Ann Larson
@annlarson.bsky.social
140 followers 83 following 23 posts
Words: New Republic, Nation, Jacobin, Fast Company, Hammer & Hope, In These Times, Lithub etc Co-founder, Debt Collective Collaborations: Economic Hardship Reporting Project Teaching: Univ of Utah Free Palestine
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Reposted by Ann Larson
epi.org
In the past 10 yrs, teachers' wages DECREASED by $46/week after adjusting for inflation. Wages increased by $220 for other college grads

Why are we penalizing teachers for working one of the hardest & most important jobs in our communities?

We need to pay teachers more! www.epi.org/publication/...
The teacher pay penalty reached a record high in 2024: Three decades of leaving public school teachers behind
Over the past three decades, stagnant weekly wages of public school teachers have fallen further and further behind those of college graduates who chose other careers, resulting in an ever increasing ...
www.epi.org
Reposted by Ann Larson
kenklippenstein.bsky.social
Hakeem Jeffries says of Cuomo's attacks on Mamdani for living in a rent controlled apartment: "It's a legitimate issue that has been raised, and the [Mamdani] campaign is going to have to address it."
Reposted by Ann Larson
amandalitman.bsky.social
"The worth of an ideology can only be judged by its delivery."

This is a good answer in a great interview that @zohrankmamdani.bsky.social gave the Nation. www.thenation.com/article/poli...
Reposted by Ann Larson
lookheron.bsky.social
Open bribery of political officials, open flouting of statutory and constitutional law to set up personalist control over a vast administrative apparatus, establishment of concentration camps, sending weapons to genocidaires, arresting dissenters
Reposted by Ann Larson
ddayen.bsky.social
There have now been five separate formal determinations that the Trump administration has illegally impounded funds appropriated by Congress. @brycecovert.bsky.social looks at the real-world impact of these delays on the thousands of organizations who rely on that money.
prospect.org/health/2025-...
When Federal Funding Doesn’t Show Up
The Trump administration has denied legally obligated funds to thousands of organizations dependent on federal grants, causing layoffs, service cuts, and mass anxiety.
prospect.org
Reposted by Ann Larson
ddayen.bsky.social
We had a relatively unnoticed coup at the Justice Department last week. An antitrust division that was following the law has now been reduced to a puppet in a pay-to-play scheme involving MAGA influencers and corporate treasuries. On Organized Money we talk to the writer who broke open this story.
The Coup at the Antitrust Division
Podcast Episode · Organized Money · 08/05/2025 · 46m
podcasts.apple.com
Reposted by Ann Larson
ddayen.bsky.social
I wrote back in April that the best way to think about Trump's tariffs were as sanctions to shake down other countries. The final result reinforces this: Trump is using trade as a bargaining chip to win other policies, or even just the illusion of wins.
Here's my post-Liberation Day update:
Trump’s Tariffs Are Kleptocracy in Action
Very little of what you’ve heard about presidential ‘deals’ is true. It’s really a shakedown on behalf of Trump’s desires and corporate whims.
prospect.org
Reposted by Ann Larson
mattseybold.bsky.social
Canvas just became one of the most powerful surveillance, IP theft, & data monetization tools in the world.

OpenAI bought a user-base locked in to long-term contracts.

But they can’t make us use their trashware.

Boycott. Luddify. Open source.

Don’t let them have your work or your students.
Reposted by Ann Larson
hammerandhope.bsky.social
"It’s morning again in America. Federal agents snatch students off the streets. The White House boasts of banishing hundreds of people to a Salvadoran prison, ignoring the judges who demand due process." hammerandhope.org/article/trum...
White Supremacy Is Apocalyptic for Everyone
Across the world, the right wing is blowing up everything and incinerating the planet.
hammerandhope.org
Reposted by Ann Larson
reichlinmelnick.bsky.social
At the DeSantis Everglades detention camp, people with green cards are being held in terrible conditions, with maggots in the food, the lights kept on 24 hours a day, and delayed access to medicine.

One guy had his Bible taken and was told "here there is no right to religion."
"I am Leamsy La Figura. We've been here at Alcatraz since Friday. There's over 400 people here. There's no water to take a bath, it's been four days since I've taken a bath," he said.

He claimed the food at the immigration facility is scarce and unsanitary.

"They only brought a meal once a day and it had maggots. They never take off the lights for 24 hours. The mosquitoes are as big as elephants," La Figura said.

Detainees say rights are being violated
Other detainees echoed La Figura's concerns, alleging violations of their basic rights.

"They're not respecting our human rights," one man said during the same call. "We're human beings; we're not dogs. We're like rats in an experiment."

"I don't know their motive for doing this, if it's a form of torture. A lot of us have our residency documents and we don't understand why we're here," he added.

