up Google to end abusive search monopoly. (AP)
     

  • Undocumented workers power the on-demand economy. (NYT)
     

  • The Freedom of Information system is struggling and journalists expect it will get worse in Trump’s second term. (Neiman)
     

  • Logging is the deadliest job and a growth industry. (NYT)
     

  • PTSD from the Covid pandemic haunts nursing aides. (NPR)

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