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Feminists and Hillary, For and Against: TheNation podcast 1/14

LISTEN online HERE
Katha Pollitt says feminists should vote for Hillary–she’s good for women, and, unlike Bernie, she can get elected.
But Liza Featherstone says feminists should not vote for Hillary—her record is full of attacks on poor women, starting with “welfare reform.”

And Tavis Smiley talks about Martin Luther King’s last year—the year that began with his speech condemning the war in Vietnam, where he called the US “the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today.”
Tavis’s book, Death of a King: The Real Story of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s Final Year, is out now in paperback.

Barack Obama, David Bowie: John Nichols on KPFK 1/13

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In Obama’s final State of the Union speech, he condemned anti-Muslim bigotry and argued for action on climate change. JOHN NICHOLS of The Nation will comment.

And we’ll also talk about DAVID BOWIE, who died earlier this week. PLAYLIST: “Heroes”— recorded in Berlin, about the Berlin wall; “Young Americans,” with the unforgettable line “Do you remember/Your President Nixon?”; “Fame” – the song he wrote and recorded with John Lennon.  READ John Nichols on David Bowie HERE.

Plus: How a small number of people can accomplish great things–and change history. We’ll speak with ERIC FONER about the hidden history of the underground railroad—his book Gateway to Freedom is out in paperback now.

Also,  RICK PERLSTEIN  says The attempt to cover up the police killing of Laquan McDonald in Chicago ought to end Mayor Rahm Emmanuel’s career.

Rick Perlstein: Rahm Must Go: TheNation podcast 1-7

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The attempt to cover up the police killing of Laquan McDonald in Chicago ought to end Mayor Rahm Emmanuel’s career, says Rick Perlstein, who reviews Rahm’s life in politics going back to the Clinton era and Obama’s first term.

Also: It’s the first anniversary of the attack on Charlie Hebdo in Paris. Charb, the editor-in-chief, finished a manifesto two days before he was killed; we have comment from Amy Wilentz and Adam Gopnik—he wrote the forward to Charb’s book.

Plus: Dolpo Radio, with Rebecca Solnit—she went hiking in the remote Dolpo region of Nepal to help with a traveling medical clinic and to see what climate change looked like in the Himalayas.

Pico Blvd. Diary: LA Review of Books 1-5-16

A caravan of four Stanford football buses roars down Pico Boulevard with a police escort — in town for the Rose Bowl. I stand at the corner with a delivery guy from the Domino’s Pizza down the block — he’s an older Latino man.

He asks, “Is it Obama?” . . .

Continue reading  at LA Review of Books HERE

Barbara Ehrenreich: How the White Working Class Lives Now: KPFK 1/6

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Barbara Ehrenreich
talks about the alarming rise in the death rate of middle-aged white working-class men, who are committing suicide and dying of drug overdoses and alcoholism–or else voting for Donald Trump.  But is there another path?

Also: Harold Meyerson says if you want to understand exactly what caused the evisceration of the American middle class, you have to follow the money—and look at the fundamental redefinition of the corporate mission that has transformed U.S. business over the past 35 years.
READ 
Harold at The American Prospect, HERE.

Plus: Kenneth Turan of the LA Times talks about “The Big Short”:  A true crime story and a wild  comedy, a heist film and a movie with a message, “The Big Short” tells the story of “outsiders who saw the giant lie at the heart of the economy.”  READ Turan’s review HERE WATCH the trailer HERE.

 

Gore Vidal, Angel and Monster: KPFK 12/30

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The great GORE VIDAL: before he died in 2012, Vidal asked JAY PARINI to write his biography. The book is out now: Empire of Self—Jay says he wanted to “look at the angel and the monster alike.”
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Also: JOHN
POWERS reports on Canada’s popular new prime minister, Justin Trudeau, who has already welcomed Syrian refugees—and defended the Alberta tar sands. John writes about politics and film for Vogue and Vogue.Com, and is editor-at-large on Fresh Air with Terry Gross, where he has an audience of four million listeners.

Plus: the best of the year 2015: TAVIS SMILEY on Martin Luther King’s last year: it was “hell.”  That was 1967, the year his speech criticising the Vietnam war was denounced not only by the mainstream media—the NY Times called it “disastrous and self-defeating”—but also by most of black America as well. Tavis’s book is DEATH OF A KING:The Real Story of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s Final Year.  (Originally broadcast 2/4/15)

Best of the Left, 2015: The Nation podcast, 12/23

Listen online HERE  iTunes podcast HERE
The most valuable activist, the biggest ideological comeback, the best newspaper front page
, and more: JOHN NICHOLS presents The Nation’s Progressive Honor Roll for 2015–the season’s most unusual “best” list.

Also: guns in America: what is to be done? AMY WILENTZ comments—starting with her friend who keeps his guns under his bed.

Plus: The great GORE VIDAL: before he died in 2012, Vidal asked JAY PARINI to write his biography. The book is out now: Empire of Self—Jay says he wanted to “look at the angel and the monster alike.”

American Muslims and ISIS: KPFK 12/23

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American Muslims, according to ISIS, are “hypocrites” who occupy “the grey zone” between their Caliphate and their enemies, “the Crusaders”: LAILA LALAMI explains–she wrote the novel The Moor’s Account, which was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in Literature.

Also: TOM LUTZ reports on his trip to Minsk, in Belarus, just before the city’s greatest writer, Svetlana Alexievich, won the Nobel Prize for Literature for her oral history of Chernobyl.
Tom is editor-in-chief of the LA Review of Books.  (One more thing: He did NOT go from Minsk to Pinsk.)

Barbara Ehrenreich: White Workers are Dying, Literally. The Nation Podcast 12/17

Listen online HERE  iTunes podcast HERE
On this week’s podcast, Barbara Ehrenreich talks about the alarming rise in the death rate of middle-aged white working class men, who are committing suicide and dying of drug overdoses and alcoholism.

Also: Rebecca Solnit explains the amazing Paris climate agreement, along with the not-so-amazing parts—and talks about the tasks facing the environmental movement now.

And John Powers reports on Canada’s popular new prime minister, Justin Trudeau, who has already welcomed Syrian refugees—and defended the Alberta tar sands.
Podcast home page HERE