Trump Watch

The Pope and the Sexual Abuse of Children: KPFK 2/13

LISTEN online HERESUBSCRIBE to iTunes podcast HERE
The sexual abuse scandal in the Catholic church: That’s the subject of a documentary playing all this month on HBO – the filmmaker is ALEX GIBNEY—he won an Oscar for “Taxi to the Dark Side.”  This new documentary is “Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence in the House of God.”

Also: HAROLD MEYERSON talks about Obama’s State of the Union speech last night – and the Republican response.  Harold is editor-at-large of The American Prospect and a columnist for the Washington Post op-ed page.

And for black history month, UCLA historian ROBIN KELLEY will look at the life and music of Thelonious Monk.  Robin’s book Thelonious Monk, The Life and Times of an American Original, is out now in paperback.    PLAYLIST: “‘Round Midnight,”  “Well You Needn’t,” “Straight No Chaser,” “Sweet and Lovely” – 1947 Blue Note sessions.  (originally broadcast 10-21-09)

 

A Permanent Democratic Majority? KPFK 2/6

LISTEN online HERESUBSCRIBE to iTunes podcast HERE
Is the party of old white men doomed by demography?
  Will the young and the women and the people of color form a permanent ruling coalition?   RICK PERLSTEIN says history suggests it’s not going to happen.  He’s the author of the classics Before the Storm, on Goldwater, and Nixonland.  He blogs for TheNation.com.

Also: For black history month, historian IRA BERLIN analyzes four epic migrations of African-Americans.  Ira teaches at the University of Maryland; his book is The Making of African America: The Four Great Migrations is out now in paperback.

Plus: New Orleans between the Superbowl and Mardi Gras: 150,000 tourists came last weekend for football; a million more are coming next weekend to binge-drink during Mardi Gras.  The city lives off the restaurants and hotels.  NONA WILLIS ARONWITZ was there last week, thinking about the possibility of organizing those industries to make these jobs better.  Nona writes for The Nation and blogs at TheOtherNWA.com.

Is ‘Pro-Choice’ Passé? Katha Pollitt on KPFK 1/30

LISTEN online HERESUBSCRIBE to iTunes podcast HERE
Forty years after Roe v. Wade, for the first time since polling began on this issue, more people are telling Gallup they are pro-life than say they are pro-choice.  Does that mean we need to replace the term “pro-choice” with something else?  If so, what?  KATHA POLLITT comments; she’s a columnist for The Nation.

ALSO: Republicans and Randians – Ayn Rand, that is: JOHN NICHOLS talks about the strange ideas of our opposition party – especially those of Ron Johnson, the Wisconsin Republican who defeated Russ Feingold.  John is Washington correspondent for The Nation.

PLUS:  Another day older and deeper in debt: historian STEVE FRASER talks about the politics of debt in America, from debtor’s prison to our present debtor nation.  Steve is author of Wall Street: America’s Dream Palace.  He wrote about debt for TomDispatch and Jacobin.

Harold Meyerson on Obama’s Majority: KPFK 1/23

LISTEN online HERESUBSCRIBE to iTunes podcast HERE
HAROLD MEYERSON on Obama’s majority—and the way he connected our struggles for equality today with the history of “Seneca Falls and Selma and Stonewall.”  But can Obama’s majority win the coming fights not just for social equality but for economic reforms?  Harold is editor at large of The American Prospect and columnist for the Washington Post op-ed page.

Plus: Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah” has become one of the emost widely recorded songs in music history—ALAN LIGHT explains how that happened.  His new book is THE HOLY OR THE BROKEN: …The Unlikely Ascent of ‘Hallelujah’.  Playlist: “Hallelujah” by Jeff Buckley, K.D. Lang, Bob Dylan, Adam Sandler, and Leonard Cohen Live in London.

Also: The true story of a convicted murderer and the lawyers who fought for his freedom: BARRY SIEGEL, the Pulitzer-Prize winning journalist who heads the Literary Journalism program at UC Irvine, tells the story of Bill Macumber, who was released from prison in Arizona in November after spending 37 years in jail maintaining his innocence.  Barry’s new book is MANIFEST INJUSTICE.
Barry Siegel book talk at UCI Law School noon Thurs 1/24: info HERE.

 

Life in the Ruins: Amy Wilentz on Haiti–KPFK 1/16

LISTEN online HERESUBSCRIBE to iTunes podcast HERE
Haiti Since the Earthquake: AMY WILENTZ
reports on life in the ruins, and on the failures (and occasional successes) of relief and recovery efforts.  Fact: most of the $379 million initially allocated by the US for aid to Haiti after the earthquake did not go to Haiti or Haitians; one-third went to the US military.  Amy’s magnificent new book is FAREWELL FRED VOODOO: A Letter from HaitiREAD Amy’s new report from Haiti in The Nation HERE ;
SUPPORT
Dr. Megan Coffee at TiKayHaiti.org.

Plus: TOM FRANK on the secret behind Steven Spielberg’s Lincoln: historian Doris Kearns Goodwyn—“uninspiring to the point of boredom.”  So how did her work come to define our era?  Tom wrote about Spielberg and Goodwyn for his Harper’s column this month, HERE.

Also: the My Lai massacre was not an isolated incident; millions of innocent Vietnamese civilians were killed and wonded by American forces—“a My Lai a month” is what award-winning reporter NICK TURSE calls it.  His decade of research in secret Pentagon archives and interviews with vets and Vietnamese are the basis of his important new book, KILL ANYTHING THAT MOVES: The Real American War in  Vietnam.

