2016 Programs

2016 Program Archive

February 7 - Oversight on Assassinations; Facts and Figures on the Drone Program; A Hippocratic Oath on the Economy?

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We begin with an analysis of the testimony today from the White House Counterterrorism Chief John Brennan whose nomination to head up the CIA drew sharp questions from hawks and doves over the contentious issues of drone policy and assassination authority. A former CIA official Melvin Goodman, the author of “National Insecurity: The Cost of American Militarism” joins us to discuss recent efforts to pry secrets from the White House over its drone policy.

 

mel goodman

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Then, since John Brennan is considered the architect of the drone program, and his testimony today was delayed due to protesters expressing outrage that the U.S. government operates what many consider to be an assassination program with limited oversight that is not subject to international law, we look into the size and scope of the drone program. Bill Roggio joins us. He is the editor of The Long War Journal, which is considered the leading authority on the numbers of drones the U.S. has and how many targets they have struck in what countries and the extent of collateral damage involved in these strikes.

bill rogio

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Then finally we speak with economist James Galbraith about the standoff in Washington over the future of the economy and the nation’s economic recovery that has repeatedly been held hostage by Congressional Republicans trying to cut taxes for their wealthy donors and cut government programs they don’t like or want to privatize. We discuss whether, as some have suggested that before they cause another recession, the Congress should take the Hippocratic Oath on the economy.

 

james galbraith

 

February 6 - Are Bankers Too Big to Jail?; Did Khamenei Approve the Bulgarian Bombing?; Tunisia on the Secular/Religious Divide

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We begin with the 610 million dollar fine (most of which will be paid to U.S. regulators and the Department of Justice) levied against the Royal Bank of Scotland for rigging the Libor rate. Bartlett Naylor, the former chief of investigations for the U.S. Senate Banking Committee joins us to discuss why the government is able to claw back money from banks for criminal behavior but at the same time no bankers go to jail. bartlet naylor

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Then we look into U.S. and Israeli efforts to get the Europeans to designate Hezbollah as a terrorist organization following the Bulgarian inquiry that found Hezbollah guilty of a bus bombing that killed Israeli tourists. A former CIA officer who spent decades operating against Hezbollah, Robert Baer, joins us to discuss the role of Iran in these tit-for-tat assassinations and terrorist acts that are likely to escalate as Iran and Hezbollah face defeat in Syria.

robert baer

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Then finally we speak with a State Department Middle East veteran who served in Tunisia to get an update on the killing of a secular leftist opposition leader whose assassination has led to the ruling Islamist government dissolving parliament and calling for speedy, new elections. Ambassador David Mack, a former Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Middle East Affairs joins us to discuss the secular/religious divide erupting in Tunisia, Egypt and Israel. david mack

 

February 5 - The Ethics of Killing by Remote Control; The Academy Award-Nominated Filmmakers of "5 Broken Cameras"

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We begin with an analysis of the confidential Justice Department memo leaked to NBC News that authorizes the U.S. government to order the killing of American citizens if they are believed to be Al Qaeda leaders, even if there is no intelligence that they are actively involved in a plot to attack the U.S. Bradley Jay Strawser, a professor in the Defense Analysis Department at the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School and author of “Killing By Remote Control: The Ethics of an Unmanned Military” joins us to discuss targeted killing, an issue that is bound to dominate Thursday’s confirmation hearing of John Brennan to head up the CIA. bradley strawser

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Then we are joined in the studio by the film makers of the Academy Award nominated documentary feature “5 Broken Cameras”. Palestinian farmer and cameraman Emad Burnat and Israeli documentary filmmaker Guy Davidi discuss their powerful film that documents the encroachment of Israeli settlers on a Palestinian village where Emad and his wife and four sons live. “5 Broken Cameras” reveals the shocking ground truth of the Israeli/Palestinian struggle, provided by the five cameras Emad uses, as one-by-one they are destroyed by the Israeli Army over a six year period, while Palestinian villagers are beaten and killed by Israelis with impunity as they engage in non-violent protest trying to protect their farms, homes and families.

emad and guy

 

February 4 - The President Stumps for Gun Safety; More Blackouts Ahead and How to Avoid Them; Recapturing the Word Jihad from Muslim and Anti-Muslim Extremists

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We begin with the president’s speech today in Minneapolis in front of a backdrop of police officers where he kicked off his public campaign to reduce gun violence in America. Lawrence Jacobs, the Director of the Center for the Study of Politics and Governance at the University of Minnesota joins us to discuss what steps have been taken to reduce gun violence in Minnesota and whether the president can get enough of the public behind him to stand up to the NRA. lawrence jacobs

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Then we speak with one of the leading authorities on the delivery of power to large populations, David Freeman, the former head of the TVA, New York Power and the LA Department of Water and Power. Following the half-hour blackout in the middle of the Super Bowl, we discuss our dependence on electricity from an ageing grid that will be subject to more and more stress in the future from extreme weather caused by global warming, that is in turn caused to a great extent by the use of coal to generate electricity.

david freeman

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Then finally we speak with the organizer of a public campaign #MyJihad, which seeks to recapture the proper meaning of the word “Jihad” that has been expropriated by Muslim and anti-Muslim extremists alike. Ahmed Rehab, the Executive Director of the Chicago office of the Council on American-Islamic Relations joins us to discuss his campaign that has already begun with advertisements in subways and on buses in Chicago, San Francisco and Washington D.C.

ahmed rehab

 

February 3 - A Brazen Attack on the CFPB by the Banking Lobby's Hirelings; The Secular/Religious Divide in Israel and Egypt; The NFL's Legacy of Brain-damage

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We begin with the latest brazen attack on the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau with an apparent collusion between the DC Circuit’s Republican judiciary and the Republican Senate leader Mitch McConnell who sent the president a letter on Friday vowing to block the re-nomination of the current head of the CFPB Richard Cordray until Congress passes a bill to neuter the bureau. Jeff Connaugton, the author of “The Payoff: Why Wall Street Always Wins" joins us to discuss whether the banking lobby’s Republican hirelings and the court’s judicial activists will succeed in eliminating any consumer protection from an industry that all but destroyed the economy. jeff connaughton

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Then we speak with investigative journalist Max Blumenthal who just returned from covering the elections in Israel and the riots in Egypt. We discuss the secular and religious divide in Israel that was reflected in the elections and in the current horse-trading going on now as a coalition government is being formed. And the same divide in Egypt between the secular youth who propelled the revolution now battling in the streets against the religious government that stole the revolution.

max blumenthal

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Then finally, with today’s Super Bowl celebrations underway in New Orleans, we look into the future of the increasingly violent game of football that has led to over 4,000 lawsuits from NFL players seeking damages blaming the league for minimizing brain-damage and its long-term effects. Veteran sportswriter Robert Lipsyte joins us to discuss whether the brutal collisions in football can be minimized without losing fans of this multi-billion dollar spectator sport.

robert lipsyte