brussels

How to Become Terror-Torn Europe - And How Not to

Recoiling from the terrorist carnage in Brussels, Americans may be attracted to the "tough" posturing of Donald Trump and Ted Cruz. The casino mogul wants to bring back torture, while the Texas senator hopes to bomb indiscriminately until the desert glows. Trump would bar any Muslim from entering the United States, while Cruz would dispatch special police patrols into Muslim neighborhoods. Both eagerly demonize Muslims worldwide and stigmatize Muslims in America.

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Trump Isn't Just Feeding the Media, He's Also Fueling Terrorist Propaganda

What you're about to read won't spoil the end of “House of Cards” season four for you. Reality will do a fine job of that. In the Netflix show's most recent season that was released in mid-March, the power-obsessed Frank Underwood has proved that nothing is more important than remaining in the White House—not the lives of innocents, and not the reputation of his country.

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Why Brussels Makes Total Sense for an ISIL Attack - Yet Was Supremely Ill-Prepared

Earlier today the New York Times reported the identity of the two suicide bombers who carried out yesterday’s terrorist attacks in Brussels that left 31 dead and 270 injured, according to the current toll. The terrorists were brothers Ibrahim and Khalid el-Bakraoui, Belgian citizens with a prior criminal record, but no known links to terrorism—until a raid by authorities last week.

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Will the Response to the Brussels Attack Be to Look at Terrorism’s Root Causes - or More War? (VIDEO)

Belgium has begun three days of mourning after at least 31 people died and over 230 were injured Tuesday in bombings targeting the Brussels Airport and a crowded subway station near the headquarters of the European Union. ISIS took responsibility for the Brussels bombings and claimed more would follow.

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The Worst Republican Responses to the Brussels Attacks (So Far)

In Belgium, as is always true in the immediate aftermath of terror attacks, what we know is constantly changing. Hours after two explosions at Brussels’ international airport and a third at the Maelbeek metro station, the death toll stands at 34 with 170 reported injuries. We’ve seen this before, and know how it goes. In the days and weeks that follow, there will be much more intel gathered and information shared. But a lack of information has never stopped pundits and politicians from weighing in, and in the case of this latest tragedy, that fact remains as true as ever. While some delivered measured remarks, and others waited to learn the details before speaking, here are the worst immediate responses to the attacks.

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Palestinian Activist: Attacks in Brussels & Paris Underscore Need to Address Crisis in Syria

Salah Abdeslam had fled to Brussels after the Paris attacks. After his arrest in a raid on Friday, the Belgian interior minister had warned the country was on the highest level of alert for a possible revenge attack. "I think the attacks today really underscore the urgent crisis and catastrophe that is taking place in Syria and the need for the international community to redouble its efforts to address in a serious way the civil war that is going on there that has really given rise, through the failure of the Syrian state, the vacuum of power that exists between Syria and Iraq, to this monster that we have come to know as ISIS, which has metastasized around the globe," says Yousef Munayyer, executive director of U.S. Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation. We speak with Munayyer and Robert Freedman, visiting professor of political science at Johns Hopkins University and the former president of Baltimore Hebrew University.

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James Galbraith: Greek Revolt Threatens Entire Neoliberal Project

James K. Galbraith, author of The End of Normal  and professor at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs at UT Austin, has an inside view of the crisis leading to the recent referendum in Greece. Galbraith has worked for the past several years with recently departed Greek finance minister Yanis Varoufakis as both a colleague and co-author, and he has just returned from Greece, where he looked down over the rooftops of Syntagma Square as citizens made history in a strong vote against austerity. He discusses the last week’s dramatic turn of events and what is at stake going forward as the austerity doctrine — and the entire neoliberal project — come under threat. This post was originally published on the blog of the Institute for New Economic Thinking.

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A New Future? How China and Russia (and Maybe Germany) Will Try Squeeze Washington Out of Eurasia

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Banks Have Become the Permanent Government of Europe

"As things stand, the banks are the permanent government of the country, whichever party is in power.” --Lord Skidelsky, House of Lords, UK Parliament, 31 March 2011)

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Think the Tea Party Is Crazy? Europe's Rising Neo-Fascism Is a Taste of What's Coming If Austerity Prevails in America

American political dysfunction looks pretty bad — but just take a look at what’s going on across the Atlantic. A poisonous wave of right-wing, neo-fascist parties is emerging in response to the continent’s ongoing austerity and hugely ineffectual policy response to the resulting jobs crisis. 

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