Clear It with Sidney | Hillman Foundation

Clear It With Sidney

The best of the week’s news by Lindsay Beyerstein

Clear It with Sidney

Young Woman Unfairly Blamed for Crash Caused by GM Ignition Defect

For nearly a decade, Candice Anderson assumed she was to blame for the 2004 crash that killed her boyfriend. She was driving when the accident occurred and, because she had a trace of Xanax in her bloodstream, she even faced a manslaughter charge in connection with the accident.

Last week, Ms. Anderson learned that the crash had nothing to do with her driving. She lost control of her car because the vehicle had a defective ignition, a defect that the manufacturer, General Motors, did not disclose. Ms. Anderson’s boyfriend was one of 13 people who were killed because of this defect, the New York Times reports.

 

[Image Credit: Vintage GM ad, Alden Jewell, Creative Commons.]

#Sidney's Picks: Inequality, Religion, and Beer

The Best of the Week’s News:

  • A powerful essay by David Cay Johnston on the need to make the minimum wage a living wage.
  • A year for a beer? That’s what can happen if you’re too poor to pay your court fees.

 

[Photo credit: Wander Mule, Creative Commons.]

Ta-Nehisi Coates Makes the Case for Reparations

Hillman Judge Ta-Nehisi Coates makes the case for reparations in a cover story at the Atlantic. The piece begins: “Two hundred fifty years of slavery. Ninety years of Jim Crow. Sixty years of separate but equal. Thirty-five years of racist housing policy. Until we reckon with our compounding moral debts, America will never be whole.”

It’s an important conversation and one that’s long overdue. We at Hillman are biased, but we can’t think of a better person to put forward the moral and historical case for reparations than Mr. Coates. 

The $10 Trillion "Ask": Chris Hayes Wins May Sidney Award for "The New Abolitionism"

We at the Hillman Foundation are very proud to announce that Chris Hayes has won the May Sidney Award for “The New Abolitionism,” a provocative feature in The Nation in which he argues that fossil fuel companies must forfeit $10 trillion in unburned oil and gas reserves in order to avert civilization-destroying climate change, a demand he says is no less urgent, and no less radical than the abolitionist ultimatum that slaveholders give up the vast wealth they held in human bondage.

Read Lindsay Beyerstein’s Backstory interview with Hayes to learn more about the stakes of this debate and the innovative tactics that could bring the likes of Exxon Mobil to heel. 

Striking Workers Mistreated at NYU's Abu Dhabi Site

When NYU announced a plan to build a campus in Abu Dhabi, a city in the UAE with notoriously lax labor laws, the university pledged to respect the rights of workers. But former workers on the site said their jobs broke virtually every promise NYU made about wages, hours, working conditions, and living standards.

Amongst other complaints, former workers on the site of NYU’s future Abu Dhabi campus say they were beaten by police and deported for striking and that they were forced to live in squalor, work involuntary overtime, and pay huge recruiting fees to get their jobs. 

 

[Photo credit: Yuwen Memon, Creative Commons.]

 

#Sidney's Picks: Ukrainian Steelworkers Oust Separatists from their City

The Best of the Week’s News:

  • A kickstarter campaign is underway to fund “Can’t Take It No More!,” a documentary about workers resisting WalMart.
  • Super-size it: The battle for fast food fairness goes global, sparking demonstrations as far away as Brazil and Japan.

 

[Photo credit: Wander Mule, Creative Commons.]

Fast Food Protests Go Global

  • The fight for a $15/hr living wage for the fast food industry has gone global. On Thursday, fast food activists are holding protests in 80 cities across 30 countries, plus 150 strikes in the United States. 

 

[Photo credit: Light Brigading, Creative Commons.]

Videos from the 2014 Hillman Prize Ceremony Now Available

As promised, all the videos from last week’s Hillman Prize ceremony at the Times Center are now available on YouTube. Check them out. 

Coca-Cola Funded Both Sides of the Drunk Driving Wars

Nothing better than the real thing? Well…

Coca-Cola funded Mothers Against Drunk Driving in Public but gave privately to an industry group that campaigned to weaken drunk driving laws, according to private documents obtained by Ryan Grim and Amanda Terkel of Huffington Post. 

 

[Photo credit: Deus X Florida, Creative Commons.]

#Sidney's Picks: A Tribute to Digby & Fast Food Organizing Going Global

The Best of the Week’s News

  • A moving tribute to Heather “Digby” Parton on the occasion of her Hillman Prize win by Kathleen Geier of the Washington Monthly. Hillman judge Katrina vanden Heuvel thought the post was so apt she quoted it when she presented Digby’s award at Tuesday’s Hillman Prize ceremony. 

 

[Photo credit: Wander Mule, Creative Commons.]

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