LISTEN ONLINE TO THIS SHOW – SUBSCRIBE TO PODCAST
The fastest-growing, most dynamic capitalist country in the history of the world is the People’s Republic of China today. PETER HESSLER has lived in China for the last ten years as a staff writer for The New Yorker; he spent months in a development zone, hanging around with businessmen and with workers. Peter’s new book is COUNTRY DRIVING: A Journey Through China from Farm to Factory.
Plus: HAROLD MEYERSON says “Like earthquakes, Goldman Sachs can strike anytime. Its work can slumber undetected for years, only to erupt, unanticipated, with catastrophic consequences.” He looks at how Wall Street greed and secrecy are bringing misery to Greece and endangering the European Union. Harold writes an op-ed column for the Washington Post.
Also: The past and future of capitalism: historian JOYCE APPLEBY says capitalism isn’t an expression of human nature, but the specific result of some unlikely developments, mostly in England. She emphasizes that capitalism is as much a cultural as an economic system. Joyce’s new book is THE RELENTLESS REVOLUTION: A History of Capitalism.
Forty historians testify for Big Tobacco when they are sued by smokers with cancer; two testify against. Why the disparity?
Also: we remember
(Guest-hosted by Alan Minsky while I was on jury duty–thank you Alan!) Our president gives his first State of the Union speech tonight at 600pm, and apparently Obama will call for an across-the-board three-year spending freeze to placate Republicans who say the deficit is a big problem. Question: Do ordinary people really care about the deficit? And don’t we need a much bigger deficit right now?
Also: 

Plus: Palestinian life in Gaza – now, and in 1956, when Israelis killed 275 people in two forgotten massacres.
In 1969, as the anti-war movement was reaching a peak, Richard Nixon’s White House staff debated what they could do to “show the little bastards” what kind of man they were up against. They were concerned about what would be the biggest antiwar demonstration in US history on Nov. 15, 1969, when half a million people came to Washington D.C. to demand that an end to the war in Vietnam.