LISTEN ONLINE TO THIS INTERVIEW HERE
The man who stopped the My Lai massacre, Hugh Thompson, died on Jan 6, 2006.
He was a military helicopter pilot who put his helicopter down between the soldiers and villagers, ordering his men to shoot their fellow Americans if they attacked the civilians. “There was no way I could turn my back on them,” he later said of the victims. We interviewed him in February 2000.
also on this show on KPFK Wed. 1/11: SAM ALITO is sort of like ROBERT BORK: he has a long and full record of challenging liberal positions on presidential power, abortion, civil rights and control of corporations. More than any nomination in memory, his threatens to finally transform the court. ROBERT SCHEER will explain: he writes a syndicated column and edits TruthDig.com.
Plus: Israeli Prime Minister ARIEL SHARONs massive stroke has caused an earthquake in the political landscape there he had dominated Israeli politics for two decades and had been expected to win the next elections. But does the sudden end of his politicl career make any difference to the Palestinians? AMY WILENTZ will comment: she was Jerusalem correspondent for the New Yorker, and wrote an award-winning novel, Martyrs Crossing, about Palestinians and Israelis.

PLUS: Spying on Americans well have an update from 


Dec. 8 is the 25th anniversary of the killing of JOHN LENNON. Well commemorate that anniversary by listening to some rare audio from the Pacifica Radio Archives documenting Lennon’s engagement with the anti-war movement of the sixties: ABBIE HOFFMAN talking about John Lennon in a 1981 interview, PETE SEEGER rembering how he lead half a million people singing Give Peace a Chance at the Washington Monument in 1969, Lennons own voice from the bed-in in Amsterdam in 1968 and the Free John Sinclair concert in 1971 and, throughout the hour, some of our favorite Lennon music.


ALSO: President Bush in a speech today announced a National Strategy for Victory in Iraq. For comment and analysis we turn to
IRAQ UPDATE: For the first time, Iraq’s political factions on Monday collectively called for a timetable for withdrawal of US forces, putting new pressure on the Bush White House. ROBERT SCHEER will provide comment and analysis: in his column today, at 







