2016 Programs

2016 Program Archive

July 21 - Why Whites Cling to the Fiction that Race is no Longer a Problem; Building on the President's Rhetoric on Race Relations; An Israeli Calls for a Boycott

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We begin with a response to President Obama’s recent remarks on race and a reaction to the demonstrations taking place across the country in response to the verdict acquitting George Zimmerman for shooting the unarmed black teenage Trayvon Martin. Charles Gallagher, a professor of Sociology and the Chair of the Department of Sociology and Criminal Justice at La Salle University and author of “Below the Belt: Race, Ethnicity, Labor and Politics in a Changing Sunbelt” joins us to discuss why a lot of whites cling to the fiction that race relations are no longer a problem in America.

charles gallagher

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Then we speak with Obery Hendricks, a Visiting Scholar in Religion and African American Studies at Columbia University and author of “The Universe Bends Towards Justice: Radical Reflections on the Bible, the Church and the Body Politic”. We discuss how the president might build on his powerful speeches on race that many feel do not go sufficiently beyond rhetoric to address the reality of race relations in America brought into focus but the flagrantly unjust murder of Trayvon Martin and the acquittal of his killer.

obery henricks

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Then finally we go to Israel to speak with Gideon Levy, a columnist for Ha’aritz and author of “The Punishment of Gaza”. His recent article “The Israeli Patriot’s Final Refuge: Boycott” has gained international attention and might have broken the law in Israel. With peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians resuming tentatively and reluctantly, we discuss Gideon Levy’s contention that change won’t come from within unless Israel pays a price for the occupation.

digeon levy

 

July 18 - Will the Capture of a Mexican Drug Lord Provoke a Bloody Backlash?; Putin Jails a Potential Rival; Washington Dithers While Syria Burns

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We begin and go to Mexico City to speak with veteran correspondent Dudley Althaus the senior correspondent in Mexico for Global Post where he has an article “Mexico’s Zetas boss nabbed. Cue the brutal backlash”. We discuss the capture of one of Mexico’s most wanted men and whether this will spur the rival Sinaloa Cartel to seize control of the Zetas’ drug smuggling routes into the United States.

 

dudley althaus

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Then we speak with Ambassador Steven Pifer, an expert on Russia at the Brookings Institution who served as Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director of Russia, Ukraine and Eurasia at the National Security Council. We discuss the five year jail sentence of Russia’s charismatic young anti-corruption crusader Alexei Navalny who Putin is afraid could be a potential opposition leader so is railroading him on trumped up charges to prevent Navalny from running for mayor of Moscow.

 
steven pifer

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Then finally, with the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs acknowledging today that “currently the tide seems to have shifted in Assad’s favor” in Syria, we look into calls from key Senators who are pressuring Obama to use force to defeat Assad as the Syrian opposition loses ground and shows deepening signs of division. Henri Barkey, who served as a member of the State Department’s Policy Planning Staff on the Middle East, the Eastern Mediterranean and Intelligence, joins to assess the increasingly bloody stalemate that has the U.S and its allies dithering while Syria burns.

henri barkey

 

July 17 - Cuba and North Korea's Hidden Ties Exposed; The Reversal of Political Islam in the Middle East; A Victim of Solitary Confinement on the Hunger Strike

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We begin with the very puzzling incident in the Panama Canal where a North Korean freighter was intercepted containing ancient Soviet era weaponry from Cuba, hidden under tons of brown sugar. Roberto Suro, who heads up the Cuba Program at USC’s Annenberg School of Communication and Journalism, joins us to discuss this flashback to the Cold War and whether it could set back fledgling efforts at improving U.S. – Cuban relations. Roberto Suro

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Then we get an analysis of how the reversal of political Islam in Egypt is reverberating throughout the Middle East, and the behind-the-scenes struggle between Saudi Arabia and Qatar to shape the future of political Islam to prevent democratic reform infecting their own repressive feudal monarchies. Veteran New York Times Middle East correspondent Youssef Ibrahim joins us to discuss the widespread disappointment and cynicism towards radical Islamic regimes, like Hezbollah and Hamas amongst Arabs, as well the rejections of theocratic intrusion into secular life in Turkey, Tunisia and Eqypt. Youssef Ibrahim

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Then finally, as the hunger strike in California’s prisons over solitary confinement enters its tenth day, we speak with Sarah Shourd, who has an article at the ACLU’s website, “The Iranian Government locked me in solitary confinement for 410 days. Today my thoughts are with the hunger strikers”. We discuss her ordeal as a political hostage in Iran and an article in Wednesday’s New York Times by Wilbert Rideau who spent 12 years in solitary confinement. Sarah Shourd

 

July 16 - Suing the NSA to Stop Them Spying on Americans; Open Season on Black Boys; Africa's Population Explosion

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We begin with a lawsuit filed today in Federal Court by the Electronic Frontier Foundation against the National Security Agency to stop it spying on American Citizens. Cindy Cohn, the Legal Director and General Counsel of the Electronic Freedom Foundation joins us to discuss the legal challenges ahead to stop what the plaintiff’s describe as an “illegal and unconstitutional program of dragnet electronic surveillance”. cindy cohn

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Then we speak with Gary Younge, a feature writer and award-winning columnist for the UK Guardian, whose recent article in The Guardian “Open season on black boys after a verdict like this”, has gained international attention. With appeals for calm in the wake of such an unjust verdict, Gary Younge asks, as the father of a black child, how he and his child can feel calm and whether the only option now for black teens who venture out of their homes, is to be armed like George Zimmerman.

gary younge

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Then finally, following a recent report by the U.N. that China’s population will shrink, India’s will plateau, but Africa’s will explode, we speak with John Bongaarts, Vice President and Distinguished Scholar at the Population Council, an international non-profit that studies world population. We look into Africa’s lost decade in birth control and how the world’s increasingly strained water and land resources will be able to support and estimated 9.6 billion people by 2050.

john bongaarts

 

July 15 - The Corporate Backers of "Stand Your Ground"; Did the Prosecution Blow the Zimmerman Trial?; The Showdown in the Senate

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We begin with an analysis of the role of the organization that crafted the “stand your ground” law with the NRA, ALEC, the American Legislative Exchange Council, in the death of Trayvon Martin and the acquittal of George Zimmerman. Lisa Graves, the Executive Director of the Center for Media and Democracy and the publisher of ALECexposed.org joins us to discuss how much blood do the corporate backer of ALEC like Verizon and AT&T. have on their hands. lisa graves

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Then we speak with a prominent Florida criminal defense lawyer Jeffrey Weiner, the former president of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers to assess how much the prosecution blew the case against George Zimmerman and whether their prosecutorial over-reach in charging Zimmerman with second degree murder backfired. We also discuss why the jury was not told that the police dispatcher told the armed and angry Zimmerman to stay in his car.

jeffrey weiner

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Then finally we look into the looming showdown in the Senate where tomorrow, if the 43 Republican senators block the nomination of Richard Cordray to head up the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau as they have threatened, Majority Leader Harry Reid will change the Senate rules to allow a simple majority vote on non-lifetime appointment to the executive branch. Micah Hauptman, the Financial Policy Counsel at Public Citizen, joins us to discuss why Republican Senators are determined to neutralize the new bureau that protects citizens from the same kind of bank fraud that caused the 2008 crash.

micah hauptman