This Is Hell!
Longform interview Hell since 1996.
News 326 rész Longform interview Hell since 1996.
1311: Turkey's fascist alliance / Max Zirngast
76 perc
326. rész
Writer Max Zirngast on his article "Turkey Is Trying to Ban the Socialist, Pro-Kurdish HDP" co-written with Alp Kayserilioğlu and Güney Işıkara via Jacobin.
https://jacobinmag.com/2021/03/turkey-erdogan-hdp-peoples-democratic-party-pro-kurdish-socialism
1310: Ending endless war / Jonathan Ellis + brian bean
68 perc
325. rész
Jonathan Ellis and brian bean on confronting US violence at home and abroad, and their article "Rebuilding the Anti-Imperialist Movement in a New Era" for Rampant.
https://rampantmag.com/2021/03/rebuilding-the-anti-imperialist-movement-in-a-new-era/
1309: Immigration under Biden / Karina Moreno
58 perc
324. rész
Urban policy and planning scholar Karina Moreno on her article "Joe Biden’s Immigration Reform Doesn’t Do Enough to Help Migrant Workers" for Jacobin.
https://www.jacobinmag.com/2021/03/joe-biden-immigration-reform-us-citizenship-act
1308: Lula, lawfare and antidemocracy in Brazil / Brian Mier
64 perc
323. rész
Live from São Paulo, journalist Brian Mier reports on Lula da Silva's legal victory, pandemic politics and antidemocracy in Brazil.
ARCHIVE: Cindy Milstein on the revolutionary potential of death and grief.
38 perc
322. rész
From 2017: Writer Cindy Milstein explains how death and grief connect us to the collective nature of the human experience, revealing the potential for solidarity and compassion in the face of capitalism's commodification of the self, and showing us a new way of living together, right now, while we still have the time.
1307: Thirty years of war against Iraq / Kathy Kelly
75 perc
322. rész
Peace activist Kathy Kelly on the realities of war and sanctions for Iraq's people, the state of the anti-war movement and her article "Remembering the First Gulf War" for The Progressive, and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen visits the Playground of Blood.
https://progressive.org/dispatches/remembering-first-gulf-war-kelly-210302
1306: The business of immigrant labor / Ruth Milkman
64 perc
321. rész
Sociologist Ruth Milkman on the dynamics of immigration law and low-wage work, and her new book "Immigrant Labor and the New Precariat" for Polity Books.
https://www.wiley.com/en-us/Immigrant+Labor+and+the+New+Precariat-p-9780745692012
1305: The abolitionist horizon / Mariame Kaba
70 perc
320. rész
Organizer Mariame Kaba on state violence, the possibilities of police and prison abolition, and her book "We Do This 'Til We Free Us: Abolitionist Organizing and Transforming Justice" from Haymarket Books.
https://www.haymarketbooks.org/books/1664-we-do-this-til-we-free-us
1304: The future price of water / Ray Levy Uyeda
70 perc
319. rész
Writer Ray Levy Uyeda on her article "A Bleak Future for Water" for The Baffler, and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen hears the quiet part loud.
https://thebaffler.com/latest/a-bleak-future-for-water-levy-uyeda
1303: The politics of public land / Nick Bowlin
68 perc
318. rész
Journalist Nick Bowlin on public land management under the Trump administration, and his article "The Land Was Ours" for The Drift.
https://www.thedriftmag.com/public-lands/
1302: The struggle for Europe / Raquel Varela
65 perc
317. rész
Historian Raquel Varela on a century of capital, worker struggle and left movements across Europe, and her book "A People's History of Europe From World War I to Today" from Pluto Press.
https://www.plutobooks.com/9780745341347/a-peoples-history-of-europe/
1301: Fracking Appalachia / Sean O'Leary
65 perc
317. rész
Ohio River Valley Institute's Sean O'Leary on the economic impact of natural gas extraction across Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Ohio, and his report “Appalachia’s Natural Gas Counties: Contributing more to the U.S. economy and getting less in return”
https://ohiorivervalleyinstitute.org/new-report-natural-gas-county-economies-suffered-as-production-boomed
BONUS: Vernon Bellecourt Dec 1999 + Sept 2000
85 perc
321. rész
Two conversations with American Indian Movement leader Vernon Bellecourt from the archives. Really love these interviews. Chuck is laid up with back problems, please send prayers and/or muscle relaxers.
1300: Ecology, energy and the state / Erald Kolasi
68 perc
320. rész
Writer Erald Kolasi on his article "The Ecological State" for Monthly Review and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen celebrates Fat History Month.
1299: Chavismo and the people / Cira Pascual Marquina + Chris Gilbert
74 perc
319. rész
Cira Pascual Marquina and Chris Gilbert on the dynamics of Venezuelan society, struggles on the communal path towards socialism and their book "Venezuela, the Present as Struggle: Voices from the Bolivarian Revolution" via Monthly Review.
https://monthlyreview.org/product/venezuela_the_present_as_struggle/
1298: Coloniality and Black citizenship / Sabelo J. Ndlovu-Gatsheni
65 perc
318. rész
Historian Sabelo J. Ndlovu-Gatsheni on colonialism's legacy of dehumanization, the exclusionary nation-state and his article "Black Citizenship and the Problem of 'Coloniality'" for Black Agenda Report's Black Citizenship Forum.
https://blackagendareport.com/black-citizenship-forum-black-citizenship-and-problem-coloniality
1297: The coming anti-protest laws / Alleen Brown + Akela Lacy
74 perc
318. rész
Journalists Alleen Brown and Akela Lacy on their report "State Legislatures Make “Unprecedented” Push on Anti-Protest Bills" for The Intercept, and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen empathizes with savages and samurai.
1296: The long shadow of eugenics / Elizabeth Catte
68 perc
317. rész
Historian Elizabeth Catte on Virginia's forced sterilization campaign in the mid-20th century, the intersection of race, medicine and social control, and her book "Pure America: Eugenics and the Making of Modern Virginia" from Belt Publishing.
https://beltpublishing.com/products/pure-america
1295: Experiments in medium design / Keller Easterling
71 perc
316. rész
Writer Keller Easterling on new ways of seeing the world and its possibilities, and her book "Medium Design: Knowing How to Work on the World" from Verso Books.
https://www.versobooks.com/books/3245-medium-design
1294: All the other epidemics / Lynn Parramore
65 perc
315. rész
Cultural theorist Lynn Parramore on the deep social effects of economic precarity, and her article "Epidemic of Despair Could Haunt America Long After COVID" at the Institute for New Economic Thinking.
https://www.ineteconomics.org/perspectives/blog/epidemic-of-despair-could-haunt-america-long-after-covid
1293: Crisis, law and the health of the people / Elliot Sperber
74 perc
314. rész
Write Elliot Sperber on his essay "Four crises, one crisis (or the health of the people)" for Monthly Review, and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen sees the up side of the down side of success.
https://mronline.org/2021/01/26/four-crises-one-crisis-or-the-health-of-the-people/
1292: Corporate platforms, corporate censorship / Peter Bloom + Carl Rhodes
65 perc
314. rész
Peter Bloom and Carl Rhodes on their article "Beware Corporate ‘Democracy Washing’: Twitter, Trump, and the Danger of Privatizing the Fight Against Fascism" for Common Dreams.
https://www.commondreams.org/views/2021/01/23/beware-corporate-democracy-washing-twitter-trump-and-danger-privatizing-fight
1291: Native stories, establishment journalism / Julian Brave NoiseCat
73 perc
313. rész
Julian Brave NoiseCat on his article "Apocalypse Then and Now" for Columbia Journalism Review, and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen watches the detectives.
https://www.cjr.org/special_report/apocalypse-then-and-now.php
1290: Five years of poison for Flint / Anna Clark
68 perc
312. rész
Journalist Anna Clark on her article "The Unfinished Business of Flint's Water Crisis" for ProPublica.
https://www.propublica.org/article/the-unfinished-business-of-flints-water-crisis
1289: How Bolsonaro sold off Brazil / Brian Mier
60 perc
311. rész
Journalist Brian Mier on his documentary "Dismantling Brazil: Bolsonaro's Neoliberal Agenda" via redfish.
https://youtu.be/_ToGVJ3Zk2I
1288: The FBI's role in the assassination of Fred Hampton / Flint Taylor + Jeff Haas
68 perc
310. rész
Attorneys Flint Taylor and Jeff Haas on their report "New Documents Suggest J. Edgar Hoover Was Involved in Fred Hampton’s Murder" for Truthout.
https://truthout.org/articles/new-documents-suggest-j-edgar-hoover-was-involved-in-fred-hamptons-murder/
1287: Fascism and liberal democracy / Robert Cavooris
73 perc
309. rész
Writer Robert Cavooris on his article "We Need a Popular Antifascist Movement" for Partisan, and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen admits to digestive relief.
https://partisanmag.com/we-need-a-popular-antifascist-movement/
1286: Lawful evil / Rose Parfitt
66 perc
308. rész
Law scholar Rose Parfitt on her article "Mob Constitutionalism: The Riot in the Rights" for Critical Legal Thinking.
https://criticallegalthinking.com/2021/01/12/mob-constitutionalism-the-riot-in-the-rights/
1285: Crisis diagonalism / William Callison + Quinn Slobodian
82 perc
307. rész
William Callison and Quinn Slobodian on their article "Coronapolitics from the Reichstag to the Capitol" for Boston Review.
https://bostonreview.net/politics/william-callison-quinn-slobodian-coronapolitics-reichstag-capitol
1284: Police violence, protest and working class convergence / Ida Susser
76 perc
307. rész
Anthropologist Ida Susser on her FocaalBlog article "Covid, police brutality and race: are ongoing French mobilizations breaking through the class boundaries?" and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen revisits the US military’s violations of the hospitality code.
http://www.focaalblog.com/2020/12/03/ida-susser-covid-police-brutality-and-race-are-ongoing-french-mobilizations-breaking-through-the-class-boundaries/
1283: McDonald's in Black America / Marcia Chatelain
69 perc
306. rész
Historian Marcia Chatelain on the economic and social dynamics of fast food corporations and Black American life, and her book "Franchise: The Golden Arches in Black America" from Liveright.
https://wwnorton.com/books/9781631493942
1282: Escalating the climate fight / Andreas Malm
71 perc
305. rész
Social ecologist Andreas Malm on the failures of environmental pacifism, the urgent need to destroy capital's carbon infrastructure, and his book "How to Blow Up a Pipeline: Learning to Fight in a World on Fire" from Verso.
https://www.versobooks.com/books/3665-how-to-blow-up-a-pipeline
1281: India's farm law disaster / Avik Saha
65 perc
304. rész
Lawyer and farmer activist Avik Saha on the planned corporate takeover of Indian agriculture.
1280: Opioid deaths and deindustrialization / Peter Ikeler
74 perc
304. rész
Sociologist Peter Ikeler on the link between mass opioid death and deindustrialization in the US, and his paper "Labor relations and the overdose crisis in the United States"
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/16066359.2020.1793962?journalCode=iart20
1279: Mobility and climate disaster / Mimi Sheller
67 perc
305. rész
Sociologist Mimi Sheller on the politics of movement and refuge under climate change, and her book "Island Futures: Caribbean Survival in the Anthropocene" from Duke University Press.
https://www.dukeupress.edu/island-futures
1278: Boxing and Blackness / Gerald Horne
75 perc
305. rész
Historian Gerald Horne on the intertwined histories of boxing and Black men in America, and his book “The Bittersweet Science: Racism, Racketeering and the Political Economy of Boxing” from International Publishers.
https://www.intpubnyc.com/product/the-bittersweet-science-racism-racketeering-an-the-political-economy-of-boxing/
Four border stories from Chuck's youth on drugs.
40 perc
305. rész
Your bitter, blind, broke, gap-toothed radio host Chuck Mertz shares four stories of crossing the US-Canada border on/with drugs sometime in the early 1980s.
Unlocked from the Patreon podcast. Merry Christmas everybody.
1277: Ad hoc, end of year.
55 perc
304. rész
Chuck explains what he learned about farmer strikes in India from a cancelled interview, and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen tells how he'll win the war.
1276: Global feminisms / Lucy Delap
67 perc
303. rész
Historian Lucy Delap on her new book "Feminisms: A Global History" from University of Chicago Press.
https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/F/bo71583482.html
1275: Telling the truth about nature / Bram Büscher
69 perc
302. rész
Sociologist Bram Büscher on his new book "The Truth about Nature: Environmentalism in the Era of Post-truth Politics and Platform Capitalism" from University of California Press.
https://www.ucpress.edu/book/9780520371453/the-truth-about-nature
1274: Uber's wreckage in Kenya / Amanda Sperber
66 perc
301. rész
Journalist Amanda Sperber on her report "Uber made big promises in Kenya. Drivers say it's ruined their lives." for NBC News / 100 Reporters / Journalists for Transparency, and in a Moment of Truth Jeff Dorchen juggles delusions about democracy.
