Background Briefing has a new home at BackgroundBriefing.org.
Please visit and bookmark the new site. You can search show archives here.
Background Briefing has a new home at BackgroundBriefing.org.
Please visit and bookmark the new site. You can search show archives here.
2016 Program Archive
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| We will begin with an Iraqi perspective of the U.S. withdrawal from Iraq. Raed Jarrar, an Iraqi political analyst and blogger joins us to analyze why Iraq, with enormous oil resources and a greater national income than Egypt, Lebanon, Syria and Jordan combined, who have four times Iraq’s population, has a lower standard of living than its neighbors. |
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Then we will examine the political dysfunction in Washington as the House appears ready to reject the compromise to extend the payroll tax cut for two months. Lawrence Mishel, the president of the Economic Policy Institute who is the author of the authoritative study of the American workforce, “The State of Working America” joins us to discuss the implications for working Americans if this tax cut is taken away by House Republicans who appear determined to protect tax cuts for the one percent by holding an extension of a modest boost in the family income for most Americans hostage to an oil pipeline. |
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| Then finally we will look into the unrest in Kazakhstan where oil workers have been on a seven month strike against a State oil Company half-owned by Chinese interests. William Fierman, a professor of Central Eurasian Studies and Political Science at Indiana University joins us to explain the source of the violence that has left many dead and dampened the celebration of the 20th anniversary of independence for this former Soviet Republic that has had the same corrupt leader before and since its independence. |
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| MUSIC: Beach House - Used To Be; Arcade Fire - Intervention; Built to Spill - Fly Around My Pretty Little Miss; Against Me! - Problems |
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| We begin with two assessments of the dangers posed to our civil liberties by the passage of the National Defense Authorization Act the president threatened to veto but will now sign. First we speak with Scott Horton, who is a professor at Columbia Law School and a contributing editor at Harpers in legal affairs and national security. We try to understand why this law that the heads of our military and national security establishment did not want, that has the civil liberties community alarmed, was not vetoed by the president. |
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Then joining us for a further discussion of this bill that goes much further in militarizing law enforcement than anything the Bush/Cheney Administration ever proposed, is Aziz Huq, a former clerk for Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg who is now a professor of Law at the University of Chicago. We examine the objections that civil libertarians and our top military and national security officials have about the bill and how much the compromise language that was sufficient for the president to withdraw his veto, leaves open the possibility of a further erosion of the bill of rights and a future abuse of power. |
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| Then finally we look into what the U.S. Intelligence community lost in the capture of a top-secret state-of-the-art drone now in Iranian hands. One of the world’s leading experts on mercenaries, robotics and future warfare, Peter Singer, a Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution and Director of the 21st Century Defense Initiative joins us. We discuss how much of a treasure trove the largely intact Sentinel drone will be for the Russians and Chinese and how it ended up on display by Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Corps. |
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| MUSIC: Shabazz Palaces - Free Press and Curl; Arcade Fire - The Well and the Lighthouse; Fugazi - Provisional; Black Sabbath - Electric Funeral |
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| We begin with Shahid Buttar, the executive director of the Bill of Rights Defense Committee to discuss the contents of the Defense Authorization bill the President had threatened to veto but now appears willing to sign into law. We examine provisions in the bill the Pentagon and the FBI opposed which the White House now accepts and determine how much they pose a threat to the civil liberties of Americans exercising their constitutional rights under the first, fifth and sixth amendments. |
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| Then, with the announcement of a moratorium on the planned closure of more post offices and 250 mail processing plants that would eliminate 28,000 more jobs, we discuss the real reason the Postal Service is in financial difficulty, as opposed to the often-stated misreporting by the mainstream press that the Internet is putting the post office out of business. The president of the National Association of Letter Carriers, Fredric Rolando joins us to lay out the reasons why the same Congress now calling for a plan to save the Postal Service, is responsible for shackling it with a uniquely onerous pre-funded health and retirement fund that has billions in surplus. |
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| Then finally we examine an alternative approach to the growing confrontation with Iran over its nuclear program. Mohammed Ayoob, the University Distinguished Professor of International Relations at Michigan State University joins us to discuss why Iran wants a nuclear weapon and how best to deal with them once they have it. He has an article at CNN “Can the World Live With a Near-Nuclear Iran”. |
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| MUSIC: Dirty Projectors - Rise Above; Conor Oberst - Get Well Cards; Fleet Foxes - Helplessness Blues; The Shins - We Will Become Sillouettes |
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| We begin with Patrick Meighan, a writer best know for his work on “Family Guy” and “Titus” who was arrested and imprisoned earlier this month while participating in the “Occupy LA” protest at City Hall. He tells us the story of his treatment at the hands of the LAPD that the mainstream press failed to report and we discuss the rough treatment those protesting the destruction of our economy get in contrast to the kid glove treatment of those who reaped billions in profits while bringing economic ruin upon millions of their fellow citizens who in turn bailed them out with taxpayer money that has rewarded Wall Street while Main Street languishes. |
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| Then we hear about “The 10 Greediest Americans of 2011". Sam Pizzigati, a veteran labor journalist and fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies joins us to discuss his hall of shame list of America’s greediest CEO’s who get exorbitant paychecks and bonuses while laying off workers, cutting their benefits, squeezing their pay and making them work longer for less. |
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| Then finally we discuss the likelihood of the Euro crisis resuming soon in the wake of a European summit that many analysts feel did not solve the problem but kicked the can down the road. Stephen Walt, a professor of International Affairs at Harvard University joins us to discuss the financial crisis that will not go away and we also talk about his latest article at Foreign Policy, “Five Potential Game-changers in International Diplomacy”. |
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| MUSIC: Fugazi - Cashout; Dirty Projectors - Gimmie Gimmie; Ben Harper - Mister; LCD Soundsystem - Tribulations |
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| We begin with two perspectives on our withdrawal from Iraq that Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki applauded as a success at the White House where President Obama spoke of the impressive progress made by Iraq. First, Middle East Scholar and Iraq specialist Juan Cole joins us to analyze what this long and expensive war achieved for the United States that appear to have left Iran in charge of Iraq’s destiny. And what we are leaving behind in a country broken by a war we waged based on specious claims. |
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Then we speak with a former Deputy Director of the State Department’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research, the only Intelligence Agency that told the truth about Iraq’s alleged WMD’s and resisted the Bush Administration’s manufactured case for war. Wayne White joins us to reflect on where Iraq is today as opposed to before under Saddam Hussein, and whether this largely defenseless country with deep internal divisions will hold together, presided over by a corrupt and weak government over which the U.S. has little influence while Iran seems to call the shots. |
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| Then finally we examine the apparent self-marginalization of the U.K. in Europe, following the British Prime Minister’s rejection of an agreement that came out of the recent European summit. James Cronin a professor of History at Boston College who chairs the British Study Group at Harvard’s Center for European Studies joins us to discuss a possible rift in Britain’s ruling coalition and whether London’s financial center really did veto the European agreement as Prime Minister Cameron has claimed. |
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| MUSIC: MGMT - Pieces of What?; My Morning Jacket - Gideon; Fionn Regan - Shadow of an Empire; Vera Lynn - There'll Always be an England |
Taking listeners deep into the underlying issues and forces that shape our world.
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