- The 40-Year Slump—"From 1954 thought 1974, American workers brought home most of the wealth that they produced. Since 1974, they've steadily lost power—and they're getting just a fraction of the wealth they produce today."
- Investment Manager Explains Why 99.5% Of Americans Can Never Win
- Paid Sick Leave is Popular — So Corporate America is Lobbying Against Democracy
- Swiss outrage over executive pay sparks a movement in Europe
- Bangladeshi garment workers win a 77% pay rise
- "Because Marissa Said So" — Yahoos Bristle at Mayer's QPR Ranking System and "Silent Layoffs"
- Microsoft axes its controversial employee-ranking system
- Facebook and Microsoft help fund rightwing lobby network, report finds—"State Policy Network rejects climate change, opposes workers' rights – and is backed by some top US tech and telecoms firms."
- Deal Reached in Inquiry Into Visa Fraud at Tech Giant—"Infosys has agreed to pay $34 million to settle claims of 'systemic visa fraud and abuse' involving temporary workers brought to the United States." Paying for cheap foreign labor so as not to pay for Americans' just wages. NYT
- What Contract IT Workers Miss About Being Full-Time
- It's business that really rules us now—"Lobbying is the least of it: corporate interests have captured the entire democratic process. No wonder so many have given up on politics."
- Corporate America's new scam: Industry P.R. firm poses as think tank!—"How the media fell hook, line and sinker for the propagandist, respectable-sounding 'Employment Policies Institute.'" Salon
- Corporate Welfare: Boeing Gets Jaw-Dropping $9 Billion to Stay in Washington State
- Michael Sandel: Why we shouldn't trust markets with our civic life
- The Whitewater Scandal and Our Two Americas in the Raw
- Wall Street's nightmare: President Elizabeth Warren—Also Hilary Clinton's. Politico
- Elizabeth Warren: 'Too Big To Fail' Is Worse Than Before Financial Crisis
- Elizabeth Warren challenges Obama to break up 'too-big-to-fail' Wall St banks—"Amid speculation that she might run against Hillary Clinton in 2016, firebrand senator attacks regulators for multiple failings."
- Elizabeth Warren: quiet revolutionary who could challenge Hillary Clinton in Democrats' 2016 race—"Senator's tough stance against Wall Street is attracting voters on the left who are disenchanted with the party establishment."
- Democrats quietly throwing presidential support behind Elizabeth Warren: report
- Video: The Wall Street Code—"A Goldman Sachs/UBS 'quant' turned whistle blower explains how the market is rigged."
- Fed Official Who Helped Orchestrate QE: 'I'm Sorry, America,' QE Really Was A Huge Wall Street Bailout
- You Know Something's Wrong When Billionaire Fund Managers Are Worrying About Inequality
- A great idea for making Wall Street pay its fair share—"Here's an idea for raising government revenue whose time may have come. Instead of taxing the income of the wealthy, tax investment transactions that don't contribute much, if at all, to economic growth."
- Occupy Wall Street activists buy $15m of Americans' personal debt—"Rolling Jubilee spent $400,000 to purchase debt cheaply from banks before 'abolishing' it, freeing individuals from their bills."
- JPMorgan's #AskJPM Twitter Hashtag Backfires Against Bank—Being asked the tough questions [Salon].
- JP Morgan agrees $4.5bn mortgage settlement—"US investment bank JP Morgan has agreed to pay $4.5bn (£2.8bn) to investors who lost money on mortgage-related securities during the financial crisis."
- Rogue Spanish trader says no to US extradition—"A former JPMorgan bank trader arrested in Spain refused Friday to be extradited to the United States where he faces criminal charges in the massive 'London Whale' fraud scandal."
- JPMorgan allegedly paid $80,000 a month to Wen Jiabao's daughter
- Korea's Financial Regulator Forewarns Local JP Morgan of Information Disclosure
- Judge criticizes lack of prosecution against Wall Street executives for fraud
- Moody’s cuts ratings of three big US banks—"Moody's has cut the credit ratings of big U.S. banks including Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase, after deciding that the federal government is less likely to bail the financial institutions out if they get into future difficulties."
- Ex-Bank Executive May Face Death in Vietnam Fraud Trial
- House Passes GOP 'Fix' For Obamacare Cancellations
- Liberals Should Fight Like Hell for Single Payer Health Care
- Conservatives Confident America Rejecting Obamacare, Ready for Every-Man-for-Himself Care
- Alaska won't expand Medicaid
- They've learned nothing!: Media's Obamacare coverage is humiliating—"Betraying any knowledge of political science, media embarrasses itself with a phony frenzy. Here's how bad it was." Salon
- European, US Media Face New Tests With NSA Spying
- NSA files: New York Times defends the Guardian's Snowden leaks
- UK's reputation is damaged by reaction to Edward Snowden, says UN official—"Special rapporteur on freedom of expression says he is alarmed at political response to revelations of mass surveillance."
- Jailed Anonymous hacker Jeremy Hammond: 'My days of hacking are done'—"Hammond calls his 10-year sentence a 'vengeful, spiteful act' by US authorities eager to put a chill on political hacking." Wikileaks has released the rest of their Stratfor files.
- Jeremy Hammond: FBI directed my attacks on foreign government sites—"Anonymous hacktivist told court FBI informant and fellow hacker Sabu supplied him with list of countries vulnerable to cyber-attack."
- Blast from the Past: The Rise and Fall of Jeremy Hammond: Enemy of the State—"As a devastating series of cyberattacks struck the heart of the national-security establishment, the Feds set out to destroy the legendary hacker and radical anarchist by any means necessary."