A third detainee, who said he is Colombian, described deteriorating mental health and lack of access to necessary medical care.

"I'm on the edge of losing my mind. I've gone three days without taking my medicine," he said. "It's impossible to sleep with this white light that's on all day."

He also claimed his Bible was confiscated.

"They took the Bible I had and they said here there is no right to religion. And my Bible is the one thing that keeps my faith, and now I'm losing my faith," he said.
Reposted by Ann Larson
jacobinmag.bsky.social
Steering the country toward another potential financial crisis, the Trump administration has moved to completely gut the federal regulatory agency tasked with reining in financial institutions: jacobin.com/2025/04/trum...
Reposted by Ann Larson
alexhan.bsky.social
The only meaningful institutions in the civic life of the United States that working class people control are labor unions.

The only meaningful path to any democratic transformation requires the leadership of institutions that working class people control.
olufemiotaiwo.bsky.social
"The agreement includes meaningful raises, smaller class sizes, and more classroom resources, but it also codifies some of the most comprehensive LGBTQ+ protections ever included in a public school labor deal."

Check out "bargaining for the common good"

www.advocate.com/news/chicago...
Chicago Teachers Union ratifies groundbreaking contract cementing LGBTQ+ protections
Discrimination in education isn't welcome in the Windy City.
www.advocate.com
Reposted by Ann Larson
olufemiotaiwo.bsky.social
"Students told WNCN, Raleigh CBS affiliate, that they’ve been dealing with a lot — from mold in the dorms and broken air conditioners to brown tap water and mice. They say they’re simply asking for better, safer living conditions."

context: this is a public HBCU

www.wfmynews2.com/article/news...
Protest over housing conditions at NCCU leads to five arrests
NCCU students protest poor housing conditions, leading to five arrests due to unauthorized campus use.
www.wfmynews2.com
Reposted by Ann Larson
jacobinmag.bsky.social
Reminder that millionaires and billionaires evade an estimated $150 billion in taxes every year, according to the IRS.

Happy Tax Day.
Reposted by Ann Larson
aaup.org
AAUP @aaup.org · Apr 10
Are you a history professor who has been pressured to alter your curriculum — particularly regarding the history of Black & African American people in the United States?

We would love to talk to you. Send us a DM!
Reposted by Ann Larson
clemenceguette.bsky.social
En route vers Washington, Netanyahou aurait survolé l'espace aérien français.

Sous le coup d'un mandat d'arrêt de la Cour pénale internationale pour crime contre l'Humanité, il aurait dû être intercepté et arrêté.
Reposted by Ann Larson
bostonreview.bsky.social
Organizing on the scale that our struggles demand means finding common ground with a broad spectrum of people, many of whom we would never otherwise interact with, & building a shared practice of politics in the pursuit of more just outcomes.

@prisonculture.bsky.social & @mskellymhayes.bsky.social:
How Much Discomfort Is the Whole World Worth? - Boston Review
Movement building requires a culture of listening—not mastery of the right language.
www.bostonreview.net
Reposted by Ann Larson
haymarketbooks.org
Trump's Hammer, Our Hope 🌱

Join @naomiaklein.bsky.social, @chenjerai.bsky.social, @keeanga.bsky.social, & @astra.bsky.social for an emergency town hall on the cascading crisis and how we can fight back.

Tuesday, April 8 at 5:00 pm ET

RSVP to attend: www.tickettailor.com/events/hayma...
Trump's Hammer, Our Hope
Naomi Klein, Chenjerai Kumanyika, Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, and Astra Taylor
An Emergency Town Hall
Tuesday, April 8, 5:00 pm ET
Reposted by Ann Larson
davidsirota.com
Abundance™ aims to kill the antitrust movement & deter Dems from challenging oligarchy.

It wrongly pretends corporate power isnt the creator of scarcity.

Its political theory was tried in 2024 & was defeated by Trump.