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/uber-made-big-promises-kenya-drivers-say-it-s-ruined-n1247964
1273: Venezuela parliamentary election report / Federico Fuentes
79 perc
300. rész
Journalist Federico Fuentes reports on Venezuela's recent parliamentary elections and his article "Why Venezuela’s National Assembly elections matter" for Green Left.
https://www.greenleft.org.au/content/why-venezuelas-national-assembly-elections-matter
1272: The past and future of epidemics / Frank Snowden
66 perc
299. rész
Historian Frank M. Snowden on his book " Epidemics and Society: From the Black Death to the Present" via Yale University Press.
https://yalebooks.yale.edu/book/9780300192216/epidemics-and-society
1271: Population control in 1970s India / Shivani Shedde
63 perc
299. rész
Architect Shivani Shedde on poverty and population control in Indira Gandhi-era India, and her article "Housing the Poor for a Healthy Planet and Healthy Nation" for e-flux.
https://www.e-flux.com/architecture/sick-architecture/345269/housing-the-poor-for-a-healthy-planet-and-healthy-nation/
1270: The future of seafloor extraction / Rebecca McCarthy
66 perc
298. rész
Writer Rebecca McCarthy on her Baffler article "Deep Sea Rush," and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen swats the zeitgeist zombies.
https://thebaffler.com/salvos/deep-sea-rush-mccarthy
1269: Land inequality, social inequality / Ward Anseeuw
59 perc
297. rész
Ward Anseeuw on the International Land Coalition report "Uneven Ground: Land inequalities at the heart of unequal societies.
"https://www.landcoalition.org/en/uneven-ground/report-and-papers/
1268: Brazil municipal election report / Brian Mier
69 perc
296. rész
TeleSur English's Brian Mier reports on far-right losses, and gains for both the left and center-right in Brazil's 2020 municipal elections.
1267: Statehood and pandemic in Puerto Rico / Dave Buchen
78 perc
295. rész
Our Man in San Juan, Dave Buchen reports on a statehood vote in Puerto Rico, mid-pandemic and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen and his anesthesiologist give a stern warning.
1266: On utopia / Teppo Eskelinen
66 perc
294. rész
Philosopher Teppo Eskelinen on "The Revival of Political Imagination: Utopia as Methodology" from Zed Books.
https://www.zedbooks.net/shop/book/the-revival-of-political-imagination/
1265: Prisoner resistance at the start of COVID-19 / Duncan Tarr
72 perc
293. rész
Researcher Duncan Tarr on the report "First 90 Days of Prisoner Resistance to COVID-19: Report on Events, Data, and Trends" from Perilous.
https://perilouschronicle.com/2020/11/12/covid-prisoner-resistance-first-90-days-full-report/
1264: Breaks in the drug supply chain / Ann Neumann
68 perc
293. rész
Writer Ann Neumann on her Baffler article "Drugs for the People," and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen stands on a principle.
https://thebaffler.com/salvos/drugs-for-the-people-neumann
1263: The end of public school / Jack Schneider + Jennifer Berkshire
67 perc
291. rész
Jack Schneider and Jennifer Berkshire on their book "A Wolf at the Schoolhouse Door: The Dismantling of Public Education and the Future of School" from The New Press.
https://thenewpress.com/books/wolf-schoolhouse-door
1262: On islands / Alastair Bonnett
62 perc
290. rész
Geographer Alastair Bonnett on his book "Elsewhere: A Journey into Our Age of Islands" from University of Chicago Press.
https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/E/bo45051804.html
1261: Pro-democracy politics in Hong Kong / Brian Hioe
66 perc
290. rész
Journalist Brian Hioe on his article "Pan-Democrat Legislators Resign En Masse from Hong Kong Legislative Council" for New Bloom Mag:
https://newbloommag.net/2020/11/12/pan-dem-resign-hk/
1260: The abortion struggle in Poland / Zofia Malisz
65 perc
289. rész
Polish politician Zofia Malisz on the abortion rights struggle in Poland and the statement letter "Our Bodies, Our Lives, Our Country, the World," and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen leans on survivor bias.
https://progressive.international/wire/2020-10-30-razem-our-bodies-our-lives-our-country-the-world/en
1259: Mapping the Anthropocene / Anna L. Tsing
64 perc
289. rész
Anthropologist Anna L. Tsing on "Feral Atlas: The More-Than-Human Anthropocene" a digital project from Stanford University Press.
http://feralatlas.org/
1258: Toward degrowth / Giorgos Kallis + Susan Paulson
61 perc
289. rész
Giorgos Kallis and Susan Paulson on their book "The Case for Degrowth," co-written with Giacomo D'Alisa and Federico Demaria for Polity.
https://politybooks.com/bookdetail/?isbn=9781509535620
1257: Let it all fall / Mohamed Abdou
67 perc
288. rész
Mohamed Abdou on his essay "Let Empire collapse: why we need a decolonial revolution" for ROAR Magazine.
https://roarmag.org/essays/let-empire-collapse-why-we-need-a-decolonial-revolution/
1256: A Marxist lens on capitalism's crisis / Hadas Thier
60 perc
287. rész
Writer Hadas Thier on her book "A People's Guide to Capitalism: An Introduction to Marxist Economics" from Haymarket Books.
https://www.haymarketbooks.org/books/1481-a-people-s-guide-to-capitalism
1255: Anarchy for the people / Ruth Kinna
59 perc
286. rész
Political theorist Ruth Kinna on anarchism in thought and action, and her new book "The Government of No One: The Theory and Practice of Anarchism" from Penguin UK.
https://www.penguin.co.uk/books/300/300055/the-government-of-no-one/9780141984667.html
1254: Trump's war in Yemen / Mohammed al-Jumaily
66 perc
285. rész
Conflict researcher Mohammed al-Jumaily on US military actions in Yemen, tracking civilian death and his report "Eroding Transparency: US counterterrorism actions in Yemen under President Donald Trump" for Airwars.
https://airwars.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/Eroding-Transparency-Trump-in-Yemen.-Airwars-October-2020.pdf
1253: Constitutional struggle in Chile / Bree Busk
66 perc
255. rész
Live from Santiago, Bree Busk on her article "Chileans mobilize in advance of a historic plebiscite" for ROAR Magazine, and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen takes another stab at the advertising culture.
https://roarmag.org/essays/chile-constitutional-referendum/
1252: Natural gas politics in Bolivia / Bret Gustafson
62 perc
254. rész
Anthropologist Bret Gustafson on his new book "Bolivia in the Age of Gas" from Duke University Press.
https://www.dukeupress.edu/bolivia-in-the-age-of-gas
1251: Rethinking the home / Diana Lind
59 perc
254. rész
Urban policy specialist Diana Lind on her new book "Brave New Home: Our Future in Smarter, Simpler, Happier Housing" from Bold Type Books.
https://www.boldtypebooks.com/titles/diana-lind/brave-new-home/9781541742642/
1250: Wisconsin and the politics of White supremacy / Emma Roller
68 perc
253. rész
Journalist Emma Roller on her article "How Wisconsin Became a Bastion of White Supramacy" for The New Republic.
https://newrepublic.com/article/159524/wisconsin-became-bastion-white-supremacy
1249: Greenwashing environmental racism / Danielle Purifoy
68 perc
252. rész
Lawyer and geographer Danielle Purifoy on her reports "Knock on Wood: How Europe's wood pellet appetite fuels environmental racism in the South" and "As the wood pellet industry grows across the South, Enviva targets Alabama and Mississippi for future expansion " for Scalawag, and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen concludes his spiel on class consciousness.
https://scalawagmagazine.org/2020/10/wood-pellet-environmental-racism-part-one/
https://scalawagmagazine.org/2020/10/wood-pellet-environmental-racism-part-two/
1248: Tech chained to capital / Xiaowei Wang
61 perc
251. rész
Writer Xiaowei Wang on their book "Blockchain Chicken Farm And Other Stories of Tech in China's Countryside" from Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780374538668
1247: The COVID-19 horizon / Rob Wallace
67 perc
250. rész
Evolutionary epidemiologist Rob Wallace on his new book "Dead Epidemiologists: On the Origins of COVID-19" from Monthly Review Press.
https://monthlyreview.org/product/dead-epidemiologists-on-the-origins-of-covid-19/
1246: Arctic death spiral / Gloria Dickie
60 perc
249. rész
Journalist Gloria Dickie on her report "The Arctic is in a death spiral. How much longer will it exist?" for The Guardian.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/ng-interactive/2020/oct/13/arctic-ice-melting-climate-change-global-warming
1245: A transit in common / Theresa Enright
69 perc
249. rész
Political science scholar Theresa Enright on her Society & Space essay "Commotion" and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen hammers the history of class-consciousness into shape.
https://www.societyandspace.org/articles/commotion
1244: Toward mass debt resistance / Thomas Gokey
61 perc
248. rész
The Debt Collective's Thomas Gokey on their new book "Can't Pay, Won't Pay: The Case for Economic Disobedience and Debt Abolition" via Haymarket Books.
https://www.haymarketbooks.org/books/1520-can-t-pay-won-t-pay
1243: On populism and anti-populism / Thomas Frank
62 perc
248. rész
Writer Thomas Frank on his book "The People, No: A Brief History of Anti-Populism" from Metropolitan Books.
https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250220110
1242: Global banks, global money laundering / Ben Hallman
62 perc
247. rész
International Consortium of Investigative Journalists chief reporter Ben Hallman on global bank fraud and the massive #FinCENFiles investigation.
https://www.icij.org/investigations/fincen-files/
1241: Toward African economic sovereignty / Fadhel Kaboub + Ndongo Samba Sylla
72 perc
246. rész
Economists Fadhel Kaboub and Ndongo Samba Sylla on their open letter "Africa’s Pandemic Response Calls for Reclaiming Economic and Monetary Sovereignty," and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen looks at the spectrum from white to pale to transparent to invisible.
https://mes-africa.org/
1240: Migrant rescue and backlash / Daniel Trilling
62 perc
245. rész
Journalist Daniel Trilling on his article "How rescuing drowning migrants became a crime" for The Guardian.
https://www.theguardian.com/news/2020/sep/22/how-rescuing-drowning-migrants-became-a-crime-iuventa-salvini-italy
1239: Breaking up monopolies / Rory Van Loo
66 perc
244. rész
Legal scholar Rory Van Loo on antitrust law, the politics of monopoly-busting and his paper "In Defense of Breakups: Administering a 'Radical' Remedy."
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3646630#
1238: Global capitalism, global police state / William I. Robinson
67 perc
244. rész
Sociologist William I. Robinson on his new book "The Global Police State" from Pluto Press.
https://www.plutobooks.com/9781786806666/the-global-police-state/
1237: Against the US-UK trade deal / Nick Dearden
62 perc
243. rész
Global Justice Now director Nick Dearden on his book "Trade Secrets: The truth about the US trade deal and how we can stop it" and his article "We must defeat the US trade deal" for openDemocracy.
https://tradesecrets.globaljustice.org.uk/
https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/opendemocracyuk/we-must-defeat-us-trade-deal/
1236: System Crash / Fabian Scheidler
66 perc
242. rész
Historian Fabian Scheidler on his book "The End of the Megamachine: A Brief History of a Failing Civilization" via Zero Books.
https://www.johnhuntpublishing.com/zer0-books/our-books/end-megamachine-brief-history-failing-civilization#synopsis
1235: Egypt's war on the poor / Maged Mandour
57 perc
241. rész
Political analyst Maged Mandour on his articles "The capitalist roots of Egyptian authoritarianism: demystifying a state" for openDemocracy and "Sisi’s War on the Poor" for Sada Journal.
https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/north-africa-west-asia/capitalist-roots-egyptian-authoritarianism-demystifying-state/
https://carnegieendowment.org/sada/82772
1234: Wet’suwet’en land, Wet’suwet’en law / Suzanne Dhaliwal + Lindsey Bacigal
74 perc
240. rész
Suzanne Dhaliwal + Lindsey Bacigal on indigenous pipeline resistance, territorial reoccupation and their article "All Eyes on Wet’suwet’en" for Red Pepper.
https://www.redpepper.org.uk/all-eyes-on-wetsuweten/
1233: The coming climate migration / Abrahm Lustgarten
64 perc
239. rész
Journalist Abrahm Lustgarten on his report "Climate Change Will Force a New American Migration" for ProPublica.
https://www.propublica.org/article/climate-change-will-force-a-new-american-migration
1232: On the war industry / Christian Sorensen
63 perc
238. rész
Researcher Christian Sorensen on his book "Understanding the War Industry" from Clarity Press.
https://www.claritypress.com/product/understanding-the-war-industry/
1231: Peace and death in Afghanistan / Kate Clark
67 perc
237. rész
Kate Clark on her report "War in Afghanistan in 2020: Just as much violence, but no one wants to talk about it" for Afghanistan Analysts Network
https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/reports/war-and-peace/war-in-afghanistan-in-2020-just-as-much-violence-but-no-one-wants-to-talk-about-it/
1230: Indigenous autonomy, pandemic politics / Sylvia Cifuentes
70 perc
238. rész
Sylvia Cifuentes on her article "Territory, Autonomy and Rights: Indigenous Politics and COVID-19 in the Amazon Basin" for Society and Space, and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen waits for just the right moment.
