News and Public Affairs 9-6-2021

News and Public Affairs 9-6-2021

2021-09-06T13:27:57-04:00September 6th, 2021|Blog, Weekly Guests|Comments Off on News and Public Affairs 9-6-2021

Counterpoint with Scott Harris

1) Jenny Brown, a member of National Women’s Liberation and a leader in the fight to get the morning-after pill over the counter in the US, as a plaintiff in the winning lawsuit, is the author of “Birth Strike: The Hidden Fight Over Women’s Work,” and her latest book, “Without Apology: The Abortion Struggle Now.” She’ll discuss her views on the Supreme Court’s 5-4 decision that dealt a massive blow to reproductive freedom by declining to block a Texas law that prohibits abortions after six weeks of pregnancy — and deputizes private citizens to enforce it.

2) Lindsay Koshgarian, Program Director of the National Priorities Project discusses her group’s recent report, “State of Insecurity: The Cost of Militarization Since 9/11,” as well as Biden administration foreign policy related to ongoing U.S. wars around the world.

3) Yael Bridge, an Emmy-nominated documentary filmmaker based in Oakland produced Left on Purpose, winner of the Audience Award at DOC NYC, and produced Saving Capitalism with Robert Reich. Yael talks about her new film, “The Big Scary ‘S’ Word,” which recounts U.S. history from a socialist perspective, arguing that some of our widely celebrated social advances were inspired by socialist activists and movements.

4) Michael Zweig, professor of economics emeritus at Stony Brook University in New York and author of the book, “The Working Class Majority: America’s Best Kept Secret,” talks about the state of the US labor movement in 2021 — and related topics including the passing of AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka and the future of the proposed congressional legislation, the Protecting the Right to Organize Act or PRO-ACT.

Monday, September 6, 8 pm and archived.

Writer’s Voice with Francesca Rheannon

We talk with Julia Sweig about her acclaimed book, Lady Bird Johnson: In Plain Sight.

When the assassination of JFK catapulted Lyndon Baines Johnson into the White House, few among the public knew much about the new president — and even less about the new First Lady, Lady Bird Johnson. LBJ had to try to heal a grieving nation. He was confronted with the great defining issues of that time — and, we could argue, ours: civil rights, income inequality and military conflict abroad. The person he most leaned on for advice and support was his wife.

Lady Bird chronicled her time in the White House in an extraordinary set of notebooks and tape recordings that reveal her centrality to the Johnson Administration. As my guest, Julia Sweig reveals in her book based on that chronicle, Lady Bird Johnson: In Plain Sight, the First Lady was deeply insightful and profoundly engaged with the issues of the day. Her Highway Beautification program, for example, tackled the issue of environmental racism way before environmental racism was even a term. Yet as protests against the Vietnam War exploded across the nation, this brilliant woman found herself increasingly out of touch.

In addition to her brilliant and fascinating book, Sweig has also produced a spellbinding podcast on the same topic, using Lady Bird Johnson’s own tape recordings.

Julia Sweig is a New York Times bestselling author, scholar and entrepreneur. Her writing has appeared in the New York Times, the Atlantic, the Washington Post, Foreign Affairs, the Nation and other venues. She is a senior research fellow at the LBJ School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas-Austin. Lady Bird Johnson: Hiding in Plain Sight is her fourth book.

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Then, after exiting Afghanistan, President Biden is turning his attention to China, implying that China is a serious security threat that the US may have to meet with force. But security analyst Michael Klare disagrees. We talk with him about his recent post in The Nation magazine, The Real Existential Threat Is Our Overheating Planet. We also hear a clip from our 2020 conversation with Klare about his book on the Defense Department and climate change: All Hell Breaking Loose.

On August 31, when President Biden spoke about the pullout of US and allied troops in Afghanistan, he mentioned a pivot to what he termed “competition” with China and Russia. There have been a lot of hints coming from the White House lately that that “competition” is all about beefing up the US military to meet what Biden and his Pentagon advisors see as a future existential threat coming from China’s increasing weapons investments.

But energy and security expert Michael Klare says the Pentagon and the Administration are missing the real existential threat: climate catastrophe will overwhelm both China’s military and ours.

We also play a clip from our interview with him about his book on the Defense Department and climate change: All Hell Breaking Loose.

Monday, September 6, 10 PM and archived.

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