Author Archives: floegel

But Is It News?

If you plugged into the news last weekend, you may have seen that there was something of a revolution in Ecuador. The president, Jamil Mahuad, was ousted and the vice president, Gustavo Noaboa Bejarano, was installed in his place by the military. Didn’t seem like much a of big deal in the U.S. news media, […]

Free Tibet

I’m on the road this week, calling from Sebastian, Florida, on the Atlantic coast. I’m here with the Ruckus Society at a training camp for Free Tibet activists. Half of the students at the camp are Tibetan exiles, the other half are college students on break. The students learn to plan direct actions, strategic campaigning, […]

What Do You Know?

For the past few months, I’ve been reading stories about German companies making reparation payments to the people they used as slave laborers during World War II. About 10 million people were forced to work in Nazi-era factories, often under deplorable conditions. The list of corporations which used slave labor reads like a German Fortune […]

Christmas at the Automat

I’d like to share a personal Christmas tradition that dates back over 20 years. I was in high school. One of my teachers, A.P. Bechner, a Manhattan native, would give an annual speech he called “Christmas at the Automat.” Automats are now a thing of the past. The automated cafeteria first opened in Philadelphia in […]

Who Should Get What

I’ve got a stack of catalogs on the floor beside my desk. They’ve been coming for months, but a few weeks ago, I thought instead of recycling them immediately, I’d make a stack beside my desk – not that I need another one of those – but to see if I could detect some sort […]

What Happens Here

What happened last week in Seattle – and more significantly what didn’t happen – was a great example of direct democracy. By taking the streets and raising their voices, protesters set a stumbling block in the road toward an unaccountable, unelected world government by multinational corporations. Congratulations to all who participated peacefully. Now get ready […]

Are There No Prisons?

“God bless us, every one.” Is it that time of year? Again? Already? Now that it’s December, Adrienne is spoiling for me to rent the 1951 British version of “A Christmas Carol,” with Alastair Sim. It’s a good movie, I’ll admit, but “A Christmas Carol” was written in 1843. Of what relevance could anything Charles […]