https://www.societyandspace.org/articles/territory-autonomy-and-rights
1229: The housing crisis is global / Deborah Potts
65 perc
238. rész
Geographer Deborah Potts on her new book "Broken Cities: Inside the Global Housing Crisis" from ZED Books.
https://www.zedbooks.net/shop/book/broken-cities/
1228: The geopolitics of oil / Robert Vitalis
67 perc
237. rész
Robert Vitalis on his book "Oilcraft: The Myths of Scarcity and Security That Haunt U.S. Energy Policy" from Stanford University Press.
https://www.sup.org/books/title/?id=28252
1227: Toward agroecology / Helena Paul
65 perc
236. rész
Helena Paul on her article "Looking beyond the pandemic: Agroecology, and the need to rethink our food system" for Radical Ecological Democracy.
https://www.radicalecologicaldemocracy.org/looking-beyond-the-pandemic-agroecology-and-the-need-to-rethink-our-food-system/
1226: Policing the coming crisis / Olufemi O. Taiwo
69 perc
235. rész
Philosopher Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò on his article "Climate Apartheid Is the Coming Police Violence Crisis" for Dissent, and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen asks "what color is your smoke?"
https://www.dissentmagazine.org/online_articles/climate-apartheid-is-the-coming-police-violence-crisis
1225: Prosecuting protesters / Carolijn Terwindt
63 perc
234. rész
Author and activist Carolijn Terwindt on her new book "When Protest Becomes Crime: Politics and Law in Liberal Democracies" from Pluto Press.
https://www.plutobooks.com/9780745340043/when-protest-becomes-crime/
1224: What we mean by freedom / Annelien de Dijn
61 perc
233. rész
Historian Annelien de Dijn on modern conceptions of freedom, the state, antidemocracy and her book "Freedom: An Unruly History" from Harvard Press.
https://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674988330
1223: The far right inside law enforcement / Michael German
64 perc
233. rész
Former FBI special agent Michael German on his report "Hidden in Plain Sight: Racism, White Supremacy, and Far-Right Militancy in Law Enforcement" for The Brennan Center.
https://www.brennancenter.org/our-work/research-reports/hidden-plain-sight-racism-white-supremacy-and-far-right-militancy-law
David Graeber on This Is Hell!
130 perc
232. rész
Anthropologist David Graeber's three interviews on This Is Hell!, talking about fun, bureaucracy and bullshit jobs. RIP David.
1222: Policing the externalized border / Niamh Ni Bhriain
66 perc
231. rész
The Transnational Institute's Niamh Ni Bhriain on the crises of capital and Covid-19 under the global external border regime, and her article "The deadly politics of colonial borders under COVID-19" for ROAR.
https://roarmag.org/essays/colonial-borders-covid-19/
1221: Collective collapse / Wade Davis
73 perc
230. rész
Anthropologist Wade Davis on his article "The Unraveling of America" for Rolling Stone, and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen is ready for action... later.
https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/political-commentary/covid-19-end-of-american-era-wade-davis-1038206
1220: From Carter to Reagan / Rick Perlstein
62 perc
229. rész
Historian Rick Perlstein on modern American conservatism's realignment around Ronald Reagan, and his new book "Reaganland: America's Right Turn 1976-1980" from Simon & Schuster.
https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Reaganland/Rick-Perlstein/9781476793054
1219: Toward New Afrika / Edward Onaci
66 perc
229. rész
Historian Edward Onaci on his book "Free the Land: The Republic of New Afrika and the Pursuit of a Black Nation-State" from UNC Press.
Playlist: Year 2000 Hits
236 perc
228. rész
Chuck vacation monologue
Christian Parenti on police and prisons in the US [13:00]
Andreas Toupedakis on quitting nuclear weapons work [48:14]
Joyce Horman remembers the 1973 Chilean coup d'etat [1:13:23]
Manuel Calahan from Accion Zapatista [1:45:18]
Christopher Hitchens on the lies of Bill Clinton [2:22:21]
Vernon Bellecourt from the American Indian Network [3:07:35]
Jon Sinclair from the MC5 [incomplete 3:48:00]
1218: On the US postal crisis / Sarah Anderson
70 perc
227. rész
Inequality.org's Sarah Anderson on the political and economic crises hitting the US Postal Service, and her recent article "USPS Needs Financial Aid to Continue Providing Essential Services" for Inequality.org, and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen publishes the Rotten Egg Manifesto.
1217: How the right took Italy / David Broder
69 perc
226. rész
Historian David Broder on the right's multi-decade rise to power in Italian politics and his book "First They Took Rome: How the Populist Right Conquered Italy" from Verso.
https://www.versobooks.com/books/2974-first-they-took-rome
1216: Between Hong Kong, China and the US left / Andi W + Promise Li
64 perc
225. rész
Organizers Andi W. and Promise Li on the Hong Kong protest movement, the case for solidarity from the transnational left, and their article "Left on an Island" for Tempest.
https://www.tempestmag.org/2020/08/solidarity-with-hong-kong/
1215: Beneath South Africa's ruling class / William Shoki
71 perc
225. rész
Writer William Shoki on evictions, police violence and neoliberal hegemony in South Africa, and his recent articles "The existing order of things" and "The class character of police violence" for Africa Is A Country. Plus in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen hauls sixteen tons.
https://africasacountry.com/2020/07/the-existing-order-of-things
https://africasacountry.com/2020/06/the-class-character-of-police-violence
1214: Prison reform, carceral expansion / Maya Schenwar + Victoria Law
66 perc
224. rész
Journalists Maya Schenwar and Victoria Law on the ways prison reforms expand state surveillance and punishment, and their new book "Prison by Any Other Name: The Harmful Consequences of Popular Reforms" from The New Press.
https://thenewpress.com/books/prison-by-any-other-name
1213: Peer-to-peer feminist care / Cassie Thornton
62 perc
223. rész
Artist Cassie Thornton on imagining and practicing new forms of health and social care, and her book "The Hologram: Feminist, Peer-to-Peer Health for a Post-Pandemic Future" from Pluto Books.
https://www.plutobooks.com/9780745343327/the-hologram/
1212: The exile of Rafael Correa / Guillaume Long
65 perc
222. rész
CEPR policy analyst and former Ecuadorian cabinet member Guillaume Long on lawfare, expulsion and neoliberal, antidemocratic politics in Ecuador.
1211: Work and death on the colonial pearl fishery / Tamara Fernando
64 perc
221. rész
Writer Tamara Fernando on pandemic labor on the 19th century Indian coast and her article "Death at the Pearl Fishery" for Hypocrite Reader. Plus in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen auditions new horsemen for the apocalypse.
http://hypocritereader.com/95/tamara-fernando-mannar-pearls-cholera
1210: Towards a global energy commons / Ashley Dawson
65 perc
220. rész
Writer Ashley Dawson on decarbonizing the global energy system, collectivizing renewables, and his book "People's Power: Reclaiming the Energy Commons" from OR Books.
* Use the promocode THISISHELL15 and get 15% off the book at OR's site, plus a free download of Ashley's book "Extinction: A Radical History."
https://www.orbooks.com/catalog/peoples-power/
1209: Remembering Michael Brooks + Brazil update / Brian Mier
63 perc
220. rész
Live from São Paulo, Brian Mier on the work of his friend Michael Brooks, and COVID19 politics in Brazil.
1208: The post-police budget / Alexander Kolokotronis
65 perc
219. rész
Political scientist Alexander Kolokotronis on police abolition, participatory budgeting and his article "What To Do Once We’ve Defunded The Police" for Current Affairs.
https://www.currentaffairs.org/2020/07/what-to-do-once-weve-defunded-the-police
1207: Time at the end of time / Ben Ehrenreich
76 perc
218. rész
Writer Ben Ehrenreich on the value of life and time before the collapse, and his book "Desert Notebooks: A Road Map for the End of Time" via Counterpoint Press, and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen wants to sell you another improved fascism.
https://www.counterpointpress.com/dd-product/desert-notebooks/
1206: The reactionary coalition / Brendan O'Connor
66 perc
217. rész
Writer Brendan O'Connor on opening the pandemic economy, the accelerationist right and his article "The Accelerating Gyre" for The Baffler.
https://thebaffler.com/salvos/the-accelerating-gyre-oconnor
1205: Slavery, race and capital in the sixteenth century / Gerald Horne
66 perc
216. rész
Historian Gerald Horne on his book "The Dawning of the Apocalypse: The Roots of Slavery, White Supremacy, Settler Colonialism, and Capitalism in the Long Sixteenth Century" from Monthly Review.
https://monthlyreview.org/product/the-dawning-of-the-apocalypse/
1204: Tribal jurisdiction after McGirt / Julian Brave NoiseCat
64 perc
216. rész
Julian Brave NoiseCat on Indian law and land rights after McGirt v. Oklahoma, and his article "The McGirt Case Is a Historic Win for Tribes" for The Atlantic.
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/07/mcgirt-case-historic-win-tribes/614071/
1203: Stealing 2020 / Greg Palast
83 perc
215. rész
Investigative journalist Greg Palast on mass voter theft operations ahead of the 2020 US elections, and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen clicks on #Goyaway.
1202: Toward Black anarchism / Marquis Bey
71 perc
215. rész
Writer Marquis Bey on new visions of anarchy and Blackness in this world and the next, and their book "Anarcho-Blackness: Notes Toward a Black Anarchism" from AK Press.
https://www.akpress.org/anarcho-blackness.html
1201: The future of liberal policing / Brendan McQuade
67 perc
214. rész
Criminologist Brendan McQuade on mass surveillance, population control and his article "The 'Camden Model' Is Not a Model. It’s an Obstacle to Real Change" for Jacobin.
https://jacobinmag.com/2020/07/camden-new-jersey-police-reform-surveillance
1200: The work of police unions / Flint Taylor
75 perc
213. rész
Attorney Flint Taylor on his op-ed "Police Unions Are Racist Power Brokers in Opposition to Movement for Black Lives" for Truthout and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen wants us to plan for what happens after the future.
https://truthout.org/articles/police-unions-are-racist-power-brokers-in-opposition-to-movement-for-black-lives/
1199: The agripolitics of soy / Kregg Hetherington
65 perc
212. rész
Anthropologist Kregg Hetherington on the politics of soy monocropping in neoliberal Paraguay, and his book "The Government of Beans: Regulating Life in the Age of Monocrops" from Duke University Press.
https://www.dukeupress.edu/the-government-of-beans
1198: Public space, post-pandemic / Eugene McCann
63 perc
211. rész
Geographer Eugene McCann on the politics of public and counterpublic space, and his article "Spaces of publicness and the world after the Coronavirus crisis" for Society and Space.
https://www.societyandspace.org/articles/spaces-of-publicness
1197: Toward revolutionary climate politics / Kai Heron + Jodi Dean
68 perc
210. rész
Kai Heron and Jodi Dean on progressive climate denialism, the danger of apolitical climate movements and their essay "Revolution or Ruin" for e-flux.
https://www.e-flux.com/journal/110/335242/revolution-or-ruin/
1196: Nationalist pathology / Richard Seymour
80 perc
209. rész
Writer Richard Seymour on his article "The nationalist unconscious" for Red Pepper, and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen wonders who put the pomp in Pompeo.
https://www.redpepper.org.uk/the-nationalist-unconscious/
1195: Prosecutors, too / Kate Levine + Joanna Schwartz
64 perc
209. rész
Law scholars Kate Levine and Joanna Schwartz on the role of prosecutors in the brutality of the American legal system, and their article "Hold Prosecutors Accountable, Too" for Boston Review.
https://bostonreview.net/law-justice/kate-levine-joanna-schwartz-hold-prosecutors-accountable-too
1194: Anti-abortion politics / Jennifer L. Holland
63 perc
208. rész
Historian Jennifer L. Holland on the success of the pro-life movement within conservative politics, and her book "Tiny You: A Western History of the Anti-Abortion Movement" from University of California Press.
https://www.ucpress.edu/book/9780520295872/tiny-you
1193: Pandemic municipalism / Kate Shea Baird
62 perc
207. rész
Kate Shea Baird on Barcelona En Comú and municipal politics under COVID-19 quarantine, and her article "Lessons from the pandemic for the municipalists in Spain" for ROAR Magazine.
https://roarmag.org/essays/lessons-from-the-pandemic-for-the-municipalists-in-spain/
1192: The imperial boomerang / Connor Woodman
68 perc
206. rész
Writer Connor Woodman on his Verso blog series "The Imperial Boomerang" and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen wonders if we can pretend our way to justice.
