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How our blog got its name

Sidney Hillman was a powerful national figure during the Great Depression, a key supporter of the New Deal, and a close ally of President Franklin D. Roosevelt.

When the rumor spread that President Roosevelt ordered his party leaders to “clear it with Sidney” before announcing Harry S. Truman as his 1944 running mate, conservative critics turned on the phrase, trumpeting it as proof that the president was under the thumb of “Big Labor.”

Over the years, the phrase lost its sting and became a testament to Hillman's influence.

It's hard to imagine a labor leader wielding that kind clout today, but we like the idea—and we hope Sidney would give thumbs up to our blog.

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Lindsay Beyerstein's blog

Kidnapping Rings Strong-arm Eritrean Immigrants

Imagine getting a voicemail from a teenage cousin you've never met telling you that you must pay a $25,000 ransom or her kidnappers will torture her to death and sell her organs on the black market. You know she's telling the truth because you can hear another victim screaming in agony in the background as his captors pour molten plastic on his back.Continue reading...

FDIC: Ignore the Multi-Billion-Dollar Bank Settlement Behind the Curtain

Shorter FDIC: Move along, nothing to see here, folks.

 

[Photo credit: Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library, Creative Commons.]

When Forest Whitaker Gets Frisked at the Deli

Judging by the traffic, you guys just can't get enough of Ta-Nehisi Coates. We aim to please at Clear it With Sidney, so here's your next dose of Coates: Ta-Nehisi's op/ed on the insidious, ingrained racism that leads an otherwise "nice" person to frisk Forest Whitaker in an upscale neighborhood deli.

The Observer Profiles Hillman Prize-Winner Ta-Nehisi Coates

Ta-Nehisi Coates, the winner of a 2012 Hillman Prize for analysis and opinion journalism, is profiled in the New York Observer, and the Hillman Foundation gets a shout out:Continue reading...

Herbalife Pays Big Bucks to Docs at UCLA Med School

NYC Screening, Mar 20: "Brothers on the Line"

Brothers on the Line, and award-winning documentary about the rise of Walter Reuther and his brothers from shop-floor organizers to transformative leaders of the United Auto Workers will be screened on March 20 at 9:30pm at The Anthology Film Archives, 32 2nd Ave, in Manhattan. General admission is $10. Click here for more details.Continue reading...

#Sidney's Picks: Signature Strikes, Domestic Violence, and a Canine Murder Mystery

The best of the week's news:Continue reading...

Remembering Alan F. Westin: Privacy Pioneer, Hillman Prize-winner

Alan F. Westin, the father of modern privacy law, died this week in New Jersey at the age of 83:Continue reading...