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.
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We begin with the possibility of a full-scale invasion of Gaza by Israel’s Defense Forces in response to rocket attacks from Hamas as tensions between Israelis and Palestinians have been inflamed by the murders of Israeli teenagers and the grisly revenge killing of a Palestinian boy. Gabriel Piterberg, a professor of Middle East History and author of “The Return of Zionism: Myths, Politics and Scholarship in Israel” joins us to discuss what military force might achieve, given that it has been used on Gaza before without any apparent success. |
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Then we speak with a former United Nations political officer and election monitor in Afghanistan about the latest contested election with the same candidate who was cheated in the last election Abdullah, Abdullah, claiming victory in last month’s election although preliminary results have his opponent winning with 56.44% to Abdullah’s 43.56%. Christine Fair, the author of the new book “Fighting to the End: The Pakistan Army’s Way of War”, joins us to discuss the threat by Abdullah to create a parallel government when NATO is preparing to withdraw from Afghanistan in the face of ramped-up Taliban attacks, with one on Tuesday that killed 16 including 4 NATO soldiers from the Czech Republic. |
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Then finally we examine why Google, who led the battle to preserve net neutrality and an open Internet back in 2006, is now absent from the fight leaving it up to the smaller tech companies and start-ups to take on the cable and telecom giants Verizon, AT&T, Time Warner and Comcast who want paid prioritization on the net that would allow them to become the gatekeepers and tollbooths speeding up their content while slowing down yours.Julie Samuels, the Executive Director of Engine Advocacy, a public interest group that supports the growth of technology entrepreneurship, joins us to discuss why Google, Amazon, Facebook, Netflix, Yahoo and Microsoft can afford bad net neutrality. |
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Following the murders of three Israel teenagers and the grisly revenge killing of a young Palestinian, we will begin with the volatile situation in Israel and Palestine as Hamas fires rockets at Israel and Israel’s Air Force retaliates with strikes on Gaza. Award-winning investigative journalist Max Blumenthal, author of “Goliath: Life and Loathing in Greater Israel”, joins us to discuss demonstrations across Israel by right-wing youths chanting “death to Arabs” as Justice Minister Tsipi Livni warns Israelis against incitement that leads to so-called “price-tag” attacks against Arabs.
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Then we speak with Rachel Stohl, a senior associate with the Stimson Center and a co-author of their just-released “Recommendations and Report on the Stimson Task Force on U.S. Drone Policy”. She joins us to discuss the bipartisan panel of former senior intelligence and military officials that finds the Obama Administration’s embrace of targeting killings with drones is putting the U.S. on a “slippery slope” into perpetual war while setting a dangerous precedent for lethal operations that other countries might adopt in the future. |
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Then finally we speak with John Hope Bryant, the founder and CEO of Operation HOPE and Bryant Group Companies. He was Chairman of the President’s Advisory Council on Financial Capability, Subcommittee on the Underserved and Community Empowerment and was recently appointed by President Obama as a member of the President’s Advisory Council on Financial Capability for Young Americans. We will discuss his new book “How the Poor Can Save Capitalism: Rebuilding the Path to the Middle Class” and look into how the poor and all consumers can take power over the economy and their lives. |
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We begin with an examination into the causes behind the flood of children entering the U.S. from Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador, and speak with Alexander Main, the Senior Associate for International Policy at the Center for Economic and Policy Research about the coincidence that these refugees are coming from countries where the U.S. has supported brutal military regimes and not from neighboring democratic Costa Rica that has no army, or Panama or Nicaragua.
