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Monday night the Occupy Wall Street camp in Manhattan was destroyed by the NYPD; today the activists are back, but barred from camping overnight. RICHARD KIM, executive editor of The Nation will comment on what Occupy has accomplished and what’s next – his report, “The Audacity of Wall Street,” has been posted on 3,400 Facebook pages, and he was a guest on MSNBC last week.
Today’s show is part of the Pacifica National Archives annual fundraiser – we will be asking listeners to support the Archives’ Campus Campaign, to place audio collections in high schools and colleges across the country. Please call and pledge during the show 800-735-0230 or online here.
Special feature: RY COODER’s new song for the Occupy movement, “Wall Street Part of Town”–world premiere!

Eric Hobsbawm, How to Change the World: Reflections on Marx and Marxism
The cancer danger from the new airport security scanners–which look under a traveler’s clothing–is greater than we had feared. “Research suggests that anywhere from six to 100 Americans could get cancer each year from the machines,” ProPublica’s Michael Grabell says. “Still, the TSA has repeatedly defined the scanners as ‘safe.'”. . .
Plus:
After decades in which “hard hats” were described as enemies of the left, and four decades after construction workers in lower Manhattan attacked anti-war demonstrators on Wall Street, the AFL-CIO on Thursday called on its members to defend Occupy Wall Street from the NYPD as the city moved to arrest and evict protestors in Zuccotti Park. Hard hats and hippies, together at last!….
Big Bill Broonzy – he left the Mississippi Delta to become a leading Chicago bluesman of the 1930s, singing about racial injustice alongside Pete Seeger and Studs Terkel; then traveling to Europe to ignite the British blues-rock revival of the 1960s with Eric Clapton and Pete Townshend.
Also: Whatever happened to the American left?
When Sarah Palin announced last week that she was not running for president, many wondered, what had she been trying to do during the last three years, when she seemed to be almost a candidate? Now we know: she was trying to make money.