Rick Perlstein: Why I’m a Liberal: KPFK 1/9

LISTEN online HERESUBSCRIBE to iTunes podcast HERE
Radicals use “liberal” as a synonym for all that is anemic, weak-kneed, and not really leftist at all. “I own it,” RICK PERLSTEIN says, because “liberalism, done right in this all-too-reactionary nation, is always already radical.”   Rick this week has started a thrice-weekly column for TheNation.com.

Also: Orange County Republicans: the doomsday scenario.  The white-hot heart of the GOP outside the South is Orange County, California; and yet it was in Orange County that Republicans lost the key state assembly seat that gave Democrats a supermajority in Sacramento.  GUSTAVO ARELLANO will explain — he’s editor-in-chief of the OC Weekly, where Scott Moxley’s cover story on the GOP appears this week.

Plus: the slave ship Amistad set sail from Havana in June, 1839 with a routine delivery of human cargo.  But the 53 Africans being held captive managed to take control of the ship and steer for freedom.  MARCUS REDIKER will tell that story—he is Distinguished Professor of Atlantic History at the U. of Pittsburgh and author of the wonderful new book, The Amistad Rebellion: An Atlantic Odyssey of Slavery and Freedom.

The Problems with Obama’s deal on the “cliff”: KFPK 1/2

LISTEN online HERESUBSCRIBE to iTunes podcast HERE
The problems with Obama’s deal on the fiscal “cliff”—HAROLD MEYERSON
explains – he’s editor at large of The American Prospect and he writes a column for the Washington Post op-ed page—where his new piece is “Lessons from the Longshoremen,”  HERE.

Plus: DAVID COLE asks the question “Who Pays for the Right to Bear Arms?”  His answer: Black America.  Young black men die of gun homicide eight times more often than young white men.  David teaches Constitutional Law at Georgetown; his gun piece appears on the NYTimes op-ed page today, HERE.

Also: What Lincoln did, and what he didn’t do, to free the slaves: yesterday was the 150th anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation: ERIC FONER will comment – he teaches history at Columbia and won the Pulitzer Prize for his book The Fiery Trial: Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery.
READ Eric Foner on the Emancipation Proclamation in the New York Times yesterday HERE.

Calvin Trillin: 2012 Politics in Verse: KPFK 12/26

LISTEN online HERESUBSCRIBE to iTunes podcast HERE
CALVIN TRILLIN
has written an epic poem about the 2012 election–for example, a verse on Michelle Bachman, to the tune of the Beatles song:  “Michelle, our belle/Thinks that gays will all be sent to hell.”  Trillin writes for The New Yorker and serves as The Nation‘s Deadline Poet; his new book is DOGFIGHT.

Plus:  JOHN NICHOLS with The Nation’s Progressive Honor Roll for 2012: from Bernie Sanders to Boots Riley, from Marcia Moody to Jane McAlevey, we salute activists, movements and politicians.

Also:  it’s time to listen again to BOB DYLAN’s 2009 Christmas album!  Is this a joke — or a tragedy?  SEAN WILENTZ explains — he’s official historian at the official Bob Dylan website (he also teaches history at Princeton.)  READ Sean Wilentz on Dylan’s Xmas album HERE.   PLAYLIST: “Here Comes Santa Claus”;  “I’ll Be Home for Xmas”; “Must Be Santa,” “Winter Wonderland”; “O Little Town of Bethlehem”  (originally broadcast 11/11/09).

David Nasaw on Joe Kennedy: KPFK 12/19

LISTEN online HERESUBSCRIBE to iTunes podcast HERE
JO
E KENNEDY, the famous father, was said to be a Nazi sympathizer, an anti-Semite, a bootlegger, and a Wall Street swindler.  Only some of that is true, says DAVID NASAW — his new book THE PATRIARCH: THE REMARKABLE LIFE AND TURBULENT TIMES OF JOSEPH P. KENNEDY, was named one of the ten best books of the year by the New York Times.

Plus: What will Barack Obama do with his second term?  Cut military spending, and a mount frontal attack on global warming?  The far right thinks so; TOM FRANK doesn’t agree.  His column in the new Harper’s is “Second Chance”.  Read The Baffler on gun culture HERE.

Also: LEONARD COHEN‘s songs combine intense emotion and impressive intelligence with a rich musicality.  SYLVIE SIMMONS talks about his life and unforgettable work — her new book is I’M YOUR MAN: THE LIFE OF LEONARD COHEN.
Playlist: “Suzanne”;  “I’m Your Man”; “Tower of Song”; “Democracy”;  and of course “Hallejulah.”

Oliver Sacks: Hallucinations in Topanga: KPFK 12/5

LISTEN online HERESUBSCRIBE to iTunes podcast HERE
OLIVER SACKS talks about seeing things, hearing voices, and his own experiences getting stoned in Topanga in the sixties.  He’s the legendary neurologist and wonderful  New Yorker essayist whose books include the classics The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat and Awakenings.  His new book is Hallucinations it’s eloquent, compassionate, and fascinating.  “Sacks deftly integrates literature, art, and medical history around his very human, often riveting, case histories“–Library Journal.

 Plus: Oliver Stone’s Untold History of the United States – it’s a 10-part documentary, running now on Showtime Mondays at 8 – and it’s also a big book, co-authored by historian Peter Kuznick.  Analyzing the American empire especially after WWII, it’s provocative, massively documented, and a necessary antidote to the mainstream media’s celebration of American triumphalism—
–and the book is our featured thank-you gift in the KPFK fund drive.