Co-published with Rolling Stone 👇 www.levernews.com/abundance-is...
“Abundance” Is How Dems Lose To Trump
Ezra Klein’s new book is supercharging elites’ campaign to deter Democrats from challenging billionaires and corporate power.
www.levernews.com
annlarson.bsky.social
more bad news
deseret.com.web.brid.gy
Is Utah the blueprint for America’s ‘Abundance’ agenda?
The 2024 presidential election threw the Democratic Party into disarray with no clear consensus on an alternative to Donald Trump’s blitz of executive actions to secure the border, shrink the government and reshore American manufacturing. But some party elites are now coalescing behind a pro-growth message familiar to the Beehive State. To counter a scarcity mindset on both sides of the aisle, New York Times columnist Ezra Klein and Atlantic writer Derek Thompson have proposed an abundance agenda with a new book targeting the obstacle of overregulation in Democratic strongholds. Take for example California’s high-speed rail. The project is a decade overdue, $100 billion over budget and still undergoing regulatory review because of burdensome bureaucratic requirements. Or consider the Biden administration’s $42.5 billion rural broadband initiative. Not a single house has been connected to the internet because of a 14-step approval process demanding climate plans, union favoritism and separate low-cost options. “That’s a classic example of progressive processes and procedures getting in the way of progressive outcomes,” Thompson said in an interview with the Deseret News. Gov. Cox says the Trump administration just changed the game on affordable housing in Utah. Here’s how A focus on picky government processes has created an affordability crisis of epic proportions in recent decades, Thompson said. But the solution laid out in “Abundance” isn’t to expand demand with government subsidies, following an old Democratic playbook — or to decrease demand with closed borders, cut programs and canceled trade agreements, as some Republicans might advocate — it’s to increase supply by streamlining government processes and promoting a “YIMBY” culture of “yes in my backyard.” As liberals scramble to articulate a substitute to Trump’s populist regime change, “Abundance” proposes a simple thesis: The answer to voter frustration isn’t pointing fingers, it’s producing more of the material outcomes that make America great. “‘Abundance’ is inherently a positive-sum vision,” Thompson said. “We totally reject (a) scarcity-for-scarcity vision.” At its heart, “Abundance” calls for a shift in attitude away from simple redistribution and toward seismic innovation. And, according to Thompson, the book’s call to action could take a page or two from Utah’s example of pioneer positivity. ### Does Utah have an abundance mindset? A 2023 Harvard study, often cited by Utah Gov. Spencer Cox, found that the state is a clear outlier in terms of having the least amount of “zero-sum thinking,” or the belief that one group’s gains must come at another’s expense. Of the 20,400 survey respondents, Utah residents were the least likely to agree with statements asking whether the success of a certain ethnicity, immigrant community, international trade partner or income class necessarily hurts another group. Zero-sum thinking was shared evenly among members of both major political parties. Democrats tended to be more zero-sum about economic inequality. Republicans tended to be more zero-sum about immigration. Young people also tended to be more zero-sum than older generations. This trend was bucked by Utah, the youngest state in the nation. Over the past few years, Utah has been ranked as the best state in the country, the best place to start a business, the best place for upward social mobility and the state with the strongest middle class, all while taking the title of the fastest growing state in the nation from 2010 to 2020. In November, Cox told community leaders at the Utah Valley Chamber of Commerce Growth and Prosperity Summit that the secret to Utah’s success is a “non-zero-sum mindset” that avoids false choices between growth and quality of life. “Cox does a really lovely job of marrying the material arguments for abundance with a deep understanding of what life is about in the first place,” Thompson said. Just as there is a “scarcity faction” on the left and the right, with the former favoring “de-growth” environmental activism and the latter lobbying for protectionist policies, there is also a bipartisan “abundance faction,” Thompson said, that can become a source of unity for lawmakers across the country who are more interested in improving outcomes than scoring political points. While “abundance Republicans” and “abundance Democrats” hold different end goals, they tout a similar trust in the power of good process to unleash human ingenuity, Thompson said. With his book representing the rallying cry for pro-growth liberals, Thompson said that Utah’s governor could very well characterize the conservative counterpart. “There are Republicans, like Cox, who see very clearly that the path toward prosperity, not just material prosperity, but human well-being, requires an obsession with the basic building blocks of material wealth, and that starts with housing,” Thompson said. Cox has framed his second term around the motto of “Built Here,” based on his promise to spur the construction of 35,000 new starter homes by the time he leaves office in 2029 and his objective to double power production over the next decade as the state goes big on artificial intelligence, nuclear reactors and transportation technology ahead of the 2034 Winter Olympics. During his state of the state address in January, Cox highlighted these goals but emphasized that they could fall out of reach unless Utahns keep exercising faith in the belief that they can make the desert blossom despite limited resources. “We are at a fork in the road,” Cox said. “We can either press forward with our pioneer spirit, our grit, our industry and our faith, and build the next great chapter of Utah’s story — or we can be washed away in the negative, nationwide malaise of dysfunction.