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Phyllis Schlafly died Monday—they called her “the first lady of the right.” Katha Pollitt considers what Phyllis Schafly might have been, if it weren’t for women like Phyllis Schlafly.
Also: Rosa Brooks explains How Everything Became War, and the Military Became Everything (the title of her new book). She’s a law professor at Georgetown University and a former op-ed columnist for the LA Times (and she’s also the daughter of Barbara Ehrenreich).
And we’ll talk about politics with John Nichols—the new CNN poll shows Trump AHEAD BY TWO, while the new Washington Post poll shows it’s almost impossible for him to win.
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Plus Ari Berman analyses the effect of voting rights victories in court on Trump’s chances in North Carolina and other swing states. Ari’s book Give Us the Ballot is out now in paperback.
And Dave Zirin reports from the Olympics in Rio – the protests, the displaced people, and the real problem: not the Brazilian government, but the International Olympic Committee. Dave is the author of Brazil’s Dance with the Devil.
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Also: SUSAN FALUDI, author of the feminist classic “Backlash,” has a new book about her father – he got male-to-female sex reassignment surgery when he was 76 – and told her about it afterwards. The book is “In the Darkroom.”
Plus: a criminal trial for the sheriff – former LA County Sheriff Lee Baca will go to trial on federal charges of obstruction of justice and conspiracy to obstruct justice. It’s one of the most amazing developments in the history of Los Angeles. CELESTE FREMON of WitnessLA.com will explain.
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The fight to limit government surveillance tactics: Ben Wizner talks about what we have won—and what we need to do next. He’s director of the ACLU’s Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project and the lawyer for Edward Snowden.
And Tom Lutz has been traveling a lot; he went to Lhasa to talk about Tibetan resistance to China; he went to Jordan to talk about Iran and America; and he went to Tehran to talk about the Kurds.