LISTEN ONLINE TO THIS SHOW – SUBSCRIBE TO PODCAST
HAROLD MEYERSON talks about Ted Kennedy’s place in American politics — “He was, as he lay dying, new again,” Harold writes at The American Prospect Online — because “Kennedy outlived the Reagan-Thatcher conservative era to which for so many years he had led the opposition.”
Plus: Iraq: the Forever War. DEXTER FILKINS covered the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan starting 2001 for the New York Times. Filkins describes “an arid, hopeless policy” in an unforgettable book: The Forever War. It’s out now in paperback. (first aired 9/17/2008)
And we feature a special Ted Kennedy edition of Your Minnesota Moment: Minnesotans remember Kennedy’s visits to the state.

Also: The “State Secrets Privilege” allows the president to withhold documents and block civil litigation in the name of national security. It didn’t always exist – it was created in 1953.
Bentonville, Ark., may be unknown to most Americans, but it is the center of the world for some 750 corporations that manufacture consumer goods — because Bentonville is the legendary home office of Wal-Mart, and those corporations want to sell their products to the world’s largest retailer. It’s also the largest private employer in the nation, operator of 4,200 stores. Bentonville is a key to understanding the success of Wal-Mart, historian Nelson Lichtenstein argues in his terrific book, The Retail Revolution: How Wal-Mart Created a Brave New World of Business. . . .MORE in the LA Times Sunday Book Review 

And we’ll talk about bottled water: do you really need to drink bottled water? Water from Fiji, or France, or the Sierras? Do you really need nine glasses a day? How bad is municipal tap water? 
Also: Official government websites turn out to provide a treasure trove of insights into the uses of power and the possibilities of citizen political action — that’s what 
Also: Can one reporter change the world? I.F. STONE thought so – he’s the subject of a terrific new biography, 

