Trump Watch

Julian Bond on the 1960s: KPFK 1/16

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JULIAN BOND on SNCC, the sixties, and civil rights.  He was one of the founders of SNCC in 1960, and led protests against segregation in Georgia.  From 1998 to 2010, he was chairman of the NAACP.  His essay, “”The Movement We Helped Make”,” appears in the book Long Time Gone: Sixties America Then and Now, edited by Alexander Bloom. (originally broadcast July 31, 2001).

also: HAROLD MEYERSON analyzes the Jan. 19 Nevada caucuses – he calls Las Vegas “workers’ paradise” where the 60,000-member hotel employees union, Local 226 of the Culinary Workers, has endorsed Obama.Harold is executive editor of The American Prospect and an op-ed page columnist for The Washington Post; he wrote about “The Caesar’s Palace Soviet ”for the Prospect website.

Plus: France and the US: today on one side of the Atlantic we’ve had “freedom fries” and beaujolais poured down the sewer; on the other, mobs attacking McDonalds.It wasn’t always that way: VANESSA SCHWARTZ shows how, in the 1950s and 1960s, Hollywood loved Paris, and, as the cover of Look magazine declared in 1958, “Brigitte Bardot conquers America.” The result was a rich and cosmopolitan film culture.Vanessa teaches history and film studies at USC; her new book is It’s So French! Hollywood, Paris, and the Making of Cosmopolitan Film Culture.

KPFK 1/9: Hillary & Obama in New Hampshire

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our day-after analysis of the Democratic and Republican primaries in New Hampshire: John Nichols, Washington correspondent for The Nation, and John Powers, columnist for LA Magazine, will answer the big questions about Hillary v. Obama and McCain v. Romney. Also: how perverse is the New Hampshire primary?
John Nichols writes “The Online Beat” blog at TheNation.com;
John Powers’s piece The Hillary Puzzle” appears in the new issue of Los Angeles Magazine.

also: People, pants, and global trade: RACHEL LOUISE SNYDER looks at the human, environmental, and political forces shaping the multi-billion dollar denim industry. She’s one of the few jouranlists ever to be granted permission to accompany factory monitors visiting a Gap factory in China, and her story about Cambodia’s garment workers was featured on “This American Life.” Rachel’s book is Fugitive Denim: A Moving Story of People and Pants in the Borderless World of Global Trade. She will be speaking and signing Wed. nite at Book Soup, 8818 Sunset Blvd, W. Hwyd, 7pm.

KPFK 12/26/2007: Writers on Strike, cont.

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The writers’ strike continues: HOWARD RODMAN updates the issues: the significance of Letterman & Leno, and Jon Stewart & Stephen Colbert going back on the air in January, and of the union striking the Academy Awards broadcast. Mostly, we’ll talk about how the writers can win. Howard is a board member of the Writers Guild of America, West, and teaches screenwriting at USC; his screen adaptation of Savage Grace, starring Julianne Moore, premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in 2007, plays at Sundance this month, and opens in May.
WATCH the hilarious “Heartbreaking Voices of Uncertainty”

Also: best books of the year: SUSAN FALUDI exposes they way the 9-11 attacks led to a call to restore “traditional” manhood, marriage, and maternity. “Once again,” she says, Americans “fled from self-knowledge and retreated into myth.” Susan wrote the unforgettable book BACKLASH; her new book is The Terror Dream: Fear and Fantasy in post-9/11 America. (originally broadcast Oct. 31, 2007).

Plus: some of our favorite holiday music: two versions of “Please Come Home for Christmas” — Darlene Love, and Aaron Neville — and of course Poncho Sanchez “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas.”

KPFK 12/19: The Year in Review

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IRAQ: American officials in Baghdad inhabit an isolated world: the Green Zone, a walled fortress filled with villas, swimming pools, and shiny new SUVs. It’s ground zero for cultural blindness, neo-con fanaticism, and imperial fantasy – the place where the American effort to remake Iraq was always doomed to failure. RAJIV CHANDRASEKARAN of the Washington Post tells that story — his book is Imperial Life in the Emerald City: Inside Iraq’s Green Zone. (broadcast April 4, 2007)