1191: Expulsion politics / Adam Goodman
64 perc
205. rész
Historian Adam Goodman on his new book "The Deportation Machine: America's Long History of Expelling Immigrants" from Princeton University Press.
https://press.princeton.edu/books/hardcover/9780691182155/the-deportation-machine
1190: The feminist war on crime / Aya Gruber
69 perc
204. rész
Legal scholar Aya Gruber on crimes against women, mass incarceration and her book "The Feminist War on Crime: The Unexpected Role of Women's Liberation in Mass Incarceration" from University of California Press.
https://www.ucpress.edu/book/9780520304512/the-feminist-war-on-crime
1189: On police violence / Musa al-Gharbi
63 perc
204. rész
Sociologist Musa al-Gharbi on the politics of police violence, and his article "Brutal Force" for The Baffler.
https://thebaffler.com/latest/brutal-force-al-gharbi
1188: Power over police / Max Rameau + Netfa Freeman
75 perc
203. rész
Organizers Max Rameau and Netfa Freeman on today's uprisings, fighting the violence of dispossession and their article "Community Control Vs. Defunding the Police: A Critical Analysis" for Black Agenda Report.
https://www.blackagendareport.com/community-control-vs-defunding-police-critical-analysis
1187: Capitalism and collapse / Richard Hunsinger + Nathan Eisenberg
64 perc
203. rész
Writers Richard Hunsinger and Nathan Eisenberg on the unfolding crises of global capitalism and their essay "Mask Off: Crisis & Struggle in the Pandemic" from Cosmonaut.
https://cosmonaut.blog/2020/06/08/mask-off-crisis-struggle-in-the-pandemic/
1186: Capitalist enchantment / Eugene McCarraher
64 perc
202. rész
Writer Eugene McCarraher on capitalism's grip on the modern world and all its subjects, and his book "The Enchantments of Mammon: How Capitalism Became the Religion of Modernity" from Harvard University Press.
https://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674984615
1185: Class and Black Lives Matter / Cedric Johnson
66 perc
201. rész
Historian Cedric Johnson on police violence, antiracist activism, class politics and his article "The Triumph of Black Lives Matter and Neoliberal Redemption" for Nonsite.
https://nonsite.org/editorial/the-triumph-of-black-lives-matter-and-neoliberal-redemption
1184: Climate fracture / Ajay Singh Chaudhary
86 perc
200. rész
Writer Ajay Singh Chaudhary on the diverging politics of climate change and his Baffler article "We're Not in This Together," and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen explores fear and human nature.
https://thebaffler.com/salvos/were-not-in-this-together-chaudhary
1183: Children, strangers and the carceral state / Paul M. Renfro
69 perc
199. rész
Historian Paul M. Renfro on the child abduction panics of the 70s and 80s, America's political and social response, and his book "Stranger Danger: Family Values, Childhood, and the American Carceral State" from Oxford University Press.
https://global.oup.com/academic/product/stranger-danger-9780190913984?cc=us&lang=en
1182: No time for Black liberals / Yannick Giovanni Marshall
65 perc
198. rész
Africana studies scholar Yannick Giovanni Marshall on radical uprisings against the police and colonialism, the power of Black radicalism and his op-ed "Black liberal, your time is up" for Al Jazeera English.
https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/black-liberal-time-george-floyd-200601155933648.html
1181: Structural robbery, mass resistance / William C. Anderson
77 perc
197. rész
Writer William C. Anderson on the real theft in capitalist society and the uprisings against it, and his article "Forget 'Looting.' Capitalism Is the Real Robbery" for Truthout. And in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen attends the Get Real Shabbat.
https://truthout.org/articles/forget-looting-capitalism-is-the-real-robbery/
1180: Death penalty logic / Sarah Beth Kaufman
62 perc
196. rész
Sociologist Sarah Beth Kaufman on the social and legal mechanisms of capital punishment, and her book "American Roulette: The Social Logic of Death Penalty Sentencing Trials."
https://www.ucpress.edu/book/9780520344396/american-roulette
1179: On state terror / Henry Giroux
58 perc
195. rész
Cultural critic Henry Giroux on the violence wielded by capital and the state, the uprisings across the country, and his article "Racial Domestic Terrorism and the Legacy of State Violence" for Counterpunch.
https://www.counterpunch.org/2020/06/01/racial-domestic-terrorism-and-the-legacy-of-state-violence/
1178: Unlearning Imperialism / Ariella Aïsha Azoulay
67 perc
194. rész
Theorist Ariella Aïsha Azoulay on imperial violence in the past and present, unlearning history and her book "Potential History: Unlearning Imperialism" from @VersoBooks.
https://www.versobooks.com/books/3079-potential-history
1177: Neoliberalism, energy and climate crisis.
66 perc
194. rész
Sociologists Julius Alexander McGee and Patrick Trent Greiner on neoliberal energy markets and the new realities of climate change.
Julius and Patrick wrote the article "How Long Can Neoliberalism Withstand Climate Crisis?" for Monthly Review.
https://monthlyreview.org/2020/04/01/how-long-can-neoliberalism-withstand-climate-crisis/
1176: Bars, mid-pandemic.
79 perc
193. rész
The Hopleaf's Michael Roper on the present and future of restaurants under COVID19, and his article "How the Pandemic Wreaked Havoc With One of Chicago’s Most Venerable Beer Bars" for Eater Chicago. And in a Moment of Truth, opportunity knocks and Jeff Dorchen answers.
https://chicago.eater.com/2020/5/6/21243329/hopleaf-bar-owner-michael-roper-coronavirus-challenges-andersonville
1175: Ports at the center of global capitalism.
63 perc
192. rész
International politics scholar Laleh Khalili on the role of ports in the circulation of profit and power in global capitalism, and her new book "Sinews of War and Trade: Shipping and Capitalism in the Arabian Peninsula" from Verso.
https://www.versobooks.com/books/3172-sinews-of-war-and-trade
1174: Pork on the frontier of capitalism.
65 perc
191. rész
Anthropologist Alex Blanchette on the domination of the industrialized pork industry, and his book "Porkopolis: American Animality, Standardized Life, and the Factory Farm" from Duke University Press.
https://www.dukeupress.edu/porkopolis
1173: Europe's managed migration disaster.
72 perc
190. rész
Writer Pavlos Roufos on Europe's managed, externalized migration crisis, and his article "A Disaster Foretold" for The Brooklyn Rail.
https://brooklynrail.org/2020/05/field-notes/A-Disaster-Foretold
1172: Another coup attempt in Venezuela.
73 perc
189. rész
Live from Santiago, journalist Lucas Koerner reports on a failed coup attempt in Venezuela involving US mercenaries, and his article "Venezuela: Two US Citizens Captured in Botched Coup Attempt" for Venezuelanalysis.
https://venezuelanalysis.com/news/14864
1171: On coerced labor.
61 perc
188. rész
Sociologist Erin Hatton on the rise of coerced labor in the United States, and her book "Coerced: Work Under Threat of Punishment" from University of California Press.
https://www.ucpress.edu/book/9780520305410/coerced
1170: DIY disaster relief in NYC.
68 perc
187. rész
Matt Peterson and Maria Herron of Woodbine on building networks of solidarity and aid under quarantine in New York City.
https://www.woodbine.nyc/
1069: Mexico, mid-pandemic.
70 perc
186. rész
Live from Mexico City, Laura Carlsen reports on Coronavirus politics in Mexico, and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen concludes his 4 part series on a TV doctor's turn to the snake oil.
1168: COVID-19 in Black America.
61 perc
185. rész
Historian Ibram X. Kendi on the racial pandemic within the larger US Coronavirus outbreak, and his article "Stop Blaming Black People for Dying of the Coronavirus" for The Atlantic.
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/04/race-and-blame/609946/
1067: Defending life and liberation in Rojava.
68 perc
184. rész
Sociologist Dilar Dirik on the fate of the Rojavan revolution, building power together for all people, and her chapter "Only with you, this broom will fly: Rojava, Magic, and Sweeping Away the State Inside of Us" in the collection "Deciding for Ourselves" from AK Press.
1166: COVID-19 and ecological crisis.
69 perc
183. rész
Writer Vijay Kolinjivadi on the global Coronavirus pandemic as ecological disaster and his article "This pandemic IS ecological breakdown: different tempo, same song" for Uneven Earth.
http://unevenearth.org/2020/04/this-pandemic-is-ecological-breakdown-different-tempo-same-song/
PLUS: Chuck on who is all in this together, and the week in Rotten History...
1165: Taiwan, mid-pandemic.
71 perc
182. rész
Live from Taipei, New Bloom editor Brian Hioe on COVID-19 politics in Taiwan, and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen follows a TV doctor's trail of snake oil.
1164: What's wrong with the nation state?
62 perc
181. rész
Iranian studies scholar Hamid Dabashi on the failures of the nation-state as a frame for political power, and his new book "The Emperor is Naked: On the Inevitable Demise of the Nation-State" from Zed Books.
https://www.zedbooks.net/shop/book/the-emperor-is-naked/
1163: Deciding on a new world, together.
62 perc
180. rész
Writer Cindy Milstein on self-determination and community organization under (and after) COVID-19 lockdown, and her new book "Deciding For Ourselves: The Promise of Direct Democracy" from AK Press.
https://www.akpress.org/deciding-for-ourselves.html
1162: Brazil, mid-pandemic.
74 perc
179. rész
Live from São Paulo, Brian Mier reports on COVID-19 and authoritarian clown politics in Brazil, and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen continues his fictional expose of a man who betrayed his calling in exchange for fame and fortune.
1161: Dissent at a dead end.
60 perc
178. rész
Writer Malcolm Harris on life in the wake of capitalism's global triumph, the state of dissent since Occupy, and his book "Shit Is Fucked Up And Bullshit: History Since the End of History" from Melville House.
https://www.mhpbooks.com/books/shit-is-fucked-up-and-bullshit/
1160: Class struggle after COVID-19.
59 perc
177. rész
Cosmonaut's Remi Debs Bruno and Medway Baker on COVID-19 and capitalism in crisis, why the future might finally be up for grabs, and their essay "The End of the End of History: COVID-19 and 21st Century Fascism."
https://cosmonaut.blog/2020/03/26/the-end-of-the-end-of-history-covid-19-and-21st-century-fascism/
1159: Learning from the Sanders loss.
64 perc
176. rész
Writer Danny Haiphong on what the left can learn about power and politics from the failures of the Bernie Sanders presidential campaigns.
Danny wrote the article "Bernie Sanders’ Exit from the Race Is Not Betrayal, It’s a Reality-Check" for the American Herald Tribune.
https://ahtribune.com/us/2020-election/4060-bernie-sanders-exit-reality-check.html
1158: South Korea, mid-pandemic.
70 perc
175. rész
Seoul correspondent Marc Flury reports on Covid-19 policies in South Korea, and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen follows a certain TV doctor's career from Caring Professional to Right-leaning Snake Oil Salesman [Part 1 of 4]
1157: COVID-19 and the capitalist world.
69 perc
174. rész
Rob Wallace and Alex Liebman on the ways the Coronavirus pandemic exposes the crises of capitalism in nature and society. Rob and Alex wrote the essay "Covid-19 and the Circuits of Capital" with Luis Fernando Chaves and Rodrick Wallace for Monthly Review.
https://monthlyreview.org/2020/04/01/covid-19-and-circuits-of-capital/
1156: The Cuban Revolution endures.
66 perc
173. rész
Historian Helen Yaffe on the characteristics of Cuba's longterm socialist revolution, and her new book "We Are Cuba! How a Revolutionary People Have Survived in a Post-Soviet World" from Yale University Press.
https://yalebooks.yale.edu/book/9780300230031/we-are-cuba
1155: Hungary, mid-pandemic.
69 perc
172. rész
Budapest correspondent Todd Williams reports on authoritarian politics and the Coronavirus in Hungary, and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen considers existence and other disposable items.
1154: The global virus.
61 perc
171. rész
Historian Andrew Liu on the geopolitics of Coronavirus blame, the pandemic's spread across the global market, and his n+1 article "Chinese Virus,' World Market."
https://nplusonemag.com/online-only/online-only/chinese-virus-world-market/
1153: Who gets what in the US Coronavirus bills.
67 perc
170. rész
Economist Eileen Appelbaum on the US legislative response to the Coronavirus, and her article "The U.S. Response to COVID-19: What’s in Federal Legislation and What’s Not, but Still Needed" written with Shawn Fremstad for CEPR.
https://cepr.net/the-u-s-response-to-covid-19-whats-in-federal-legislation-and-whats-not-but-still-needed/
1152: The power of the feminist manifesto.
63 perc
169. rész
Writer Breanne Fahs explores the power of the feminist manifesto - as radical act of anger and imagination, and revolutionary document of social change.
Breanne is editor of "Burn It Down! Feminist Manifestos for the Revolution" from Verso: https://www.versobooks.com/books/3151-burn-it-down
PLUS: Chuck can't go back to whatever normal was, and this week in Rotten History...
1151: Puerto Rico, mid-pandemic.
69 perc
168. rész
Our Man in San Juan, Dave Buchen reports from colonial lockdown in Puerto Rico and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen imagines his way out of this mess.
1150: The fight when Spring comes.