“ ### Utah’s housing scarcity crisis Utah is at risk of losing its abundance future if the state’s rapid growth runs into too much resistance toward change, according to Steve Waldrip, Cox’s senior adviser on housing affordability. Despite being political opposites, California — which hasn’t elected a statewide Republican since 2006 — and Utah — which hasn’t elected a statewide Democrat since 1996 — have seen their housing costs become the second and eighth least affordable in the country. In Utah, the homeownership rate has historically been around 70%, Waldrip said. But now only around 7%-8% of non-homeowners can afford to buy a median-priced home. In over 60% of the state, median home prices are more than five times greater than the median income. And a recent poll found that a third of Utahns have considered moving out of state because of expensive housing. Poll: A third of Utahns say housing costs are so expensive they’ve considered moving out of state The problem is on track to worsen, even with the unprecedented steps being taken by the state Legislature to encourage affordable home development. Population growth is currently outpacing construction by around 6,000 units a year in Utah. If this trend continues, last year’s shortage of 37,000 homes could grow to 45,000 homes over the course of 2025. Only so much can be done at the state level, according to Waldrip, because it is ultimately up to cities and counties to decide whether to allow new developments on smaller plots of land. So what’s getting in the way? “Honestly, it’s fear,” Waldrip said. “The biggest impediment we have really is this fear narrative that creeps into our local politics and drives a lot of the decisions that are made at that local level because the perception that there’s a risk of loss if any change happens.” This fear comes from the “false choice” that cities can either grow larger or keep current residents happy, Waldrip said. But this stands in stark contrast to the Utah “ethos” beginning at the time Brigham Young led pioneers into the valley in 1847, according to Waldrip. That generation thought it was their duty to sacrifice to make the state more habitable for their children and grandchildren — and even Utahns in 2025, Waldrip said. This kind of “long view” is needed now more than ever, Waldrip said, because at the end of the day an abundance agenda is really a pro-family agenda as unaffordable housing pushes younger families to move away. ### Can Utah be the blueprint for ‘Abundance’? Devin Zander, age 25, and his wife are currently renting in Sugar House and hope to buy a home near Salt Lake City. But there are almost no new homes available on the market, and the ones that are for sale are extremely expensive. “The barrier of entry is so high,” Zander said. A report from the University of Utah’s Kem C. Gardner Institute found that the median home price in Salt Lake County is $530,000. This means that to buy a home a household needs an income of at least $153,000. Zander has started his own real estate development firm in the hopes of increasing the number of high-density townhomes in his area but he continually hits barriers at the city level, he said. While Utah has shown it is very capable of fast-tracking large scale infrastructure projects, like the FrontRunner and new highways, Zander said municipalities often push back against state pressures to permit high density developments, forcing families like his to leave town, and leading to the closure of empty elementary schools. Zander referenced Texas as a model — also highlighted in “Abundance” — as a place with little local zoning limitations and, as a consequence, little trouble with affordable housing. But one organization has bet its future on Utah’s continued reputation as the place where government can be small, capable and supportive of private sector innovation. The Utah-based Abundance Institute launched its operations almost a year ago with the goal of preventing lawmakers in Salt Lake and Washington, D.C., from squandering opportunities around artificial intelligence and alternative energy sources. Did the 2025 Legislature do enough for housing affordability in Utah? Chris Koopman, the group’s CEO is a nationally recognized legal scholar on regulation and innovation who moved his family to Utah in 2018 precisely because of “Utah’s focus on abundance.” “Utah has really been a blueprint for what an abundance agenda looks like in practice,” Koopman said. “If you were to ask someone, ‘Go, find a place where you could nail and scale some of the most innovative ideas around technology and government, it would be Utah.” Despite the depressing housing market, Utah has led the nation on innovative AI policy, funding a “regulatory sandbox” to propose targeted AI regulations instead of pursuing blanket rules that could hinder the industry. Under Cox’s “Operation Gigawatt,” the state — which consistently ranks No. 1 for energy affordability — has also spearheaded attempts to develop new nuclear energy technologies with $8.5 million for nuclear site preparation, the creation of a new nuclear commission and the signing of a tristate energy compact with Idaho and Wyoming. The Abundance Institute hopes to continue this momentum with public education campaigns, expert policy briefs and an events partnership with the University of Utah. As the politics of division push more and more Americans to view policymaking as an arena to fight over their stagnant piece of the pie, Koopman wants Utah to remain a place where smart growth can be seen as a positive-sum win for everyone. “We have let fear and misunderstanding drive so many of our public policies,” Koopman said. “And so from from our perspective, we want to flip that narrative from pessimism to optimism.”
www.deseret.com
Reposted by Ann Larson
kenklippenstein.bsky.social
Attorney General Pam Bondi directs prosecutors to seek death penalty for Luigi Mangione
Reposted by Ann Larson
ufcw3000.bsky.social
At 5:30 pm today, March 27, our union will join labor and community organizations in a demonstration at the NW Detention Center to protest the detention of longtime labor leader Alfredo “Lelo” Juarez and SEIU 925 UW lab tech Lewelyn Dixon.
A picture of a protest with people holding signs reading "Free LELO NOW, LET LELO GO! ICE LET ALFREDO GO!!" Above is text on Blue Bars reading "DEFEN DETAINED IMMIGRANT WORKERS! THURSDAY, MARCH 27 AT 5:30PM NW DETENTION CENTER 1623 E J ST, TACOMA WAS 98421