Also: THE POLITICS OF HEALTH CARE: I spoke with New York Times op-ed columnist PAUL KRUGMAN about that topic at ALOUD at Central Library, a free series at the Los Angeles Public Library presented by the Library Foundation of L.A., and we will feature highlights of that conversation. Krugman’s new book is The Conscience of a Liberal. (broadcast Nov. 7, 2007)

Plus: HILLARY: is she a closet leftist and radical feminist? Has she been targeted by a vast right-wing conspiracy? We talked with CARL BERNSTEIN about Hillary’s 1960s; why she left Washington for Arkansas in 1974; why her 1993 health care plan ended in disaster; and why so many people don’t like her. Carl Bernstein of course is the Watergate Pulitzer Prize-winner; his new book is A WOMAN IN CHARGE: The Life of Hillary Rodham Clinton. (broadcast July 18, 2007)

KPFK 12/12: The Nuclear Danger Now

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We thought The Bomb might disappear with the Cold War – but instead we face the rising danger of nuclear terrorism and the nuclear programs of Iran and North Korea occupying center stage in the presidential election. We’ll have comment and analysis from JONATHAN SCHELL – his new book is The Seventh Decade: The New Shape of Nuclear Danger. Jonathan writes for The Nation and Harper’s, and is currently teaching at Yale.

Plus: historian DAVID NASAW talks about Andrew Carnegie: he was the richest man in the world; he crushed the Homestead Strike — and he opposed US imperialism. David’s book Andrew Carnegie is out now in paperback. (Originally broadcast Oct. 25, 2006)

ALSO: Rethinking “McGovernism”: George McGovern’s 1972 campaign is often blamed for moving the Democratic Party away from the working man towards women, blacks, gays, environmentalists, and peacniks.  BRUCE MIROFF argues that recent Democratic presidential candidates fearful of “McGovernism” have moved to the center — and lost. Bruce teaches history at SUNY Albany; his new book is The Liberals’ Moment: The McGovern Insurgency and the Identity Crisis of the Democratic Party.

KPFK 12/5: Arguing About Gitmo

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Today the Supreme Court hears arguments in what may be the most important constitutional case of the decade: whether the men detained at Guantanamo have a right to a fair trial before a real court. ERWIN CHEMERINKSY will comment – he has been named dean of the new UC Irvine law school, and he represents one of the Gitmo detainees whose case is before the court.
Read about the case at The Center for Constitutional Rights
Watch the video that Fox News refused to run

Also: Have the Democrats already blown the biggest swing state? BOB MOSER reports on Florida politics – he’s been writing for The Nation about the Democrats’ efforts to win back the South in 2008.

Plus: When politics worked in California: JESSE UNRUH ran the state’s Democratic party at mid-century, before term limits and lavish campaign spending – he was a fighting populist who wrote civil rights and education laws that were well ahead of their time. BILL BOYARSKY will explain – his new book is Big Daddy: Jesse Unruh and the Art of Power Politics. Bill was an award-winning reporter and editor for the LA Times for 30 years; now he teaches at USC and is covering the primaries for TruthDig.

KPFK 11/28: Hillary Up to Now

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Thanks to her sure-footedness, her rivals’ mistakes, and diminishing Democratic divisions, Hillary has built a commanding lead – but we haven’t heard from Iowa yet. That’s what HAROLD MEYERSON says — he’s an op-ed columnist for the Washington Post, and he wrote the cover story for the new issue of The American Prospect.

Also: Our Bodies, Ourselves may be the most influential left book of the last thirty years. LINDA GORDON explains how the feminist women’s health manual transformed women’s understanding of health and sexuality and changed US medicine. Linda teaches history at NYU, and wrote about The Making of Our Bodies, Ourselves by Kathy Davis for The Nation.

Plus: THE SLAVE SHIP: 12 million Africans were transported across the Atlantic over three centuries, mostly on British and American ships. MARCUS REDIKER talks about the “wooden world” where British and American captains faced threats of mutiny and insurrection. His new book tells an intimate human history of an inhuman institution. It’s “a magnificent and disturbing work” — that’s what Robin D.G. Kelley says.
Marcus Rediker an award-winning historian, and also a teacher and activist.