67 perc
167. rész
Writer Max Haiven on the world mid-crisis, the struggle to come, and his essay "No return to normal: for a post-pandemic liberation" for ROAR Magazine.
https://roarmag.org/essays/no-return-to-normal-for-a-post-pandemic-liberation/
1149: Beyond the Coronavirus curve.
58 perc
166. rész
Economist Josh Gans on the global and national mobilization against the Covid-19 pandemic, how societies must transform to save lives, and his policy brief "A War Footing: Surfing the Curve" for EconFIP.
https://econfip.org/policy-brief/a-war-footing-surfing-the-curve
1148: Coronavirus, capitalism and the world we face now.
68 perc
165. rész
Evolutionary biologist Rob Wallace on the linked global crises of Covid-19 and capitalism, waking up to the fight for our lives, and his article "Notes on a novel coronavirus" for Monthly Review.
https://mronline.org/2020/01/29/notes-on-a-novel-coronavirus/
PLUS: Chuck on survival capitalism and this week in Rotten History...
1147: Antidemocracy by design.
79 perc
164. rész
Political scientist Yekaterina Oziashvili on the antidemocratic structure of American society and her article “The U.S. Constitution and the Myth of Liberal Democracy” for Left Voice, and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen ranks the Austrian nobility.
https://www.leftvoice.org/the-u-s-constitution-and-the-myth-of-liberal-democracy
1146: The empire runs on coal.
64 perc
163. rész
Historian On Barak on British energy imperialism in the Middle East, the carbon infrastructure of the modern world, and his book "Powering Empire: How Coal Made the Middle East and Sparked Global Carbonization" from University of California Press.
https://www.ucpress.edu/book/9780520310728/powering-empire
ARCHIVE: Penny Rimbaud / Punk, politics and art / 2001
56 perc
162. rész
CRASS co-founder Penny Rimbaud on anarchy in the UK music scene, the politics of punk music, and why the love is the fundamental condition of anarchism.
1145: Life under work.
62 perc
161. rész
Mareile Pfannebecker and J. A. Smith on capitalism's domination over our time, the rise of malemployment, and their book "Work, Want, Work: Labour and Desire at the End of Capitalism" from Zed Books.
https://www.zedbooks.net/shop/book/work-want-work/
PLUS: Chuck on locking ourselves away, and this week in Rotten History...
1144: Toward Indigenous jurisdiction.
68 perc
160. rész
Writers Shiri Pasternak and Hayden King on dispossession of indigenous land and power, and their paper "Land Back" for the Yellowhead Institute. Plus in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen tells the tale of a whale.
https://redpaper.yellowheadinstitute.org/
1143: The case against Joe Biden.
68 perc
159. rész
Jacobin writer Branko Marcetic on Joe Biden's five decade career of rightwing politics within the Democratic party, what a Biden / Trump election means for America, and his new book "Yesterday's Man: The Case Against Joe Biden" from Verso and Jacobin.
https://www.jacobinmag.com/store/product/67
1142: Smartphones and society.
63 perc
158. rész
Writer Nicole Aschoff on the ways smartphones have transformed our relationship with capital and ourselves, and her new book “The Smartphone Society: Technology, Power, and Resistance in the New Gilded Age” from Beacon Press.
http://www.beacon.org/The-Smartphone-Society-P1551.aspx
PLUS: Chuck isn’t going anywhere soon, and the Question From Hell!
1141: Toward citizen science.
66 perc
157. rész
Scientist Abby Kinchy on the politics of science in institutions and society, and her book “Scientist by the People: Participation, Power, and the Politics of Environmental Knowledge" co-written with Aya H Kimura for Rutgers University Press.
https://www.rutgersuniversitypress.org/science-by-the-people/9780813595078
PLUS: Chuck on who chose Biden, and this week in Rotten History.
1140: The politics of food waste.
69 perc
156. rész
Writer Austin Bryniarski on waste and inequality in the American food system, and his article "The war on food waste is a waste of time" for The Outline, and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen wins one for the Rosas.
Episode 1139: Soap operas and the stories we tell.
60 perc
155. rész
Media studies scholar Elana Levine on gender and politics through mass media, and her book "Her Stories: Daytime Soap Opera and US Television History" from Duke University Press.
https://www.dukeupress.edu/her-stories
1138: Under Silicon Valley.
60 perc
154. rész
Economist Rob Larson on tech’s platform capitalism, network effect monopolization and his book “Bit Tyrants: The Political Economy of Silicon Valley” from Haymarket Books.
https://www.haymarketbooks.org/books/1381-bit-tyrants
PLUS: Chuck talks about what won't get talked about in primary coverage, and this week's Question From Hell!
1137: Depoliticization and the revolutionary idea.
64 perc
153. rész
Writer Asad Haider on seeing radical possibilities beyond the depoliticized frame, building a revolutionary movement beyond the limits of the Sanders campaign, and his essay “On Depoliticization” for Viewpoint.
https://www.viewpointmag.com/2019/12/16/on-depoliticization/
PLUS: Chuck gambles on Biden 2020, and this week in Rotten History…
1136: Platform capitalism and quantum supremacy.
70 perc
152. rész
IT For Change deputy director Nandini Chami on her article "Data governance and the new frontiers of resistance" written with Anita Gurumurthy for ROAR / Transnational Institute, and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen defends the obvious.
https://roarmag.org/essays/intelligent-corporation-platform-capitalism/
1135: Class and race politics in the neoliberal era.
63 perc
151. rész
Historian Touré Reed on Trump and Sanders, what's been removed from politics by neoliberalism, the politics of race and class and his book "Toward Freedom: The Case Against Race Reductionism" from Verso.
https://www.versobooks.com/books/3166-toward-freedom
1134: Democrats against Democracy.
60 perc
150. rész
Writer Shuja Haider on the anti-Democratic politics of the Democratic Party primaries, and his article “The world’s biggest threat to democracy is the Democratic Party” for The Outline.
https://theoutline.com/post/8721/democratic-debaste-superdelegates-dnc-convention
Plus: Listener Feedback and the Question from Hell!
1133: The histories of production.
61 perc
149. rész
Economist Paul Cockshott on his book "How the World Works: The Story of Human Labor from Prehistory to the Modern Day" from Monthly Review Press.
https://monthlyreview.org/product/how-the-world-works/
PLUS: Chuck gets trolled by CNN, and this week in Rotten History...
1132: American presidents against Black Americans.
70 perc
148. rész
Black Agenda Report columnist and senior editor Margaret Kimberley on the history of anti-Black politics from the American executive, and her book "Prejudential: Black American and the Presidents," and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen punctures the balloons and hands and feet of the faithful.
https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/612534/prejudential-by-margaret-kimberley/
1131: Capitalism and ecological theft.
62 perc
147. rész
Sociologist John Bellamy Foster on the modern divide between humanity and nature and his book “The Robbery of Nature: Capitalism and the Ecological Rift” from Monthly Review.
https://monthlyreview.org/product/the-robbery-of-nature/
1130: Ruin porn in a ruined world.
58 perc
146. rész
Writer and critic Kate Wagner on the aesthetics of post-industrial decline, and her Baffler article “Staring at Hell”
.
https://thebaffler.com/salvos/staring-at-hell-wagner
PLUS: Listener Feedback, and this week’s Question From Hell.
1129: Depression at the end of time.
61 perc
145. rész
Writer Mikkel Krause Frantzen on his book "Going Nowhere, Slow: The Aesthetics and Politics of Depression" from Zero Books.
https://www.johnhuntpublishing.com/zer0-books/our-books/going-nowhere-slow
Plus: Chuck doesn't travel well, and this week in Rotten History...
1128: Extinction Rebellion's apolitics.
71 perc
144. rész
Journalist Colin Kinniburgh on his article "Can Extinction Rebellion Survive?" for Dissent / In a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen dissects a human millipede.
https://www.dissentmagazine.org/article/can-extinction-rebellion-survive
1127: Rural America under capitalism.
60 perc
143. rész
Anthropologist Marc Edelman on his article "How Capitalism Underdeveloped Rural America" for Jacobin.
https://www.jacobinmag.com/2020/01/capitalism-underdeveloped-rural-america-trump-white-working-class
1126: Conservation and the Capitalocene.
64 perc
142. rész
Bram Büscher and Robert Fletcher on their book "The Conservation Revolution: Radical Ideas for Saving Nature Beyond the Anthropocene" from Verso Books.
https://www.versobooks.com/books/3149-the-conservation-revolution
PLUS: Chuck visits the mall, and this week in Rotten History...
1125: Misinformation technology.
70 perc
141. rész
Writer and researcher Samuel Woolley on his book "The Reality Game: How the Next Wave of Technology Will Break the Truth" from PublicAffairs, and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen vets the DNC's savior.
https://www.publicaffairsbooks.com/titles/samuel-woolley/the-reality-game/9781541768253/
1124: AMLO's first year.
61 perc
140. rész
International studies scholar Humberto Beck on the Dissent article "Year One of AMLO’s Mexico."
https://www.dissentmagazine.org/article/year-one-of-amlos-mexico
1123: Ambulance work under late capitalism.
64 perc
139. rész
Sociologist Josh Seim on the work of paramedics under neoliberal precarity and his book "Bandage, Sort, and Hustle: Ambulance Crews on the Front Lines of Urban Suffering" from University of California Press.
https://www.ucpress.edu/book/9780520300231/bandage-sort-and-hustle
1122: On planetary extraction.
64 perc
138. rész
Political economist Martín Arboleda on the globalized system of resource extraction and economic imperialism, and his book "Planetary Mine: Territories of Extraction under Late Capitalism"
https://www.versobooks.com/books/3078-planetary-mine
PLUS: Chuck falls off the Trump Unity Bridge, and this week in Rotten History...
1121: Carbon and architecture.
66 perc
137. rész
Architect Stephanie Carlisle on the building industry's role producing climate change, and her article "I’ve been polluting the planet for years. I’m not an oil exec—I’m an architect" for Fast Company.
https://www.fastcompany.com/90435650/these-are-the-last-years-of-design-as-we-know-it
PLUS: In a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen beholds the elder gods of American politics.
1120: The politics of school lunch.
61 perc
136. rész
Civil Society and Community Studies scholar Jennifer Gaddis on the politics of school lunch programs in America, and her book “The Labor of Lunch Why We Need Real Food and Real Jobs in American Public Schools” from University of California Press.
https://www.ucpress.edu/book/9780520300033/the-labor-of-lunch#about-author
1119: Capitalism in Space.
62 perc
135. rész
Journalist Peter Ward on capitalism’s push to space, the future of exploitation, accumulation and the rest of us on planet Earth, and his book “The Consequential Frontier: Challenging the Privatization of Space” from Melville House.
https://www.mhpbooks.com/books/the-consequential-frontier/
PLUS: Chuck watches a newscast collapse time.
1118: The geopolitics of slavery and resistance.
61 perc
134. rész
Historian Vincent Brown on the geopolitics of the transatlantic slave trade and its resistance movements, seeing our history (and our present) beyond borders, and his book “Tacky’s Revolt: The Story of an Atlantic Slave War” from Harvard University Press.
https://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674737570
PLUS: Chuck reads the news you didn’t, and this week in Rotten History.
1117: Colonialism, capitalism and Karuk land.
73 perc
133. rész
Sociologist Kari Marie Norgaard on her book "Salmon and Acorns Feed Our People: Colonialism, Nature, and Social Action" from Rutgers University Press. PLUS: In a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen stops breathing in 2020.
https://www.rutgersuniversitypress.org/salmon-and-acorns-feed-our-people/9780813584195
1116: Trump's EPA and the future of cancer.
62 perc
132. rész
Intercept journalist Sharon Lerner on the right's gutting of toxic chemical regulations and her article "The War on the War on Cancer"
https://theintercept.com/2020/01/12/cancer-trump-administration-epa-carcinogens-regulations/
1115: Toward Native American food sovereignty.
52 perc
131. rész
Journalist Kim Baca reports on the work of a Native American coalition to build tribal food sovereignty. [Rebroadcast Interview] / PLUS: Chuck beefs with a Central Illinois letter to the editor writer, and this week in Rotten History.
1114: Class and mass incarceration.
62 perc
130. rész
Sociologist Adaner Usmani on his paper "The Economic Origins of Mass Incarceration" for Catalyst Journal.
https://catalyst-journal.com/vol3/no3/the-economic-origins-of-mass-incarceration
PLUS: Chuck can't get high after not talking about his show.
1113: Irregular warfare, worldwide.
62 perc
129. rész
Historian Maria Ryan explores the rise of irregular warfare in the 21st century, and her book “Full Spectrum Dominance: Irregular Warfare and the War on Terror” from Stanford University Press.
https://www.sup.org/books/title/?id=27429
PLUS: Chuck wonders who the Clintons were triangulating with on immigration.
1112: The politics of nativism.
62 perc
128. rész
Journalist Daniel Denvir on the rise of anti-immigrant politics on the right and center, and his book "All-American Nativism: How the Bipartisan War on Immigrants Explains Politics as We Know It" from Verso Books.
https://www.versobooks.com/books/2858-all-american-nativism
PLUS: Chuck visits the future, and this week in Rotten History.
