LISTEN online HERE iTunes podcast HERE
The internet is a place where faceless commenters try to destroy lives and careers, where the punishments often outweigh the crimes, and where (ironically) there are no consequences. Best-selling author and radio person JON RONSON explains: his new book is So You’ve Been Publicly Shamed.
Jon talks about public shaming with Monica Lewinsky HERE.
.
Also: The untold story of women’s involvement in the Zapatista movement. HILLARY KLEIN will explain—she spent six years in Chiapas, and her new book is Compañeras: Zapatista Women’s Stories.
Plus: A report from Detroit, where poor people face an almost biblical foreclosure crisis: tens of thousands of people could be thrown out of their homes–and the city has plans to turn their neighborhoods in to “water retention basins.” LAURA GOTTESDEINER has that story—she writes about forgotten America for Mother Jones, The Nation and TomDispatch.
Today, April 17, is the 50th anniversary of the first march on Washington to end the Vietnam War, organized by SDS. Now, there’s a new battle underway, as peace activists challenge the Pentagon’s whitewashed history.
LISTEN online
LISTEN online
Plus It’s the 150th anniversary of The Nation magazine. Editor and publisher
LISTEN online
How the Vietnam war redefined our nation: on the 50th anniversary of the start of the war, CHRISTIAN APPY talks about the continuing struggles over its meaning and legacy. His new book is
Why do intelligent people join Scientology—and why do they stay? Oscar-winning documentarian ALEX GIBNEY interviewed eight high-ranking people who left, and who provide some explanations. His documentary
The mother of all problems in higher education today is high tuition at public colleges and universities, which forces students into decades of debt and makes for-profit schools seem like a plausible alternative. Making four years of college free is not only fair; it’s also politically possible.
One of the “stupidest” decisions Barney Frank ever made, he says in his new memoir, Frank: A Life in Politics, was bringing Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara to Harvard in the fall of 1966, at the height of the Vietnam War. I agree; I was there. But the story Frank tells in his book is, to put it generously, incomplete. What he did was even stupider than he acknowledges.
General David Petraeus has agreed to plead guilty to a misdemeanor charge of mishandling classified material and will serve no jail time for his actions. Let’s give the same deal to Edward Snowden.
LISTEN online
LISTEN online
Also: 40 years after the end of the Vietnam War, the Vietnamese are still coping with unexploded bombs and Agent Orange. George Black will report—he has the
Plus: a new kind of civil disobedience: a student debt strike. Students are refusing to make any more payments on their federal 