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Sarah Laskow

Weekly Mulch: The sticky truth about oil spills and tar sands

| January 16, 2011
Jessica Yee

Thanks Hillary -- but no thanks about the war and military part

| April 7, 2010

The Mulch: Peaceful protests turn violent in Copenhagen

| December 16, 2009
Columnists

President Zelaya and the audacity of action

Manuel Zelaya, the democratically elected president of Honduras, is back in his country after being deposed in a military coup June 28. Zelaya appeared there unexpectedly Monday morning, announcing his presence in Tegucigalpa, the capital, from within the Brazilian Embassy, where he has taken refuge. Hondurans immediately began flocking to the embassy to show their support. Zelaya's bold move occurs during a critical week, with world leaders gathering for the annual United Nations General Assembly, followed by the G-20 meeting of leaders and finance ministers in Pittsburgh. The Obama administration may be forced, finally, to join world opinion in decisively opposing the coup.

Columnists

A coup for lobbyists at the White House

Honduran President Manuel Zelaya, ousted in the middle of the night just over a month ago, enjoys global support for his return, with the exception of the Obama White House. Though Barack Obama first called the Honduran military's removal of Zelaya a coup, his administration has backpedaled. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called Zelaya's attempt to cross the Nicaraguan border into Honduras "reckless." Could well-placed lobbyists in Washington be forging U.S. foreign policy?

James Laxer

McCain, Napolitano and the myth that the 9/11 terrorists entered the U.S. from Canada

| April 25, 2009
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