KPFK 11/21: The Squandering of America

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Once upon a time America was both prosperous and relatively equitable. But that economy was captured by a financial elite when Reagan became president, and the Democrats have failed to fight back. ROBERT KUTTNER argues that we need to rebuild the “equalizing institutions” that set limits on markets in labor, stocks and technologies. Kuttner is the founder and coeditor of The American Prospect; his new book is THE SQUANDERING OF AMERICA: How the failure of our Politics Undermines our Prosperity. Kuttner will be speaking Mon Nov. 26, 8pm at Town Hall’s Writers Bloc in UCLA’s Melnitz Hall in conversation with Arianna Huffington .

Also: The Weather Underground bombed hundreds of sites, but killed only their own members – three of them, in a bomb-making accident, at the Greenwich Village townhouse explosion in 1970. CATHY WILKERSON survived that explosion and escaped, got onto the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted list, lived underground for years, then emerged as a citizen, mother, and teacher. Her new book is Flying Close to the Sun: My Life and Times as a Weatherman.
READ my Dissent piece “The Weatherman Temptation.”

Plus: American economic domination didn’t always bring hell to the Third World. Before Reagan, the US ran a politically savvy empire that brought a modicum of economic growth to poor countries. That’s what ALICE AMSDEN argues – she teaches political economy at MIT and wrote ESCAPE FROM EMPIRE: The Developing World’s Journey Through Heaven and Hell.

More stuff to read: my new piece at the Huffington Post, Seymour Hersh: Obama ‘Only Hope’ for US-Muslim Ties.

KPFK 11/14: Writers on Strike

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What’s really at stake in the writers’ strike? HOWARD RODMAN explains the issues (hint: when Viacom fired its president Tom Freston in 2006, he received $60 million in severance pay — more than all of the DVD money paid to WGA members that year). We’ll also talk about how the writers can win. Howard is a board member of the Writers Guild of America, West, and a professor of screenwriting at USC; his screen adaptation of Savage Grace, starring Julianne Moore, premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in 2007 and opens in 2008.
WATCH the hilarious “Heartbreaking Voices of Uncertainty”

BenazirAlso: BENAZIR BUTTO AND PAKISTAN’S FUTURE: AMY WILENTZ talked with the opposition leader just before she returned to Pakistan, where she called on Pervez Musharraf to resign and was placed under house arrest. Amy teaches literary journalism at UC Irvine; she has written about Butto for the Huffington Post, and her profile of Butto appeared in More magazine.

Plus: one Iraq story: in March, 20 people were killed in the bombing of Baghdad’s Mutanabbi Street market—bookseller’s row, the embodiment of the city’s venerable intellectual history. The ALOUD series at the downtown LA Public Library will hold a “Memorial Reading for Mutanabbi Street” Mon, Nov 19, 7 PM – we’ll speak with Beau Beausoleil, Sholeh Wolpé, and Louise Steinman, curator of the ALOUD series and organizer of the LA Mutanabbi program—she was profiled in the LA Times on Sunday.

More stuff to read: my new piece in The Nation about Clarence Thomas.

KPFK elections update: the voting deadline has been extended to Dec. 9. Please support the slate endorsed by the Committee to Strengthen KPFK: www.candidateslate.org

KPFK 11/7: Paul Krugman on Hillary

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“We hope we’re about to elect FDR,” New York Times op-ed columnist PAUL KRUGMAN says, “but we might be about to elect Grover Cleveland.” He said he was referring to the front-runner, Hillary Clinton. Krugman’s new book is The Conscience of a Liberal; I spoke with him at ALOUD at Central Library, a free series at the Los Angeles Public Library presented by the Library Foundation of Los Angeles, and we will broadcast highlights of that conversation.

ALSO: Bush’s policies on “fighting terrorism” have made us not only less free, but also less safe: that’s what DAVID COLE says. He’s a law professor at Georgetown U, a contributor to Salon.com and The Nation. His new book is LESS SAFE, LESS FREE: Why America is Losing the War on Terror.

Plus: REPORTING IRAQ: what the key journalists have to say about the “good news,” and the bad. We’ll speak with JOHN PALATTELLA, co-editor, along along with Mike Hoyt and the staff of the Columbia Journalism Review, of Reporting Iraq: An Oral history of the War by the Journalists who Covered it. John has written for the L.A. Times Book Review and the Washington Post Book World, and he’s the new literary editor at The Nation.

More stuff to read: my piece at the Huffington Post: “NYT’s Krugman: Hillary — The Next Grover Cleveland”?