Tag: cover1

The disinformation nation

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It may be getting harder and harder to figure out the truth, but at least this much is clear: It’s a good time to...

Boulder Weekly’s 6th annual essay issue

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Welcome to Boulder Weekly's 6th annual essay Issue. Please use the following links to connect to all the essays in this years publication: The ones...

Care delayed, care denied?

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Tony DiGiallonardo doesn’t regret anything about his job at the Rocky Flats Plant, producing nuclear weapons parts for the federal government. His work in...

Sutherland Bipolar Center closing symptomatic of a larger statewide crisis

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It’s easier for Brett to talk about his depressive episodes than it is for him to talk about his manic episodes. We agree to...

Reckoning with force

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Three officers in the Boulder County Sheriff’s Office grabbed and pulled Lauren Gotthelf out of a holding cell and onto a restraint chair. They...

Can Divestment help fix PERA?

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There’s a growing movement both in Colorado and around the world calling on investment managers to rid their funds of coal and other fossil...

Breaking point

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About 4.2% of bridges on the northern Front Range are deemed “structurally deficient” by the American Road and Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA). That’s 76...

Unearthing a forgotten history

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Adriana Corral’s art explores the human condition and our fundamental rights. Her research-based process has taken her from her home in Texas to present-day...

Drilling in an Arctic Eden

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Outside my nylon cocoon, a high-pitched buzz pulsed: enemies at the gates. Enemies that would devour me alive given the chance.  I was holed up...

In lieu of a just system

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If you’re returning to Honduras, consider covering up any tattoos and be able to explain them if asked — the tattoos might be the...

Walter Lippmann in Wonderland

Every year, Project Censored scours the landscape for the most important stories that the mainstream corporate media somehow missed, and every year the task...

It’s raining plastic. So what?

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It was the colors that caught Gregory Wetherbee’s eye: red, silver, purple, green, yellow — but most of all blue. There was dark blue...