1110: Towards a new England.
60 perc
127. rész
Writer Alex Niven on the non-state of British politics, the promise of regional devolution, and his book “New Model Island: How to Build a Radical Culture Beyond the Idea of England” from Repeater Books.
https://repeaterbooks.com/product/new-model-island-how-to-build-a-radical-culture-beyond-the-idea-of-england/
PLUS: Listener Feedback
1109: The politics of work and hunger.
62 perc
126. rész
Anthropologist Maggie Dickinson on food assistance, poverty and her book Feeding the Crisis Care and Abandonment in America's Food Safety Net from University of California Press.
PLUS: Chuck flips through the NRA’s official magazine before turning the gun on himself, and Question From Hell.
1108: Capitalism on Edge.
59 perc
125. rész
Theorist Albena Azmanova explores the new realities of precarity capitalism, the failures of class struggle and her book "Capitalism on Edge: How Fighting Precarity Can Achieve Radical Change Without Crisis or Utopia" from Columbia University Press.
http://cup.columbia.edu/book/capitalism-on-edge/9780231195379
PLUS: Chuck passes on legal weed and the week in Rotten History.
1107: Mass surveillance and social regulation.
79 perc
124. rész
Sociologist Brendan McQuade on his book "Pacifying the Homeland: Intelligence Fusion and Mass Supervision" and in a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen attends the theater of trauma.
1106: After Labour's loss / Ruined by design.
125 perc
123. rész
Writer Matt Seaton on his New York Review Daily piece "The Strange Death of Social-Democratic England" / Designer Mike Monteiro on his book "Ruined by Design: How Designers Destroyed the World, and What We Can Do to Fix It"
https://www.nybooks.com/daily/2019/12/12/the-strange-death-of-social-democratic-england/
https://www.ruinedby.design/
1105: What's next for dissent in France?
62 perc
122. rész
Writer Jacob Hamburger on the French general strike, Macron, the Yellow Vests and his New York Times opinion piece "Fury in France."
Plus: Everything Chuck learned this year, and This Week in Rotten History...
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/10/opinion/france-strike-macron.html
1104: The Lebanese constitution and the street.
70 perc
121. rész
Anthropologist Maya Mikdashi on her Jadaliyya report "Beyond the Lebanese Constitution: A Primer" / In a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen defends profit.
PLUS: Chuck's favorite books of 2019.
https://www.jadaliyya.com/Details/40318
1103: School is stupid / Against self-driving cars.
117 perc
120. rész
Artist Pen Donovan on her book "School is Stupid: Notes from the Classroom." / Sociologist Nicole Aschoff on her Jacobin article "Against Self-Driving Cars."
PLUS: Chuck's favorite books of 2019.
1102: The future of energy and the Green New Deal.
72 perc
119. rész
Sociologist Daniel Aldana Cohen explores the possibility of a people's energy program under a Green New Deal. Daniel is co-author of "A Planet to Win: Why We Need a Green New Deal" from Verso.
PLUS: Chuck's favorite books of 2019 and This Week in Rotten History...
1101: Before and after the Yellow Vests.
80 perc
118. rész
Student and Plateforme d'Enquêtes Militantes member Effix on the Yellow Vest movement today and tomorrow, and his group's text "Back to the Future: The Yellow Vests Movement and the Riddle of Organization."
PLUS: In a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen tries on money-colored glasses.
https://www.viewpointmag.com/2019/11/15/back-to-the-future/
1100: The right's shadow network.
76 perc
117. rész
Writer Anne Nelson on the Council for National Policy's influence in government and conservative culture, and her book "Shadow Network: Media, Money, and the Secret Hub of the Radical Right."
1099: The dawn of cultural anthropology.
68 perc
116. rész
Writer Charles King on his book "Gods of the Upper Air: How a Circle of Renegade Anthropologists Reinvented Race, Sex, and Gender in the Twentieth Century."
PLUS: Chuck is tired of seeing / not seeing his family, and This Week in Rotten History...
1098: Mourning Thanksgiving.
64 perc
115. rész
Historian David J. Silverman on the realities behind America's Thanksgiving myth and his book "This Land Is Their Land: The Wampanoag Indians, Plymouth Colony, and the Troubled History of Thanksgiving."
https://www.bloomsbury.com/us/this-land-is-their-land-9781632869265/
1097: Beyond capitalist education.
68 perc
114. rész
Eli Meyerhoff on education radicalism, the capitalist university and his book "Beyond Education: Radical Studying for Another World" from University of Minnesota Press.
PLUS: Chuck can't wait to be miserable on Thanksgiving, and This Week in Rotten History...
1096: Racism and retribution at the CIA.
73 perc
113. rész
Former CIA case officer Jeffrey Sterling on his book "Unwanted Spy: The Persecution of an American Whistleblower" from Bold Type Books.
https://www.hachettebookgroup.com/titles/jeffrey-sterling/unwanted-spy/9781568585581/
1095: Power and violence in post-coup Bolivia.
68 perc
112. rész
Journalist Jacquelyn Kovarik on her article "Bolivia’s Anti-Indigenous Backlash Is Growing" for The Nation.
https://www.thenation.com/article/bolivia-morales-whipala/
1094: Real estate racism / War and sleep.
110 perc
111. rész
Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor on her book "Race for Profit: How Banks and the Real Estate Industry Undermined Black Homeownership" / Franny Nudelman on her book "Fighting Sleep: The War for the Mind and the US Military"
1093: The US hand in Latin America.
73 perc
110. rész
Live from Caracas, journalist Lucas Koerner on his FAIR articles "Media Conceal Chile’s State Criminality, Delegitimize Bolivian Democracy" and "Whitewashing Neoliberal Repression in Chile and Ecuador."
https://fair.org/home/media-conceal-chiles-state-criminality-delegitimize-bolivian-democracy/
https://fair.org/home/whitewashing-neoliberal-repression-in-chile-and-ecuador/
1092: Beyond misogyny / Out of the neoliberal wreckage / Lula free.
138 perc
109. rész
Writer Liza Featherstone on her New Republic article "Moving Beyond Misogyny: Why do they hate us?" / Theorist Wendy Brown on her book "In the Ruins of Neoliberalism: The Rise of Antidemocratic Politics in the West" from Columbia University Press. / Brasilwire editor Brian Mier on the release of Brazilian political prisoner Lula da Silva.
1091: Towards counterculture / On economic imperialism.
123 perc
108. rész
Writer Curtis White on his book "Living in a World that Can’t Be Fixed: Reimagining Counterculture Today" / Sociologist Intan Suwandi on her book "Value Chains: The New Economic Imperialism."
https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/611300/living-in-a-world-that-cant-be-fixed-by-curtis-white/9781612198088/
https://monthlyreview.org/product/value-chains/
1090: The alchemy of meth.
70 perc
107. rész
Anthropologist Jason Pine on the industrial alchemy of meth in late capitalist America.
https://www.upress.umn.edu/book-division/books/the-alchemy-of-meth
PLUS: Chuck gets anti-capitalist ASMR tingles and the week in Rotten History.
1089: Chile rises up.
74 perc
106. rész
Live from Santiago, organizer Bree Busk reports on Chile’s civil uprising against neoliberal authoritarian rule.
https://roarmag.org/essays/chileans-stand-fearless-in-the-face-of-repression/
PLUS: Jeff Dorchen examines some momentous events through the lens of The Great Emancipator, Mark Zuckerberg, and Question From Hell.
1088: The price of cash bail.
66 perc
105. rész
Social scientist Christine Scott-Hayward on the deep social cost of a money bail system.
https://www.ucpress.edu/book/9780520298316/punishing-poverty
PLUS: Chuck explains what This Is Hell! actually is.
1087: Notes from Hell world.
64 perc
104. rész
Journalist Luke O'Neil on his book "Welcome to Hell World: Dispatches from the American Dystopia" and Chuck explains what the show isn't.
1086: Turkey's fascist war.
67 perc
103. rész
Journalist Max Zirngast and his Jacobin article "Turkey’s War in Syria Is a War for Fascism."
https://jacobinmag.com/2019/10/turkey-syria-war-fascism-rojava-erdogan-isis-kurds
Plus: Chuck thanks Donald Trump for raising awareness about racism / Question From Hell
1085: White evangelicals in opposition.
68 perc
102. rész
Religious studies scholar Tad Delay on the psychology and anti-politics of evangelicals, and his book “Against: What Does the White Evangelical Want?”
https://wipfandstock.com/against.html
PLUS: Chuck asks to speak to a manager.
1084: Squatters in the capitalist city.
70 perc
101. rész
Sociologist Miguel Martinez on urban democracy, a right to the city and his book "Squatters in the Capitalist City" from Routledge.
https://www.routledge.com/Squatters-in-the-Capitalist-City-Housing-Justice-and-Urban-Politics/Martinez/p/book/9781138856950
PLUS: Chuck watches Greta Thunberg, sitting alone / This week in Rotten History.
1083: Carbon Cowboys from Norway / The Symposium
72 perc
100. rész
Writer Henrik Olav Mathiesen on his Dark Mountain Project essay "Cowboy Nation: Norway's Wild West fantasy" / Jeff Dorchen listens to a podcast about the Joker movie.
1082: Five years after Ferguson / The abortion fight now.
123 perc
99. rész
Andrea Boyles on Black community organizing five years after Ferguson. / Jenny Brown on the long fight for abortion access.
1081: In the deportation machine.
67 perc
98. rész
Journalist Madeleine Schwartz on her New York Review of Books article "Inside the Deportation Courts."
Episode 1080: Clarence Thomas's Black Nationalism
80 perc
97. rész
Political scientist Corey Robin on his book "The Enigma of Clarence Thomas" from Metropolitan Books.
The Price of water / What went wrong at UAW / The exceptional Jew
123 perc
96. rész
Anthropologist Andrea Ballestero examines the future of water - as right and/or commodity / Writer Thomas Adams explores a history of corruption in United Auto Workers leadership / In a Moment of Truth, Jeff Dorchen notes the limits of Jewish exceptionalism
The future of meat / The evangelical mind / Guns on El Paso
141 perc
95. rész
Benjamin Adles Wurgaft on the future of meat on planet Earth / Adam Kotsko on the evangelical mind under endtimes capitalism / Andrew Kennis on violence and fear in El Paso
Holidays in the Anthropocene.
74 perc
94. rész
Anthropologist Amelia Moore on tourism and climate collapse in The Bahamas. Amelia is author of "Destination Anthropocene: Science and Tourism in The Bahamas" from University of California Press.
What it means to be comrades.
63 perc
93. rész
Political theorist Jodi Dean on comrades, allies and political belonging. Jodi is author of the new book "Comrade: An Essay on Political Belonging" from Verso.
https://www.versobooks.com/books/3060-comrade
On the deadly mechanism of US sanctions.
64 perc
92. rész
Policy researcher Kevin Cashman on his article "US Sanctions Are Designed to Kill" for Jacobin.
https://jacobinmag.com/2019/09/us-iran-sanctions-donald-trump-iran-deal-oil-banks
PLUS: Chuck on climate change and American exceptionalism.
Episode 1074: Wasted (Broadcast - September 21st)
214 perc
91. rész
No recycling the plastic disaster [19:35] / On protest violence [1:09:54] / The constitution, the right and power [2:07:09] / The dust up [3:20:53]
Episode 1073: People in Cages (Compilation - September 14 2019)
243 perc
90. rész
Recent interviews on incarceration.
Episode 1072: Young Living (Broadcast - September 7 2019)
242 perc
89. rész
What's next in Hong Kong? [21:44] / Torture and the time bomb [1:07:05] / This generation of leftists [2:07:36] / On urban trauma [3:08:49] / For those we lost at sea [3:49:54]
Episode 1071: Net Work (Broadcast - August 31 2019)
253 perc
88. rész
On capital's holocaust [21:20] / The online spiral [1:11:57] / Healthcare and Black labor [2:10:30] / What the Green New Deal means [3:14:54] / Spiders [3:50:08]
Chuck returns from a holiday in capitalist misery.
8 perc
87. rész
Your bitter, blind, broke, gap-toothed radio host is back from his annual summer vacation, spent waist-deep in torn lottery tickets, car fumes and ceaseless exploitation and cruelty.
Episode 1070: Bering Down (Broadcast - August 24 2019)
239 perc
86. rész
A history of the Bering Strait [19:36] / The limits of free speech [1:10:27] / A second chance for fascists [1:53:00] / Toward anti-racism [2:13:11] / The NYT's anti-Sanders campaign [3:04:08] / The Amazon up in smoke [3:36:14]
Episode 1069: Toward Feminism (Compilation - August 17 2019)
237 perc
85. rész
Recent interviews on visions of feminism.
