The GOP War on Voting: KPFK Wed. 12/14
Republican states have been changing their laws to make it harder to vote – now activists are challenging those laws, and yesterday Attorney General Eric Holder finally suggested he might enforce the laws the prohibit discrimation in voting, especially when they target minority voters – ARI BERMAN of The Nation will report.
Plus: blacks and guns in America. ADAM WINKLER looks at the twisted history of guns and gun control in the US. Today it’s the left that wants gun control, but for most of American history gun control was the program of conservative whites who wanted to keep guns out of the hands of black people. Adam is professor of constitutional law at UCLA; his new book is GUNFIGHT: The Battle of the Right to Bear Arms in America.
Obama and Jobs, Protest in China: KPFK Wed. 12-7
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Manufacturing in America: 54,000 American factories have closed in the past decade. What would it take to bring some of them back from China? HAROLD MEYERSON reports on differing strategies – match Chinese wages; or beat the Chinese with productivity; or provide government support for manufacturing. Harold writes an op-ed column for the Washington Post op-ed page and works as editor-at-large of The American Prospect, which features his report, “Back from China?”
Also: Protest in China: the year in review. JEFF WASSERSTROM talks about strikes and economic actions; environmental protests about a toxic chemical plant: and widespread anger over the cover-up of a high speed rail crash–all of which make for anxious times for the CCP. Jeff is chair of the history department at UC Irvine; recently he compared the Pepper Spray Cop meme with the Chinese Tank Man. His latest book is China in the 21st Century: What Everyone Needs to Know.
Plus: The United States of Fear: TOM ENGELHARDT argues that, since 9-11, our leaders in Washington have sent the US down the “Soviet path,” pouring American treasure into the military, war, and national security – and driving our country towards the cliff. Tom edits the indispensable Tom Dispatch; his new book is The United States of Fear.
From OccupyLA to the streets of Cairo: KPFK 11-30
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Occupy LA: 1,400 LAPD cops cleared the encampment at City Hall park in the middle of the night last night, arresting almost 300 people. ALAN MINSKY was there, reporting for KPFK — we’ll talk with him about the night, the Occupy movement, and of course the future.
Also: the Democratic Promise of Occupy Wall Street — William Greider of The Nation says that, while politics in Washington “now resembles an ecological dead zone,” the Occupy Wall Street movement is — “exhilerating. ” We are “witnessing a rare event—the birth of a social movement.”
plus: Live from Cairo: MARK LeVINE reports on the elections, and election violence, in the Middle East’s most important city. Mark teaches Middle Eastern history at UC Irvine and is a columnist for Al Jazeera English
All Night, All Day, Occupy USA: KPFK Wed. 11/23
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The OccupyUSA live-blog at TheNation.com tracks the movement across the country and the world with updates often every 5 minutes: it’s the work of GREG MITCHELL – he has a new book out, 40 Days That Shook the World: From Occupy Wall Street to Occupy Everywhere.
Also: REBECCA SOLNIT says “If you ever doubted whether you were powerful or you mattered, just look at the reaction to people like you (or your children) camped out in parks from Oakland to Portland, Tucson to Manhattan”—the militarized police attacks on Occupyers from Manhattan to UC Davis. Rebecca wrote for TomDispatch.com.
Plus: Newt Gingrich’s cruelest campaign: replace school janitors with child labor. JOHN NICHOLS talks about the current Republican front-runner – he’s Washington correspondent for The Nation and blogs for TheNation.com.
The Audacity of Occupy Wall Street: KPFK 11-16
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Monday night the Occupy Wall Street camp in Manhattan was destroyed by the NYPD; today the activists are back, but barred from camping overnight. RICHARD KIM, executive editor of The Nation will comment on what Occupy has accomplished and what’s next – his report, “The Audacity of Wall Street,” has been posted on 3,400 Facebook pages, and he was a guest on MSNBC last week.
Today’s show is part of the Pacifica National Archives annual fundraiser – we will be asking listeners to support the Archives’ Campus Campaign, to place audio collections in high schools and colleges across the country. Please call and pledge during the show 800-735-0230 or online here.
Special feature: RY COODER’s new song for the Occupy movement, “Wall Street Part of Town”–world premiere!
GOP Defeats at Polls: KPFK Wed. 11/9
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Voters yesterday rejected right-wing overreach with an unbroken string of Democratic and progressive victories: HAROLD MEYERSON comments on the defeat, 61-39, of the Ohio law stripping public employees of collective-bargaining rights, and the defeat in Mississippi, 57-43, of a sweeping antiabortion initiative. Harold writes for the Washington Post and The American Prospect.
Also: TOM WAITS has an amazing new CD out, “Bad as Me” – SASHA FRERE-JONES of The New Yorker will comment. SEE the “Visibile Tom Waits” HERE.
