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About David Sirota

Founder/editor in chief, The Lever; Oscar nominated for DON'T LOOK UP; Bernie Sanders' presidential campaign speechwriter in 2020.
  • Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas (AP Photo/Cliff Owen)

    Thomas pushed to kill disclosure laws while getting secret billionaire gifts

    Originally published: The Lever on April 12, 2023 (more by The Lever)  |

    “This court should invalidate mandatory disclosure and reporting requirements,” wrote Clarence Thomas, who did not disclose years of gifts from a billionaire.

  • MOVIES VS. CAPITALISM

    Introducing our new podcast: ‘Movies vs Capitalism’

    Originally published: The Lever on February 7, 2023 (more by The Lever)  |

    The Lever’s new movie podcast launches.

  • (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

    Health insurers get government cash, then jack up prices

    Originally published: The Lever on October 11, 2022 (more by The Lever)  |

    Despite the Affordable Care Act’s promises, publicly subsidized insurers are jacking up prices while Americans lose coverage.

  • Sen. Joe Manchin speaks during a news conference on Sept. 20, 2022. (AP Photo/Mariam Zuhaib)

    Study: Manchin’s Pipeline bill would be a climate nightmare

    Originally published: The Lever on September 27, 2022 (more by The Lever)  |

    New data suggest Dems’ greenwashed permitting legislation could produce far more carbon emissions than it eliminates.

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Money on the Left Episodes

  • Defending the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau w/ Tyler Creighton
    David Sirota

    In this episode, we speak with Tyler Creighton about the ongoing struggle to save the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) from defunding and closure at the hands of Russell Vought in the second Trump Administration. Creighton is a lawyer at the CFPB and a member of the National Treasury Employees Union (NTEU), Chapter 335.

  • Graeber’s Utopia of Refusal
    David Sirota

    Will Beaman joins Billy Saas & Scott Ferguson to discuss the enduring influence of David Graeber’s debt-centered work in the wake of Zohran Mamdani’s election to Mayor of New York City. Will and Scott unpack their jointly authored essay, “The Utopia of Refusal: David Graeber, Debt & the Left Monetary Imagination,” which is the latest […]

  • Zack Polanski’s Bold Politics Requires an Even Bolder Economic Vision: The Case for Democratic Public Finance
    David Sirota

    The Green Party of England and Wales is attracting new members in unprecedented numbers and achieving polling percentages that would have seemed impossible a year ago. However, tensions are building behind the scenes over the party’s economic programme. On December 12, 2025, just over 3 months since Zack Polanski’s election as party leader – the […]

See all Money on the Left Episodes

Monthly Review Essays

  • Nikolai Gogol’s Department of Government Efficiency
    Andy Merrifield A 1926 Soviet illustration of a production of Gogol's play The Government Inspector, showing audience members in the foreground, and actors on stage in the background.

    Almost two centuries after its opening night, Gogol’s five-act satirical play The Government Inspector continues to create a stir with every performance, seemingly no matter where. Maybe because corruption and self-serving double-talk aren’t just familiar features of 19th-century Russia, but have become ingrained facets of all systems of government and officialdom, making them recognizable to […]

Lost & Found

  • Dividends Are Not Royalties: The SAT and Surplus Value
    Michael Parenti A young man at a desk takes the SAT.

    Michael Parenti, the Marxist author and scholar, died on January 24, 2026 at the age of ninety-two. This article originally appeared in Monthly Review 45, no. 5 (October 1993). It has been frequently noted that IQ examinations, while professing to measure innate intelligence, are riddled with racial, gender, and class biases. Thus a low-income, inner-city youth, […]

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