Writer Jessa Crispin rejects today's mainstreamed, neoliberal feminism [13:22] / Laura Carlsen reports on the “First International Gathering of Politics, Art, Sport, and Culture for Women in Struggle” in Zapatista territory [57:29] / Historian Ashley D. Farmer examines the radical work of women in the Black Power movement [1:19:44] / Organizer Bree Busk explores the rise of a multisectoral, transversal feminist movement in Chile. [1:51:05] / Theorist Sophie Lewis explores the radical horizon of gestational politics [2:34:42] / Writer Zillah Eisenstein explains why the mounting crises we face cannot be reformed individually, but fought collectively. [3:14:55]
Chuck goes on on his podcast about going on another podcast.
9 perc
84. rész
Your bitter, blind, broke, gap-toothed radio host Chuck Mertz talks about what he learned from going on another podcast last week.
Episode 1066: Omnicidal (Broadcast - July 27 2019)
240 perc
83. rész
Puerto Rico in the middle of something [23:50] / Urban-digital exclusion [1:07:14] / Omnicide [2:04:35] / A new understanding of global capitalism [2:58:32] / The Twittering and the Dread [3:51:59]
Episode 1065: Carnation Instant (Broadcast - July 20 2019)
254 perc
82. rész
Hong Kong's protest wave [23:37] / Portugal's Carnation revolution [1:04:58] / In defense of public land [2:05:39] / On fugitive Blackness [3:10:15] / Stork tips [3:55:33]
Episode 1064: Heat Advisory (Broadcast July 16 2019)
245 perc
81. rész
Capital's heat engine [26:47] / The authoritarian horizon [1:11:30] / Imperialism and apartheid [2:06:30] / Buying Lincoln Park [3:08:24] / Thanks advisory conservatives [3:52:25]
Episode 1063: Trailer Hitch (Broadcast - July 6 2019)
243 perc
80. rész
Surrogacy radicalism [21:10] / Logic and the left [1:08:29] / Mobile home housing crisis [2:04:32] / The teachers' revolt [3:07:24] / The Astrocrats! [3:51:10]
Episode 1062: Slow Burn (Broadcast - June 29 2019)
246 perc
79. rész
Disinfo war on Venezuela [20:20] / Return to the politics of Stonewall [1:05:15] / Toward Chav solidarity [2:06:36] / The last 40 years of climate suicide[3:10:09] / Debate enthusiasm [3:55:16]
Episode 1061: Femward (Broadcast - June 22 2019)
239 perc
78. rész
The promise of reparations [21:39] / Okinawan women and US occupation [1:11:48] / Towards a feminist, abolitionist socialism [2:13:47] / Torture in a US prison [3:02:30] / Limit break [3:46:32]
The Best of 2019: So Far
226 perc
77. rész
Highlight interviews from the first half of 2019. Featuring Marco Roth, Richard Seymour, adrienne maree brown, Barnaby Raine and Marshall Auerback.
Episode 1059: Sunk Cost (Broadcast - June 8 2019)
240 perc
76. rész
Flood politics in the Midwest [22:10] / Rape and culture [1:0955] / How place makes race [2:12:55] / A strike education in Brazil [3:14:13] / Interview with a monster [3:45:55]
Episode 1058: America's Drug War - The First Century (Playlist - June 1 2019)
227 perc
75. rész
Recent interviews on America's Drug War.
Johann Hari on the first days of the war on drugs [1:05] / Lisa McGirr on Prohibition and state power [46:30] / Suzanna Reiss on empire and pharmaceutical dominance [1:23:05] / Sam Quinones on opiate distribution networks [2:06:45] / Donna Murch on racial capital, opioids and enforcement [2:51:20] / Jeff Dorchen on his supply of pills [3:40:36]
Episode 1057: Dose Encounters (Broadcast - May 25 2019)
245 perc
74. rész
Against the EU [20:51] / Democracy when? [1:12:38] / Capital and the border [2:03:19] / Psychedelics past and future [3:04:48] / RIP Danny Thompson [3:46:26]
Episode 1056: The Next Crash (Broadcast - May 18 2019)
219 perc
73. rész
Capitalism and the 737 [19:59] / The road to socialism in America [1:05:55] / Why and how to do nothing [1:59:58] / The devil in the Green New Deal [3:02:56] / Nostalgia Time Again [3:28:45]
Episode 1055: Flesh Market (Broadcast - May 11 2019)
239 perc
72. rész
The future of infinite war [19:22] / Class in Black politics [1:08:52] / Whiteness in a box [1:56:57] / An empire of fake news [2:11:49] / Beef and the industrial food complex [3:03:24]
Episode 1054: New World Border (Broadcast - May 4 2019)
244 perc
71. rész
Ecosocialism or extractivism [18:54] / The new global borderlands [1:05:13] / Race, tech and the census [2:04:15] / The Biden problem [3:09:17] / Faults in our deflection [3:48:52]
Episode 1053: Pill Case (Broadcast - April 27 2019)
241 perc
70. rész
The imperial hand in Brazil's coup [19:30] / The rise of Puerto Rico's punitive governance [1:07:23] / The racial line between drug war and opioid crisis [2:10:09] / Private equity pillages grocery stores [3:11:30] / Interkvetchionalism [3:50:55]
Episode 1051: Country Rote (Broadcast - April 13 2019)
223 perc
69. rész
Erdogan and Erdogan's opposition [20:52] / Towards radical reparations [1:01:35] / Four years of US war in Yemen [1:58:20] / Rural America is a real place [2:44:41] / Infinite promise [3:31:59]
Episode 1050: Detroit (Playlist - April 6 2019)
245 perc
68. rész
Episode 1050: Detroit (Playlist - April 6 2019) by This is Hell!
Episode 1049: Pipe Down (Broadcast - March 30 2019)
243 perc
67. rész
Poverty as ideology [20:52] / Mapping pipeline resistance [1:04:15] / US Christians funding Europe's far right [1:33:19] / Feminism for the 99% [2:02:19] / In Erdoğan’s grip [3:04:23] / The Crack in the Façade [3:46:26]
Episode 1048: Jail Brake (Broadcast - March 23 2019)
247 perc
66. rész
The politics of Jewphobia [19:42] / Black resistance to White supremacy [1:10:50] / A life fighting police violence [1:58:32] / Two paths to decarceration [3:12:27] / Purim is a weapon [3:51:21]
Episode 1047: Debt from Above (Broadcast - March 16 2019)
243 perc
65. rész
Venezuela and the global left [20:31] / Global debt supremacy [1:09:10] / Tribal border wall resistance [2:02:52] / With the Youth Climate Strike [2:35:44] / Chile's transversal feminism [3:06:02] / The economy of lies [3:52:49]
Episode 1046: Locked In (Broadcast - March 9 2019)
242 perc
64. rész
The radical potential of pleasure [22:43] / Deschooling as abolitionist practice [1:04:50] / The ends of the border wall [1:57:39] / US socialists and President Bernie [3:07:11] / The window and the view [3:45:53]
Episode 1045: Force Quit (Broadcast - March 2 2019)
240 perc
63. rész
Violence in 21st century life [23:06] / Black abolitionists and the politics of violence [1:06:52] / Walmart and the planned economy [2:09:03] / Corporate cuisine in the 20th century [3:04:15] / In praise of snitches [3:47:59]
The machine is on the run: How progressives won in Chicago's elections.
47 perc
62. rész
Journalist Miles Kampf-Lassin reports on the progressive wave that broke big in Chicago's 2019 elections - backed by the work of social movements and local activists, left candidates campaigning on working class policies challenged the power of neoliberal machine politics, maybe pointing towards a strategy for building electoral power for the people.
Miles wrote the In These Times cover story Chicago's Political Revolution.
Episode 1044: 90s Hits Vol 1 (Playlist - February 23 2019)
218 perc
61. rész
Extremely early This Is Hell! interviews and clips.
First This Is Hell! opening [00:00]
First Moment of Truth [01:23]
Chuck on Princess Diana [09:44]
April Oliver on being fired by CNN [23:34]
Moment of Truth - Peoria [54:21]
Gary Webb on CIA / crack [59:01]
Ryan du Val on the Sistine dorm [1:34:18]
Count Zero on Cult of the Dead Cow [1:48:41]
Moment of Truth - Clinton's impeachment [2:17:15]
Bob the gambler on gambling [2:23:35]
Liz Palmer on Brat Magazine [2:39:40]
Alex Heard on end times subculture [2:58:28]
Moment of Truth - End of the century [3:32:08]
Episode 1043: Power Supply (Broadcast - February 16 2019)
244 perc
60. rész
Drones over Somalia [20:27] / Gutting the IRS [1:03:40] / What is Democracy? [2:05:28] / Building dockworker solidarity [3:14:12] / Leftover vengeance [3:50:13]
Episode 1042: Labour Mire (Broadcast - February 9 2019)
244 perc
59. rész
Sri Lanka's political crisis [21:24] / Pay for the future with public money [1:04:36] / Steven Pinker doesn't understand global poverty [1:37:43] / A Brexit tour of British politics [2:07:50] / On the incarceration of Black woman in America [3:13:04] / Dinosaur fuel [3:54:00]
Episode 1041: Flesh Drive (Broadcast - February 2 2019)
238 perc
58. rész
Liberalism and the New Atheists [23:39] / Colony, collapse in San Juan [1:04:16] / Yellow Vests still on [1:39:11] / Progress and other myths [2:07:37] / Human sex and robots [3:05:51] / Up on the farm [3:43:50]
Episode 1039: Russia Today (Playlist - January 19 2019)
250 perc
57. rész
Recent interviews about Russia.
Larry King on privatization and mortality after communism. [1:14]
Andrew Cockburn on the political uses of a new Red Scare. [28:49]
Peter Pomerantsev on watching Vladimir Putin's television. [1:05:28]
Sean Guillory on hard times facing the Russian left. [1:47:20]
Tony Wood on Putin's hand in post-Soviet Russian politics. [2:39:43]
China Mieville on what Russia 1917 can teach the pre-revolutionary world. [3:25:06]
Episode 1038: Last Call (Broadcast - January 12 2019)
239 perc
56. rész
Climate realism, now [18:24] / On Hungary's slave law [1:04:07] / Meet the White Press [1:38:38] / The politics of sex work [2:10:06] / Rebellion or extinction [3:10:27]
Episode 1037: Best of Capitalism, Part Two (Playlist - January 5 2019)
238 perc
55. rész
Recent highlight interviews on capitalism.
Geoff Mann and Joel Wainwright explore the possible political and economic futures of a planet under rapid climate change. [1:08]
Writer Maximillian Alvarez explores the sanctity of waste and ownership in the digital age. [50:36]
Policy researcher Stacy Mitchell examines the rise and risk of Amazon's ascendant monopoly. [1:37:40]
Writer Adam Kotsko explains why we are all trapped in the moral logic of neoliberalism. [2:15:05]
Writer Pavlos Roufos dives deep into eight years of managed disaster for the Greek people under Europe's austerity regime. [2:56:25]
In a moment of truth, Jeff Dorchen bites the invisible hand that feeds. [3:50:27]
Episode 1036: Best of Capitalism, Part One (Playlist - December 29, 2018)
231 perc
54. rész
Recent highlight interviews on capitalism.
Corey Pein examines work, death and disruption in the digital economy. [01:19]
Julie Wilson views life within, and beyond, the neoliberal frame. [47:38]
Nomi Prins explains how central banks became a global superpower. [1:32:46]
Pavo Jarvensivu and Terre Vaden explore near future economics of a world in climate crisis. [2:19:14]
Helena Norberg-Hodge looks towards localization, worldwide. [2:57:47]
Jeff Dorchen imagines a world that can no longer afford itself [3:44:13]
Episode 1035: Speak and Sell (Broadcast - December 22 2018)
241 perc
53. rész
The new language of capitalism [18:55] / Jacobin's Brazil problem [1:03:37] / Trump is not a fascist [1:35:54] / Russia without Putin [2:07:05] / 2018 in craft beer [3:06:09] / Strong [3:43:31]
Episode 1034: Gilets Jawns (Broadcast - December 15 2018)
243 perc
52. rész
Yellow Vests revolt [21:12] / When we talk about rape [1:07:14] / The human toll of American wars [2:03:52] / The Pistachio Wars [2:35:23] / Why we kill ourselves [3:11:58] / Full [3:48:20]
Episode 1033: No Debate (Broadcast - December 8 2018)
241 perc
51. rész
Solidarity beyond borders [20:30] / Beware suburban fascists [1:01:56] / Co-ops won't bridge the racial wealth gap [1:35:44] / Between Black thought and White ears [2:06:06] / Debate is stupid, don't change my mind [3:09:00] / 101 Welbutrins [3:47:48]
Episode 1032: Past Due (Broadcast December 1 2018)
243 perc
50. rész
Between cops and White supremacists [20:31] / Reclaiming the Black past [1:03:44] / A history of America First [2:05:38] / Africa in the radical imagination [3:00:29] / What we became [3:51:00]
Episode 1031: Staff Picks: Alex (Playlist - November 24 2018)
268 perc
49. rész
Producer Alex picks his favorite interviews of 2018, featuring: Roy Scranton, Radha D'Souza, Tithi Bhattacharya, Asad Haider, C. Riley Snorton and Max Haiven.
