Today's Top Stories

Murdoch's WSJ Buries News About Its Own Poll And Strong Union Support

In light of the unfolding union drama in Wisconsin, wouldn't it be considered big news if a national news organization had fresh polling data that showed a strong majority of Americans supported the right of unions to use collective bargaining? Not at the Wall Street Journal, which buried that finding in the 23rd paragraph of a 24-paragraph article about the results of its own poll, taken with NBC.

February rebounds, but road to jobs recovery remains years long

February was the first month of the recovery where many of the indicators in the latest Bureau of Labor Statistics Employment Report are positive, suggesting the jobs recovery is gaining traction. However, state and local budget problems continue to be a substantial headwind to growth, with the loss of 30,000 more such jobs last month. The further bad news is that even at February’s growth rate, it would still take until around 2019 to get back to the pre-recession unemployment rate.

America's union story: Blood, struggle and bargaining for good and bad

This year, Wisconsin students will learn 2011 is the 100th anniversary of when Wisconsin became the first state to pass a law guaranteeing workers' compensation. They'll probably be taught that the state was a major fighter in the early 19th century for the radical idea of an eight-hour workday. It is the law, after all, in the land of cheese and Super Bowl champs, that school curriculums include Wisconsin's organized labor history.

Arianna Huffington: 'Go Ahead, Go On Strike -- No One Will Notice'

Arianna Huffington scoffed at a group of unpaid Huffington Post contributors that announced on Wednesday they would stop contributing content to the site, weeks after its $315 million sale to AOL was announced. Huffington dismissed the notion that all bloggers should be paid, given the wide platform HuffPo gives them, and argued that blogging on the Huffington Post is equivalent to going on Rachel Maddow, Jon Stewart or the “Today” show in which bloggers promote their ideas.

The Media Fail Workers in Wisconsin, as Usual

There is no daily newspaper in the country that does not have a business page, or at least a stock market report. That’s important if you’re among the top 10% of the population, financially, who own about 90% of all stocks. Less so if you’re one of the 130 million Americans who work for a living, or the 12 million who’d like to work but can’t find a job. But can you think of a newspaper that has a reporter, let alone a page, dedicated to labor issues?

As Labor Goes, So Goes the Nation

Unions once united workers across gender and racial boundaries. Their decline imperils modern American liberalism.

Progressives suffer today not because they lack attractive narratives but rather because their opponents have grander platforms from which to narrate their political tales. In the United States, money continues to speak, and the more you have of it, the louder you can speak. On talk radio, television news and in most daily newspapers, capital and its conservative admirers speak far louder than labor and progressives.

Why “Bloggers vs. Journalists” is Still With Us

To many people who have been paying attention, "bloggers v. journalists" is almost the definition of a played-out theme. Aren’t we past all that by now? I know this is what some people will be thinking because I thought that way myself. Blogging is far more accepted today. Most journalists are bloggers themselves, so the distinction is getting weirder. Many newsrooms are trying to attract bloggers into local networks. Blogging itself has been overtaken by social media, some people think.

For True Transparency, Amend David Hahn's FOI Strategy

Officials proclaim with faux-innocence that their only intent in posting completed FOI requests instantly to the world online is to promote "transparency." To accept this pious façade would be dangerously naïve. Governments often scoff that the FOI release dynamics are "inside baseball," too minor and complex for the public to care about. Nothing could be farther from the truth, because these dynamics can lead directly to the loss of vital stories.

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