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Then we assess the likely make-up of a President Hillary Clinton’s national security team which appears destined to be influenced by neoconservative who are making a comeback in spite of their disastrous record in Iraq and the subsequent unraveling of the Middle East that has followed their great “shock and awe” moment. Jacob Heilbrunn, the Editor of The National Interest and author of “They Knew They Were Right: The Rise of the Neocons” joins us to discuss his article in the New York Times Sunday Review “Are Neocons Getting Ready to Ally with Hillary Clinton?” |
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Then we look into Wednesday’s election in Indonesia where a former general who was military commander under the dictator Suharto and married to the autocrat’s daughter, is closing the gap thanks to a right-wing American spin doctor Rob Allyn, who has smeared the general’s opponent as a foreign imposter and a Christian which does not sit well in a predominately Muslim country. Michael Buehler, a Lecturer in the Department of Politics and International Studies at the University of London’s School of Oriental and African Studies joins us to discuss the possibility that the world’s most populous Muslim country could be led by a murderous “psychopath” who, according to his former superior officer, failed a military mental health evaluation. |
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Then finally we examine the recent Census Bureau Report that finds poverty in America is concentrated in the Southern states that are getting poorer while voting for Republican political leaders who for the past decade have been cutting the region’s social safety nets. Stephen Pimpare, the author of “A People’s History of Poverty in America” joins us to discuss why white southerners vote solidly for politicians who are lowering their standard of living. |
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We begin with the meeting in Seoul between the presidents of China and South Korea where they both urged the North not to test any more nuclear weapons. Donald Gregg, a former U.S. Ambassador to South Korea whose forthcoming book is “Pot Shards: Fragments of a Life Lived in the CIA, The White House and the Two Koreas”, joins us to discuss this apparent snub to North Korea’s young leader by his country’s only ally China, and the broader strategic changes underway in the region following Japan’s decision to change its long-standing defense posture to allow its military to fight abroad.
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Then we speak with Kamal Essaheb, an Immigration Policy Attorney at the National Immigration Law Center where he engages in advocacy and technical assistance relating to immigration law and access to legal status for immigrants. We discuss the changes to the TVPRA Act of 2008 the Obama Administration is considering that would remove the requirement of unaccompanied minors being handed over to the Department of Health and Human Services, thus enabling the Border Patrol to conduct swifter deportations of the thousands of unaccompanied children arriving on the southern border. |
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Then finally we look into the new report by the Census Bureau that finds poverty is increasing across the South where 25.7 percent of Americans in southern states are living below the poverty line set at $23,850 for a family of four, up from 18.1 percent in 2000. Thomas Hirschl, the Director of the Population and Development Program and a Professor of Development Sociology at Cornell University, and co-author of “Chasing the American Dream: Understanding What Shapes Our Fortunes”, joins us to discuss how the solidly Republican South is sinking into poverty, exacerbated by the policies of their Republican leaders who have spent the last decade cutting the social safety nets across the South. |
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We begin with the politics of immigration with the president vowing to act in the face of a do-nothing Congress controlled by Republicans who are likely to seize on the crisis at the border where unaccompanied children from Central America are flooding in. Marshall Fitz, the Director of Immigration Policy at the Center for American Progress, where he directs the organization’s research and analysis of the economic, political, legal and social impacts of immigration policy, joins us to discuss whether the current crisis will be dealt with or become an election year wedge issue.
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Then we examine the manifestation of hostile nativism on display Tuesday in Murrieta, California where anti-immigrant demonstrators stopped busses full on immigrant children who were being shipped from overcrowded detention centers in Texas and Arizona that are overwhelmed by the flood of unaccompanied minors escaping from drug-fueled gang violence in Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador. Peter Schrag, a long-time editorial page editor and columnist for the Sacramento Bee and author of “Not Fit for Our Society: Immigration and Nativism in America” joins us to discuss the ugly backlash to this humanitarian crisis. |
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Then finally, we speak with Eva Galperin, a Global Policy Analyst at the Electronic Freedom Foundation where she focuses on providing digital privacy and security for vulnerable populations. We discuss Facebook’s psyops experiment which has generated a firestorm of protest with many decrying the secret manipulation of Facebook user’s emotions to shape people’s moods, and we look into what repercussions the giant social network is likely to face with inquiries underway in Europe and elsewhere. |
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Taking listeners deep into the underlying issues and forces that shape our world.
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