The latest US sanctions target Iran’s shadow banking network, but as talks stall, experts and diplomats warn that this strategy hits ordinary Iranians hardest while shadow networks adapt and endure.
Author: Democratically
Workplace violence against healthcare workers has reached alarming levels. Progressive leadership and decisive policy could be the cure America needs.
The collapse of the Trump-Musk alliance—now consumed by scandal and public feuding—signals deeper dangers for democracy and market stability alike.
Nearly a dozen U.S. immigration officers and eight deportees face harsh, unsafe conditions at a Djibouti military base after a judicial block deepened a standoff between conservative expulsions and legal oversight.
Disneyland doesn’t just conjure magic for tourists—it generates $16.1 billion for Southern California and supports more than 100,000 jobs, reshaping what prosperity looks like for the entire region.
Russia’s surge in Iranian investment and the tightening partnership between Moscow and Tehran may rewrite the balance of power across Eurasia.
This year, Gaza’s Eid al-Adha is a memory, erased by hunger, war, and an indifferent world—while political decisions block relief, Gazan children ask: when will Eid return?
Heartland states like Oklahoma and Missouri now fall far below the national unionization average. How anti-union laws and political choices fueled this crisis—and what a labor comeback could mean for America’s future.
As Arkansas implements sweeping changes to Medicaid eligibility for pregnant women, can these targeted reforms truly overcome the state’s deep maternal health disparities—or are they merely the beginning of a much-needed broader transformation?
A federal judge is weighing whether to unseal FBI surveillance records on MLK nearly two years early—a move King’s family and civil rights leaders warn could tarnish a legacy and fuel political theater.