Background Briefing has a new home at BackgroundBriefing.org.
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Background Briefing has a new home at BackgroundBriefing.org.
Please visit and bookmark the new site. You can search show archives here.
2011 Program Archive
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| We begin with the death of the Libyan dictator Muammar Qaddafi who was killed by rebel fighters today as he tried to escape from his besieged hometown of Sirte. A former Libyan diplomat who was a translator for Qaddafi, Dr. Abubaker Saad joins us to discuss the end of a long dictatorship and the beginning of a new chapter for an oil rich country with the a small population who could all benefit greatly from a redistribution of wealth and democratic rule. |
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Then Dr. David Ruccio joins us. He is a professor of Economics at Notre Dame University and has just returned from Italy where street protests turned violent. We discuss how non-violent protests against Wall Street have spread around the world and what this global awakening of the 99% might lead to as demands for economic justice confront the power of the world’s oligarchs who either benefit from dictatorial rule or increasingly dominate electoral politics in democracies.
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| Then finally we speak with the film maker of a new documentary feature opening tomorrow, Friday, "The Revenge of the Electric Car". Chris Paine joins us to discuss his sequel to "Who Killed the Electric Car" that shows how Nissan, GM and Tesla Motors have rediscovered electric cars with a vengeance in the face of a growing worldwide public demand for clean cars. |
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| We begin with the former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich and discuss the austerity trap that the economy is stuck in with political gridlock and election politics digging the hole deeper. However there is some reason to hope that as the powerful and privileged one percent try to take us back to the Gilded Age, a movement forming might rally the nation to reclaim the American Dream for the 99%. |
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| Then we look into the shameful growth of student debt that will reach one trillion dollars this year. David Halperin, who is the director of Campus Progress at the Center for American Progress joins us to explain the increasing debt load students are now burdened with as they face a shrinking jobs market, and how lobbyists for the for-profit college industry have managed to get Congress to have taxpayer money charged back to unwitting students at exorbitant rates for a worthless education and a useless diploma. |
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| Then finally we talk about drone warfare and the inevitable blowback that will come as the U.S. loses its technological edge and other nations develop their own drones. David Cortwright, the Director of Policy Studies at the Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies at Notre Dame University joins us to discuss the future implications of the proliferation of remote-control killing machines. |
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Then finally we speak with Robert Greenwald a producer, director and political activist. He is the founder of Brave New Films. We discuss his new documentary, "The Koch Brothers Exposed," which sheds light on the toxic harm that the Koch Brothers are inflicting on this country. |
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| We begin with a political analysis of the likely effect the Occupy Wall Street movement will have on the future of progressive politics in America and the elections next year. Michael Lind joins us. He has an article at Salon.com “Occupation and Realignment; How a Real Leftist Movement Could Create a New Center in American Politics”, and we discuss the promise and pitfalls of a movement that now has a powerful and unifying economic message, which could be diffused by identity politics and other single-issue protests. |
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| Then we will examine the Occupy Wall Street movement further with Michael Heaney, who is a professor of Organizational Studies and Political Science at the University of Michigan. We will discuss what political agenda and strategy will eventually emerge from this movement that is an apparent counterweight to the right-wing Tea Party, and how much it is a response to an acute sense of threat on the political left which feels its political representatives have failed them. |
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Then finally Bill Maher joins us. He is the host of HBO’s “Real Time with Bill Maher” and we talk politics and humor, in a political environment where political candidates, many of whom are running for president, provide such a rich serving of comedic absurdity that it is difficult to tell whether life is imitating comedy or comedy is imitating life. |
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| We begin with the latest sting by the Republican dirty trickster James O’Keefe, aimed at Lawrence Mishel, the president of the Economic Policy Institute who joins us to explain why he is the target of the GOP hitman who brought down ACORN, went after CNN and NPR and got arrested trying to sting Senator Mary Landrieu. |
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| Then with the world’s population about to pass 7 billion, we look at population growth in terms of biodiversity with Amy Harwood who is the 7 Billion and Counting Campaign Coordinator at the Center for Biodiversity. We discuss how the earth’s resources, already stretched thin, can cope with the current population, let alone an expected 8 billion people by 2025 and 10 billion by 2083. |
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| Then, following President Obama’s dedication of the Martin Luther King memorial on Sunday, at which he alluded to criticism of the civil rights leader from African/Americans that is similar to the criticism the president is getting from some in the black community who feel he is not doing enough and is going too slow. Darnell Hunt joins us. He is the director of the Ralph J. Bunche Center for African American Studies and professor of Sociology at UCLA. With record unemployment in the African/American community, particularly among young men, we discuss the president’s standing as a critical election year approaches. |
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| We begin with the 99% insurrection that began with the Occupy Wall Street movement and has now gone global with massive street protests in Spain and violent clashes in Italy. Stephany Griffith Jones, the Financial Markets Program Director at the Initiative for Policy Dialogue at Columbia University joins us from the European banking haven, Luxemborg. |
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| Then we get a point by point rebuttal of the plausibility of the plot involving an Iranian/American used car salesman and a Mexican drug cartel hit man, who according to U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder planned to assassinate the Saudi Ambassador at his favorite Georgetown restaurant. Rasool Nafisi, who has studied the Pasdaran, the Guardian of Revolution in Iran, joins us to discuss the growing tensions between Saudi Arabia and Iran that could lead to a Sunni/Shia confrontation in the Middle East. |
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| Then finally we look into the latest deployment of U.S. troops to a war zone, this time in Africa, where U.S. military advisors are joining with the Ugandan military to eliminate the Lord’s Resistance Army, a murderous cult operating on the border with the Congo. John Prendegast, the co-founder of the Enough Project, an initiative to end genocide and crimes against humanity joins us. He was Director for African Affairs on the National Security Council in the Clinton Administration. |
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