Month: August 2006

Wed. 8-30: Andrei Codrescu on New Orleans

New Orleans, Mon Amour: Twenty Years of Writings from the City LISTEN TO THIS SHOW ONLINE
On the one-year anniversary of Katrina, we turn to ANDREI CODRESCU for comment. For two decades he’s been living in and writing about his adopted city. “Katrina was only a storm,” he said recently, “but what followed was so hideous that, one year later, we can only shake our heads — and vomit.” Andrei’s book New Orleans, Mon Amour is an epic love song, a clear-eyed elegy, a cultural celebration, and a thank-you note to New Orleans in its Golden Age.

PLUS: The ex-gay movement: Every year, hundreds of gay men and lesbians join ex-gay ministries in an attempt to convert to non-homosexual Christian lives. Tanya Erzen has followed the New Hope Ministry in Northern California, a Christian Right organization that insists that “change is possible.” Tanya teaches at Ohio State; her book is Straight to Jesus: Sexual and Christian Conversions in the Ex-Gay Movement.

Modern TimesALSO: BOB DYLAN’s new CD Modern Times was released yesterday — “I am tryin’ to love my neighbor . . . but, oh mother, things ain’t going well.” SEAN WILENTZ will comment; he’s the official historian at BobDylan.com, and was nominated for a Grammy for his liner notes to Bob Dylan Live 1966. PLAYLIST: “Thunder on the Mountain.” “Workingman’s Blues #2,” “Ain’t Talkin’,” “The Levee’s Gonna Break”

More stuff to read: Jon Wiener on the LA Times op-ed page: “Iraq isn’t the Philippines”

Wed. 8/23: Anger in the Arab World

The Iron Cage: The Story of the Palestinian Struggle for StatehoodLISTEN TO THIS SHOW ONLINE
Anger in the Arab World: RASHID KHALIDI
talks about the aftermath of Israel’s war in Lebanon. Rashid Khalidi is Edward Said Professor of Arab Studies at Columbia; his new book, The Iron Cage: The Story of the Palestinian Struggle for Statehood, will be published in October. He wrote about “Anger in the Arab World” for The Nation.

ALSO: The Iraqi armed forces fiasco: President Bush often says, “As the Iraqis stand up, we will stand down.” DAVID J. MORRIS recently spent five days imbedded with an Iraqi armed forces unit and the American troops training them. He found US marines demoralized by bureaucratic mismanagement, inadequate training for the Iraqis, and an astonishing shortage of equipment and supplies. Dave is a former Marine officer and the author of Storm on the Horizon: Khafji — The Battle That Changed the Course of the Gulf War (Free Press). He teaches English at UC Irvine and wrote about “The Iraqi Forces Fiasco” for Salon.com.

Bait and Switch: The (Futile) Pursuit of the American Dream PLUS: BARBARA EHRENREICH: her book Nickel and Dimed sold more than a million copies and was on the bestseller list for more than 100 weeks. Now her new book is out in paperback – Bait and Switch: The (Futile) Pursuit of the American Dream. It’s an undercover exploration of the shadowy world of the white collar unemployed. The story is alternately grim and hilarious.
(originally broadcast September 21, 2005.)

MORE TO READ: Jon Wiener on Barbara Ehrenreich’s Bait and Switch.
NEW: JON WIENER, “AN OPTIMISTIC VOICE IN ISRAEL”

Wed. 8/16: One Party Country

One Party Country: The Republican Plan for Dominance in the 21st CenturyLISTEN TO THIS SHOW ONLINE
Tom Hamburger and Peter Wallsten of the LA Times lay out “The Republican Plan for Dominance in the 2lst Century” – how right-wing strategists are neutralizing the Democrats’ traditional advantages with Latinos, women, African-Americans and Jews — and even union members. Tom and Peter will be speaking and signing One Party Country Friday at 700pm at Dutton’s Brentwood, 11975 San Vicente Blvd. in L.A.

Also: IAN WILLIAMS says the winner in Lebanon is Hezbollah: Israel succeeded in destroying the infrastructure of Lebanon and killing hundreds of Lebanese civilians, but “Hezbollah now enjoys immense prestige across the Arab and Muslim world for standing against Israeli arms longer than any of the national armies of the region.”
Ian is UN Correspondent for The Nation and the Deadline Pundit at blogspot.com.