And FRANCES FOX PIVEN says Occupy Wall Street “has already made the concentration of wealth at the top of this society a central issue in American politics. Now, it promises to do something similar when it comes to the realities of poverty in this country.” Piven, “the professor Glenn Beck loves to hate,” wrote about it for TomDispatch.com; her latest book is Who’s Afraid of Frances Fox Piven?
Ry Cooder’s L.A. Stories: KPFK Wed. 10/19
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Occupy Wall Street made a stunning showing over the weekend – we’ll talk about the different manifestations around Southern California with ALAN MINSKY, KPFK program director. My personal favorite: Occupy Irvine – more than 500 people marched on Saturday. Who would have thought?
Also: It’s time to abolish the death penalty in California – with an initiative on the November ballot. JAMES CLARK, southern California coordinator for the SAFE California Campaign, will explain the strategy—and the need for volunteers to help gather signatures.
Plus: RY COODER has a book out: Los Angeles Stories is a collection of noir-ish tales of L.A. in the late forties, and the outsiders and oddballs in the old downtown neighborhood Bunker Hill and out in Venice Beach. Los Angeles Stories is our featured thank-you premium, along with Ry’s new CD, “Pull Up Some Dust and Sit Down.” Today’s NYTimes suggests Ry Cooder’s Song “No Banker Left Behind” as an anthem for the “Occupy” movement: watch “No Banker” HERE.
Please call and pledge during the hour: 818-985-5735 — or at kpfk.org.
Republicans Kill Jobs Bill: KPFK Wed. 10/12
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Last night Senate Republicans blocked Obama’s jobs bill, which would have taxed millionaires to fund infrastructure construction, repair schools, and rehire cops, teachers, and firefighters who have been laid off. Meanwhile, Occupy Wall Street grows. JOHN NICHOLS will comment–he writes “The Beat” blog at TheNation.com.
Big Bill Broonzy – he left the Mississippi Delta to become a leading Chicago bluesman of the 1930s, singing about racial injustice alongside Pete Seeger and Studs Terkel; then traveling to Europe to ignite the British blues-rock revival of the 1960s with Eric Clapton and Pete Townshend. BOB REISMAN explains – his new book is I Feel so Good: the Life and Times of Big Bill Broonzy.
Playlist: “Black, Brown, and White,” “This Train,” “I Feel So Good.”
Also: Whatever happened to the American left? MICHAEL KAZIN says socialists. anarchists and communists never won much political power, but nevertheless their utopian spirit brought far-reaching cultural change. And then there were the Abolitionists: we could learn a lot from them. Michael’s new book is American Dreamers: How the Left Changed a Nation.
Occupy Wall Street: The Spark – KPFK Wed. 10/5
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Everybody has advice for the protesters at Occupy Wall Street –What do these people want, anyway? They need to explain their demands! BETSY REED, executive editor of The Nation, says progressives have plenty of policy ideas. Occupy Wall Street provides something new: a spark.
Occupy L.A. : news HERE, live video feed HERE.
Also: RUSSELL BANKS is one of our best writers – in his new novel, Lost Memory of Skin, his protagonist, “The Kid,” is a registered sex offender forbidden to live within 2,500 feet of a school or park – and thus forced to join a homeless camp under a Florida freeway bridge. Russell Banks will be appearing at Writers Bloc tomorrow/Thurs at 7:30pm in Century City at the MGM Building, 10250 Constellation Boulevard, tickets are $20.
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Plus: The rise of a new American security state: Pulitzer-Prize winner DANA PRIEST of the Washington Post reports on a world so vast no one knows how many people it employs, how much money taxpayers spend on it, or whether “counterterrorism” and “homeland security” accomplish anything worthwhile. Dana is co-author of the new book Top Secret America.
and Your Minnesota Moment: remember the 2008 Republican National Convention in St. Paul? Remember how Amy Goodman and two DemocracyNow producers were arrested while reporting on protests outside the convention in downtown St. Paul? Amy won a significant settlement: details on air.
A Primary Challenge to Obama? KPFK 9/28
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Ralph Nader, Cornel West, Jonathan Kozol and several others are looking for candidates to challenge Obama in the Democratic primaries next spring – JOHN NICHOLS of The Nation examines and evaluates their proposal.
Also: The US effort to “Rebuild Iraq”: how about a plant producing frozen chicken — in a country with no electricity for refrigeration? PETER VAN BUREN worked for the State Department during the “surge,” and recounts the way billions of dollars were lost to waste and fraud. His hew book is “We Meant Well: How I Helped Lose the Battle for the Hearts and Minds of the Iraqi People.” (Watch chicken plant PR video HERE.)
And now Peter seems to be the only State Dept. official facing firing over Wikileaks—for posting a link to Wikileaks at his book website.
Plus: L.A.’s jails are the worst in the nation – that’s what the ACLU says in a report issued today that details “severe and pervasive abuse” of inmates by deputies. PETER ELIASBERG, Legal Director of the ACLU/SC, says Sheriff Lee Baca “must step down.” See coverage in the LA Times (page one) and the NY Times today. SIGN THE PETITION HERE.
