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Environmental Destruction & U.S. Policy
Jane McAlevey
Myths of U.S. Middle East Policy
Stephen Zunes
U.S. policy in the Middle East is promoted as advancing the causes of peace, international law and human rights. These myths, repeated like mantras on the evening news, distort and obscure reality. The region is in turmoil and is ruled by emirs, sheiks, kings and dictators, some of whom are the U.S.’s closest allies. In […]
Vietnam: War Crimes
Deborah Nelson
Vietnam never really goes away and one should never forget Laos and Cambodia. It’s a huge stain on the American conscience. The Vietnamese were reduced to gooks and dinks who lived in hooches in Indian country. They were herded into strategic hamlets. Their lands were turned into free-fire zones and carpet bombed. They were subjected […]
Imagining the Past/Remembering the Future
Antonio Skarmeta
Interview by David Barsamian. Recorded at KGNU.
Old Wine, New Bottles
Noam Chomsky
M.I.A. or Mythmaking in America
Bruce Franklin
A persistent right-wing myth for decades after the U.S. left Vietnam was that some soldiers were left behind and that treacherous politicians in Washington were doing nothing about it. The phantom captives were designated as MIA: missing in action. There was no evidence to support the claim but it helped to demonize the Vietnamese and […]
Guatemala: Bridge of Courage
Jennifer Harbury
Guatemala is the largest and most populous of the Central American republics. It was the center of the great Mayan civilization. The country was conquered by Spain in 1524 and remained a colony for more than three centuries. A pivotal event in its modern history was the 1954 CIA- sponsored coup which overthrew its democratically […]
Wobegon Meets Alternative Radio
Garrison Keillor
An interview with the man from Lake Wobegon. Hear Keillor as you’ve never heard him before on pompous liberals, pious conservatives, NPR, PBS, talk radio and more. You won’t want to miss it. Interview by David Barsamian. Recorded at KGNU.
Living Democracy
Frances Moore Lappe
Democracy is something most of us take for granted. It may be flawed but it is the best thing going. However, signs that all is not well with our venerable system are increasingly evident. Fewer and fewer people bother to vote. Negative opinion of and hostility toward public institutions are constantly rising. Citizens feel disconnected […]
The Future of Public Interest Law
Ralph Nader
Recorded at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles, Nader makes a powerful case to graduating law students to practice public interest law and work for the common good.
The Missing Elements of U.S. Middle East Policy
Stephen Zunes
U.S. rhetoric about the war against terrorism creates many contradictions. While we criticize the fundamentalist Taliban regime in Afghanistan, we ignore the excesses of the Saudi Arabian theocratic dictatorship. U.S. foreign policy creates extremists. The more we militarize the Middle East, the less secure it becomes. Instead of relying on arms sales and air strikes, […]
Harvard Trade Union Program
Howard Zinn
2 CDs Recorded at Harvard.
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