December is make-or-break for Mother Jones’ fundraising. We have a $350,000 goal that we simply cannot afford to miss. And in "No Cute Headlines or Manipulative BS," we explain, as matter-of-fact as we can, how being a nonprofit means everything to us. Bottom line: Donations big and small make up 74 percent of our budget this year and are urgently needed this month, and all online gifts will be matched and go twice as far until we hit our goal. Please pitch in if you can right now.
December is make-or-break for Mother Jones’ fundraising, and in "No Cute Headlines or Manipulative BS," we hope that giving it to you as matter-of-fact as we can will work to raise the $350,000 we need to raise this month. Donations make up 74 percent of our budget this year, and all online gifts will be matched and go twice as far until we hit our goal.
Keely Fisher chose to pursue her Ph.D. at Ohio State University because she wanted to learn about climate change from a world-class faculty. Now one year into her program, she wonders if she belongs here.
The problem has nothing to do with Ohio State and everything to do with the Ohio General Assembly and a proposal that would regulate higher education. The wide-ranging bill includes a provision that designates climate policy as a “controversial belief or policy” and says faculty must “encourage students to reach their own conclusions about all controversial beliefs or policies and shall not seek to inculcate any social, political, or religious point of view.”
“Is this going to force me to leave?” Fisher asked, interviewed at the school’s main library.
She came to Ohio to be part of the university’s School of Environment and Natural Resources and worries that the bill, if it becomes law, would hurt her program’s ability to recruit students and faculty, and would introduce uncertainty into the classroom about how climate change can be discussed. If the proposal had been law when she was deciding where to enroll, it would have steered her to a different university, she said.
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The news business is broken.
Over the past 20 years, the number of working journalists in the US has fallen by more than half, and more and more of them work for media organizations owned by oligarchs. Is it any wonder that disinformation have come to dominate our politics?
But people are standing up to the torrent of lies. The donors who power Mother Jones’ nonprofit newsroom prove every day that there is a way to sustain truth-telling journalism. Please join them and support fierce and fearless reporting today.
The news business is broken.
Over the past 20 years, the number of working journalists in the US has fallen by more than half, and more and more of them work for media organizations owned by oligarchs. Is it any wonder that disinformation have come to dominate our politics?
But people are standing up to the torrent of lies. The donors who power Mother Jones’ nonprofit newsroom prove every day that there is a way to sustain truth-telling journalism. Please join them and support fierce and fearless reporting today.