The Great Black Way: L.A. in the 1940s and the Lost African-American RenaissancePlus: The Great Black Way: L.A.’s Central Avenue in the 1940s and the Lost African-American Renaissance: R. J. SMITH explores the world of rhythm and blues, black comics with socially-tinged humor, and the start of the popular civil rights movement in Los Angeles. R.J. is a senior editor at Los Angeles Magazine. He’s written for the Village Voice, Rolling Stone, and The New York Times Magazine.
PLAYLIST: Charles Brown, Joe Liggins, Big Jay McNeely
.

WEB EXTRA: What is George Bush reading on his summer vacation in Crawford? Press Secretary Tony Snow said he just finished “The Stranger” by Albert Camus. Maureen Dowd asked what Bush thought about the book. “He liked it,” Snow replied.
READ Maureen Dowd, “Camus Comes to Crawford”

KPFK Wed. 8/9: Fiasco in Iraq

Fiasco: The American Military Adventure in IraqLISTEN TO THIS INTERVIEW ONLINE
Fiasco: The American Military Adventure In Iraq: THOMAS RICKS of the Washington Post has written a devastating story about the incompetence and folly of the Bush administration’s war. Michiko Kakutani (NY Times) called it “staggeringly vivid and persuasive.”

LISTEN TO THIS INTERVIEW ONLINE
Plus: Joe Lieberman is dead meat: HAROLD MEYERSON explains how Ned Lamont defeated the pro-war senator in the Connecticut Democratic primary on Tuesday – and what it means for American politics. Harold writes for the LA Weekly, the American Prospect, and the Washington Post op-ed page.

LISTEN TO THIS INTERVIEW ONLINE
Also: the war in Lebanon: ROANE CAREY comments on Israel’s continuing bombing of Lebanese civilians, and Hezbollah’s continuing rocket attacks on Israeli civilians. Roane is senior editor at The Nation and editor of The Other Israel: Voices of Refusal and Dissent.

Dorothy HealeyLISTEN TO THIS INTERVIEW ONLINE
Finally: MIKE DAVIS pays tribute to DOROTHY HEALEY – the lifelong activist died Sunday. She was 91. “The Left’s ‘greatest generation’ – those tough-as-nails children of Ellis Island who built the CIO, fought Jim Crow in Manhattan and Alabama, and buried their friends in the Spanish earth – have now almost entirely passed from the American scene. It is an inestimable, heart-wrenching loss, and it is now symbolized by the death of Dorothy Ray Healey.”  (Photo by Darrow Montgomery)
READ Marc Cooper on Dorothy; Harold Meyerson on Dorothy

More stuff to read:
Jon Wiener, “Israeli Doves Challenge the War” at TheNation.com.

Jon Wiener, “Beyond My Lai: New Revealations of Vietnam Atrocities” at TheNation.com

KPFK Wed. 8-3: Israel’s war on civilians

Prophets Outcast: A Century of Dissident Jewish Writing About Zionism and IsraelLISTEN TO THIS SHOW ONLINE
Over the weekend Israel bombed Qana, killing 56 civilians, 37 of them children. Israel officially apologized but claims Hezbollah tactics are responsible for civilian deaths in Lebanon. ADAM SHATZ, literary editor of The Nation, comments. Adam wrote about Israel and Lebanon for the LA Times op-ed page Tuesday. He’s also editor of Prophets Outcast:
A Century of Dissident Jewish Writing About Zionism and Israel.

WEB EXTRA: Report from inside Israel, from Gideon Levy of Haaretz: “Israel is sinking into a strident, nationalistic atmosphere and darkness is beginning to cover everything.”

ALSO: Pro-war Sen. JOE LIEBERMAN may be defeated in the Connecticut primary next Tuesday by anti-war challenger Ned Lamont. Bill and Hillary have endorsed Lieberman; the New York Times has endorsed Ned Lamont. JOHN NICHOLS explains: he’s Washington correspondent for The Nation and writes “The Online Beat” blog at TheNation.com.
UPDATE: New poll Thurs 8/3 has Lamont ahead 54-41.

Stranger in a Strange Land: Encounters in the Disunited StatesPLUS: Stranger in a Strange Land: “Before I came to America from England, I asked an American journalist in London what kind of reactions to expect. “Well, when they hear an English accent Americans usually add twenty points to your IQ,” he replied. Recalling that the authors of The Bell Curve had claimed that black people have an IQ fifteen points lower than whites, I was heartened to think that even in the eyes of the most hardened racist I would still come out five points ahead.”” GARY YOUNGE is a correspondent for The Guardian.