Episode 1029: Ballotproof (Broadcast - November 10 2018)
270 perc
48. rész
Voting is not "harm reduction" [23:33] / No future for Greece [1:04:46] / Cuba, capital and the 21st century [2:06:36] / Blame capitalism, not humanity [3:02:37] / On Some Bats of the Red Forest [3:41:39] / The Congressional ideology gap [3:58:53]
Episode 1026: Minions [Broadcast - October 20 2018]
70 perc
47. rész
Writer Brendan O'Connor profiles the Proud, White face of ruling class violence in America [7:39] / Writer Malaika Jabali explores politics in a Black, Midwestern city abandoned by the Democratic Party. [35:50]
Episode 1025: City Limits (Broadcast - October 13 2018)
69 perc
46. rész
Live from Mexico City, correspondent Laura Carlsen reports on Trump, AMLO and the ends of NAFTA. / Journalist Rachel M. Cohen examines a 50 year shift - in people and politics - between cities and suburbs.
Episode 1024: Death Blips (Broadcast - October 9 2018)
61 perc
45. rész
Eleanor Penny on Steve Bannon's European Dream [5:44] / Aaron Timms on a liberal order running out the clock. [36:45]
Episode 1022: Authority Question (Broadcast - September 22 2018)
242 perc
44. rész
Detroit's housing chaos [25:29] / The new voter suppression [1:05:09] / The case for anti-authoritarianism [2:10:04] / Childcare under capitalism [3:06:36] / On microgenerations [3:49:45]
Episode 1021: The Best of the 2008 Financial Crisis (Playlist - September 15 2018)
248 perc
43. rész
Interviews exploring the causes and effects of the 2008 financial crisis, featuring: Jeff Faux, Ann Pettifor, James Steele, Kai Wright, Robin Hanel and Michael Hudson.
Episode 1020: Energy Futures (Broadcast - September 8 2018)
63 perc
42. rész
Biophysical economist Paavo Järvensivu and philosopher Tere Vadén explore the near future of a world in capital and climate crisis. [16:52]
Episode 1019: Arts and Grafts (Broadcast - September 1 2018)
243 perc
41. rész
What's next for Brazil's left? [20:14] / Art under capitalism [1:06:27] / The Chapo style in American politics [2:03:40] / Black radicalism for the 21st century [3:08:24] / Some thoughts on racial thinking [3:45:08]
Episode 1018: How We Got Here (Playlist - August 25 2018)
232 perc
40. rész
Recent interviews on neoliberal politics, global capitalism and the right's rise to power.
Episode 1017: Staff Picks: Leo (Playlist - August 18 2018)
247 perc
39. rész
Recent interviews on capitalism, technology and systems of control - handpicked by Producer Leo.
Episode 1014: Red Into Green (Full Broadcast - July 28 2018)
242 perc
38. rész
A leftist voice lesson [22:14] / Towards ecosocialism [1:12:19] / A black+trans history [2:05:36] / Against loiter lawfare [3:08:22] / Not to be of use [3:45:35]
Episode 1013: Violent Ends (Full Broadcast - July 21 2018)
250 perc
37. rész
New life in the Anthropocene [28:32] / When Black athletes stand up [1:08:17] / How violence solves inequality [2:09:27] / The triumph of surveillance tech [3:10:02] / Goodbye Schnepp [3:51:59]
Episode 1012: Doom and Bloom (Full Broadcast - July 14 2018)
240 perc
36. rész
The death of media [21:24] / The poisoning of Flint [1:11:13] / Living on a dying planet [2:07:34] / Green revolution in Rojava [3:01:45] / Degenerates against fascism [3:43:03]
Episode 1011: No Entry (Full Broadcast - July 7 2018)
251 perc
35. rész
New populism in France [23:14] / America's Black pioneers [1:07:19] / How we built the wall [2:07:48] / Tech's fake resistance [3:11:39] / Space enough and time [3:53:13]
Episode 1010: Lost Time (Full Broadcast - June 30 2018)
240 perc
34. rész
Trumpism before Trump [21:16] / Tomorrow's elections in Mexico [1:06:55] / Invisible detainees [1:33:43] / How Christians destroyed the Classical world [2:06:35] / The tollroad to serfdom [3:00:46] / SCROTUS opinion [3:48:06]
Episode 1009: IDPROLE (Full Broadcast - June 23 2018)
240 perc
33. rész
The globalist's blindspot [19:02] / From identity to solidarity [59:23] / American oblivion [1:59:05] / Grand theft paycheck [3:02:47] / Kanye's choice, part three [3:42:52]
Episode 1008: No Sphere (Full Broadcast - June 16 2018)
261 perc
32. rész
Inside the teenage brain [19:46] / Hard times for the Russian left [1:00:57] / Beneath the pork industry (rebroadcast) [2:09:56] / To global localization [3:17:29] / Kanye's Choice Part Two [4:06:47]
Episode 1007: Rising Signs (Full Broadcast - June 9 2018)
239 perc
31. rész
Fighting fascism today [20:09] / Anxiety season in Puerto Rico [59:46] / Italy's hard right turn [1:35:00] / The new American shore [2:08:56] / The White authoritarians [3:05:50] / Kanye's choice [3:48:02]
Episode 1006: Crash Crops (Full Broadcast - June 2 2018)
240 perc
30. rész
Global inequality's long division [20:36] / Brazil's new strike wave [1:00:19] / Immigrant detainee labor [1:34:59] / The Blackness of resistance [2:08:03] / Death on the American farm [3:08:12] / Don't rock the boat [3:46:46]
Episode 1004: Feeling Better (Full Broadcast - May 19 2018)
161 perc
29. rész
Passive voice aggression [16:45] / The politics of empathy [1:04:38] / Labor's last weapon [2:01:16]
Episode 1003: Labor Nopes (May 12 2018)
241 perc
28. rész
Countering the far right [17:56] / On bullshit jobs [1:12:41] / Automating inequality [2:05:32] / Culture war in the Trump era [3:09:35] / Rape and rhetoric [3:45:45]
Episode 1002: Collusion Course (Full Broadcast - May 5 2018)
240 perc
27. rész
Militarism and poverty [19:02] / The left must return to politics [1:04:32] / How bankers bought world power [2:06:44] / The mandatory arbitration boom [3:07:47] / The riskiest comedy [3:41:30]
Episode 1001: Extremely Offline (Full Broadcast - April 28 2018)
240 perc
26. rész
On peace in Korea [21:10] / The limits of human rights [1:03:23] / End World Bank ranking [2:08:33] / Dissent as commodity [2:37:04] / Cuba's offline internet [3:11:45] / Existential fret [3:49:06]
Episode 1000: Warming Signs (Full Broadcast - April 24 2018)
257 perc
25. rész
The disruptor's blindspot [17:26] / Teacher's strikes are women's strikes [1:06:36] / The ghost of Allan Bloom [1:36:27] / Tomorrow's climate politics [2:0903] / The business of denialism [3:10:30] / Eerie canal [3:55:21]
Episode 999: Field Notes (Full Broadcast - April 14 2018)
231 perc
24. rész
Seeing micropolitics [15:51] / From Orban's Hungary [1:05:48] / Lula and Brazil's left [1:39:11] / The apocalypse of settler colonialism [2:07:41] / Agricultureculture [3:07:52] / No one can afford to live [3:33:20]
Episode 997: Zone Defense (Full Broadcast - March 31 2018)
241 perc
23. rész
Consultation culture [20:58] / Against Chicago's gang database [1:02:02] / The non-state of ZAD [1:36:41] / Geographies of resistance [2:08:16] / Béisbol politics [3:11:39] / From Egypt to Sandy Hook [3:46:20]
Episode 996: Wage of Consent (Full Episode - March 24 2018)
239 perc
22. rész
The new state extremism [15:09] / The murder of Marielle Franco [1:02:00] / To Native food sovereignty [1:34:32] / The low-wage labor movement [2:05:50] / Amazon is the market [3:06:09] / Dalai Lemma [3:45:57]
Episode 995: Rights Reserved (Full Broadcast - March 17 2018)
241 perc
21. rész
Not talking about race [17:27] Rebel women, unite [1:04:50] Immigration under Trump [1:36:51] What's wrong with rights [2:08:55] Against fitness [3:11:33] Disrupt D20 [3:43:45]
Episode 993: Road To Joy (Full Broadcast - March 3 2018)
241 perc
20. rész
The economics of educational apartheid [17:54] / West Virginia teachers on strike [1:07:46] / Clean metals, dirty mining [1:56:51] / Finding happiness in other people [2:12:14] / #MeToo's online problem [3:08:52] / It ain't over [3:48:15]
Episode 992: Human / Nature (Full Broadcast - February 24 2018)
243 perc
19. rész
The work of Black nationalist women [17:28] / Nature, time and the coming climate storm [1:01:38] / The rebirth of White nationalism [2:06:01] / Millennials, 1982 - Present [3:06:38] / Good guys, bad guys [3:47:36]
Episode 991: Polis Scanner (Full Broadcast - February 17 2018)
223 perc
18. rész
Getting Appalachia right [16:33] / Korea's diplomatic game [59:14] / Nationalize Elon Musk [1:35:04] / Why liberalism failed [2:00:42] / Lawfare in Brazil [3:07:58] / The narrative crutch [3:33:35]
Episode 990: Incogito (Full Broadcast - February 10 2018)
239 perc
30. rész
Consciousness and the physical world [16:21] / The case against Andrew Cuomo [1:03:02] / No Olympics, anywhere [1:35:40] / The internet was always spying on you [2:06:04] / Let strippers work [3:02:06] / No water, no power in Puerto Rico [3:37:18]
Episode 989: Trigger Discipline (Full Broadcast - February 3 2018)
238 perc
29. rész
The power of Black and Brown history in America [16:38] Women on the far-right [1:00:46] The case against intersectionality [1:35:57] The other side of guns [2:06:41] What Trump changed [3:06:36] Notes on John Lennon's piano [3:46:45]
Episode 988: Connectivity Error (Full Broadcast - January 27 2018)
239 perc
28. rész
Private equity eats public pensions [18:13] / On indigenous feminism [1:03:58] / Bipartisanship is a curse [1:35:56] / Disconnection and depression [2:07:10] / To talk about race [3:05:38] / Infinite Just [3:48:22]
Episode 987: Robbermade (Full Broadcast - January 20 2018)
243 perc
27. rész
Europe's fault lines [17:08] The failures of means testing [1:02:57] Iran's periphery revolts [1:35:02] Corporate capture, state by state [1:35:02] On Christian thought and racial science [3:03:56] Thank you for your service economy [3:48:08]
Episode 986: State / Farm (Full Broadcast - January 13 2018)
242 perc
26. rész
A deep history of the earliest states [18:05] Honduras under Hernández [1:01:58] No time left, leftists [1:36:38] Finance at the fringes [2:08:10] On East Chicago's poisoned ground [3:05:48] The unseen country [3:44:33]
Episode 985: Staff Picks 2017 (Compilation - January 6 2018)
244 perc
25. rész
This Is Hell's favorite interviews of 2017.
Rebecca Liao on the reordered politics of authoritarian capitalism. [00:01:50]
Eliott Sperber on the rise of the neoliberal border wall. [53:20]
Zoé Samudzi and William C. Anderson on the anarchism of Blackness [1:34:07]
Max Haiven on financialization and reactionary authoritarianism. [2:26:42]
Tasos Sagris on the work of anarchists in austerity-era Greece [2:55:46]
Mary Otto on America’s most and least visible healthcare crisis. [3:19:28]
Episode 984: Most Clicked 2017 (Compliation - December 30 2017)
232 perc
24. rész
The six most popular This Is Hell! interviews of 2017.
Corey Robin on modern conservatism [1:10:00]
Angela Nagle on the politics of misanthropy [41:46]
Bruce Dixon on the failures of #Resistance [1:24:12]
Henry Giroux on cruelty and isolation in politics [1:54:24]
Jodi Dean on the promise of the Communist Manifesto [2:29:09]
Thomas Frank on the Democratic Party's dead end [3:10:45]
Episode 983 - Seasonable Doubt (Full Broadcast - December 23 2017)
241 perc
23. rész
The meaning of belief [18:15] / Poor Whites and slavery [59:59] / The meanings of Christmas [2:05:09] / The year in beer [3:02:46] / On socialist falafel [3:49:14]
Episode 982: Body Politics (Full Broadcast - December 16 2017)
242 perc
22. rész
Migrant labor at the end of retirement [19:03] / Voices from Brazil's left [1:01:42] / Worker pain and capitalism [1:37:10] / Tech's coded inequality [2:08:51] / Cedric Robinson's Black radicalism [3:07:53] / Bad seeds of speculation [3:49:02]
Episode 981: Age Gap (Full Broadcast - December 9 2017)
238 perc
21. rész
Millennials under capitalism [19:07] / Towards humane immigration [1:05:28] / 48 years after Fred Hampton [1:33:01] / Narco-politics in Honduras [2:05:08] / Scientific terminology and popular understanding [2:31:38] / The NFL's downward spiral [3:11:14] / The cereal is the message [3:43:47]