Feed items

If the EMW Women's Surgical Center in Louisville closes, there will be no more abortion providers in Kentucky.

The TV star wrote about the aphrodisiac in a 1991 book.

The TV star wrote about the aphrodisiac in a 1991 book.

Monica Sykes disappeared on October 28, 2016.

Monica Sykes disappeared on October 28, 2016.

A deal that North Carolina lawmakers reached to repeal the state's controversial "bathroom bill" cleared a critical hurdle Thursday.

Wanted: A few adults and kids who don't mind having some bacteria sprayed on their skin. The hope is a cheap, easy treatment for eczema.

Wanted: A few adults and kids who don't mind having some bacteria sprayed on their skin. The hope is a cheap, easy treatment for eczema.

Take the #NikeCoverUpChallenge and Demand Justice for Nike Workers

United Students Against Sweatshops

Join United Students Against Sweatshops and activists around the world who want to know—what is Nike trying to hide? 

Nike, the gargantuan apparel brand that racked in more than $32 billion in revenue in 2016 alone, is dismantling critical protections for the workers who make its apparel. Thanks to student and worker organizing in response to deplorable conditions in apparel supply chains, many universities have required Nike and other major brands to allow independent inspection and monitoring in factories that produce college-brand apparel to prevent abuse. However, Nike recently decided to bar independent watchdog the Worker Rights Consortium from entering its factories.

Nike does not have a great track record on respecting human rights in its factories, including reports of wage theft, violence and discrimination against women, unsafe working conditions and retaliation against union organizers. The decision to refuse independent inspections appears to be an attempt to evade accountability for abuses in its supply chain....

Take the #NikeCoverUpChallenge and Demand Justice for Nike Workers

United Students Against Sweatshops

Join United Students Against Sweatshops and activists around the world who want to know—what is Nike trying to hide? 

Nike, the gargantuan apparel brand that racked in more than $32 billion in revenue in 2016 alone, is dismantling critical protections for the workers who make its apparel. Thanks to student and worker organizing in response to deplorable conditions in apparel supply chains, many universities have required Nike and other major brands to allow independent inspection and monitoring in factories that produce college-brand apparel to prevent abuse. However, Nike recently decided to bar independent watchdog the Worker Rights Consortium from entering its factories.

Nike does not have a great track record on respecting human rights in its factories, including reports of wage theft, violence and discrimination against women, unsafe working conditions and retaliation against union organizers. The decision to refuse independent inspections could result in such human rights abuses going undiscovered. 

If Nike is...