VIJAY PRASHAD looks at the web of militias and drug-trafficking gangs that emerged in the Sweida region through the Syrian civil war, and how they relate to recent clashes and Israel’s intervention

AFTER something of a media and social media furore – largely confected as a culture war by the right, it might be suggested – the BBC has determined that Rule Britannia will be played at the Last Night of the Proms this year but without the words. Apparently the words will be back next year.
This suggests that the BBC is still on the page of thinking that Black Lives Matter is a moment not a movement.
Objections to the song came not just because of the words but also because of the nationalistic context it is now sung in.

KEITH FLETT looks at the long history of coercion in British employment laws

The government cracking down on something it can’t comprehend and doesn’t want to engage with is a repeating pattern of history, says KEITH FLETT

While Hardie, MacDonald and Wilson faced down war pressure from their own Establishment, today’s leadership appears to have forgotten that opposing imperial adventures has historically defined Labour’s moral authority, writes KEITH FLETT

10 years ago this month, Corbyn saved Labour from its right-wing problem, and then the party machine turned on him. But all is not lost yet for the left, says KEITH FLETT