Archive for the 'Podcasts' Category

Page 2 of 7

Doug Allen: Gandhi in Times of Terror

The podcast features Professor Doug Allen on “Recent Reflections from India: the November 26, 2008 terrorist attacks in Mumbai and Gandhi in times of terror.” Doug spoke on February 19, 2009 at the University of Maine in Orono, Maine just after returning from a trip to India. He describes this recent time in India as one where there is great interest in the nonviolent message of the Mahatma—considering that the 26-11 terror attacks on Mumbai have shaken India to the core.

His talk covers material that also appears in his article for the new Spring 2009 issue of the Maine Peace Action Committee Newsletter, “Is Nonviolence Relevant when Dealing with Terrorism?” Welcome to visitors coming here to find the podcast mentioned in the Newsletter.

 
icon for podpress  Doug Allen [77:24m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Maine Fair Trade Campaign’s Sarah Bigney

What does "fair trade" in coffee really mean

This podcast features a talk University of Maine graduate Sarah Bigney gave on Thursday September 25, 2008:

“The Two Fair Trade Movements: Bridging the Divide Between Buying Coffee and Repealing NAFTA”

Sarah Bigney is organizer at the Maine Fair Trade Campaign, a statewide coalition of 50 organizations for building a just, sustainable, and democratic economy. (Check out their site for information on current campaigns, including the one to oppose the Panama Free Trade Agreement.)

This talk was part of the Fall 2008 Thursday controversy series sponsored by the Marxist-Socialist Studies Interdisciplinary Minor, and co-sponsored by the Maine Peace Action Committee (MPAC) and Campus Activities and Events, with support of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at the University.

Additional photos (described in the talk) are posted below the fold.

 
icon for podpress  Sarah Bigney [71:35m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Continue reading ‘Maine Fair Trade Campaign’s Sarah Bigney’

David Roediger: Writing Socialist History

This podcast features a talk by Professor David Roediger, Kendrick Babcock Chair of History and Afro-American Studes at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. A long-time scholar-activist, his books include The Wages of Whiteness: Race and the Making of the American Working Class and How Race Survived U.S. History: From Settlement and Slavery to the Obama Phenomenon.

Roediger is introduced by Professor Nathan Godfried of the Department of History at the University of Maine.

Today’s talk focuses on Professor Roediger’s study of the life and work of his late friend and colleague, the labor activist and historian for the Industrial Workers of the World, Fred Thompson. Thompson died in 1987.

I found the discussion of Thompson’s years as a professor at Work People’s College in Duluth, Minnesota personally quite interesting. This was a labor school founded by radical Finns and operated for about fifty years from the 1920s to 1970.

 
icon for podpress  David Roediger [53:32m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

March 21 Teach-In on WERU

This is the podcast for the WERU Weekend Voices/peacecast.us Special featuring our Active Community Teach-in on New Strategies for Organizing in the Obama Era that broadcast on Saturday April 4, 2009 at 3 pm. The event was held Saturday March 21, 2009 in Bangor at the Unitarian Universalist Church.

The previous post included the full-length keynote talk by Joseph Gerson. There is more information HERE.

Download, rss, and iTunes links are found at this site. The download links are directly below each post. Rss and iTunes links are below near the end of the righthand column.

The first half of this WERU-broadcast version is part of the keynote given by Joseph Gerson of AFSC in New England. He is introduced first by Ilze Pertersons of the , then by Bruce Gagnon of the Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space.

Four additional speakers from the event then address a wide range of local activism on war & peace, environmental, labor, and foreign policy issues. They include:

  • Mary Beth Sullivan of the Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space who discusses economic conversion of Bath Iron Works
  • John Banks, Natural Resources Dir. of the Penobscot Nation on local environmental issues
  • Steve Husson of Food AND Medicine in Brewer discussing Labor and the Employee Free Choice Act
  • Professor Doug Allen of the University of Maine, who ties everything together.

Please also visit the marvelous audio archive site at WERU where you can listen to any WERU public affairs program in case you miss it over the air (or live outside the WERU signal range).

Two additional links that may be of interest are Bruce Gagnon’s excellent blog, Organizing Notes, and the Peace and Economic Security Program for the American Friends Service Committee in New England.

 
icon for podpress  WERU special [58:40m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Cheri Honkala: Economic Human Rights

Cheri Honkala of the Poor People’s Economic Human Rights Campaign spoke in Orono, Maine on the University of Maine campus on Thursday April 2. This is the podcast of her 61-minute program and extensive question and answer session.

Cheri Honkala just left Maine after an extensive tour. Information about the tour is posted at the Maine Association of Independent Neighborhoods, HERE. Below is additional (pre-tour) information from local organizer, Larry Dansinger.
Continue reading ‘Cheri Honkala: Economic Human Rights’

 
icon for podpress  Cheri Honkala [61:28m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Joseph Gerson: Organizing in the Obama era

This program features Joseph Gerson, Director of Programs and Director of the Peace and Economic Security Program for the American Friends Service Committee in New England. Joseph Gerson was the keynote speaker for the Active Community Teach-in on New Strategies for Organizing in the Obama Era held Saturday March 21, 2009 in Bangor, Maine.

This post includes the full-length talk by Joseph Gerson, about 65 minutes.

The event was sponsored by many active Maine peace, health care, labor, and environmental groups. The Peace & Justice Center of Eastern Maine was the lead planning organization.

Joseph Gerson is introduced first by Ilze Pertersons of the Peace and Justice Center, then by Bruce Gagnon of the Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space. (See also Bruce Gagnon’s blog)

Please visit peacectr.org for more information about the event.

 
icon for podpress  Joseph Gerson [67:46m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Do they hate us for our freedoms?

The February 26, 2009 edition of the Socialist and Marxist Studies Luncheon Series at the University of Maine featured professor of philosophy Shane Ralston on “Do They Hate Us for Our Freedoms? A Deweyan Analysis of the Bush Doctrine.”

This audio podcast runs about 56 minutes. Professor Doug Allen of the Department of Philosophy at the University of Maine introduces the program.

 
icon for podpress  Shane Ralston [56:06m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Wendy Chapkis on medical marijuana

This program features Professor Wendy Chapkis of the University of Southern Maine on “The Challenges of Creating Community or Why ‘Medical Marijuana Collective’ Doesn’t Mean You Just Come and Collect.”

Her most recent book is “Dying to Get High: marijuana as medicine” (published by New York University Press in 2008). It examines contemporary debates surrounding the medical use of marijuana and specifically the history of the Wo/Men’s Alliance for Medical Marijuana, a nonprofit formed in the wake of California’s “Compassionate Use Act of 1996”.

This program was recorded at the Memorial Union on the University of Maine campus in Orono, Thursday November 20, 2008. It appears here as broadcast on WERU Community Radio (89.9 FM Blue Hill, 102.9 FM Bangor) on Weekend Voices for Saturday December 6, 2008.

 
icon for podpress  Medical marijuana [58:00m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Key issues in the Nov. 4th election


From TrueMajority.org, referenced by panel

Here are information, links, and the podcast for the peacecast.us/WERU Weekend Voices election special featuring the University of Maine panel presentation, “What are the Key Issues in the Nov. 4th Election?”

This program explores some big ideas that ought to be part of our national discussion–if we think we have a democratic society–even if they seem to be missing or distorted in major party campaigns.

Among the most distorted ideas now running wild in the campaign is that of socialism. While this term is almost universally batted around as a pejorative, our panel make a powerful case in favor of democratic socialism–for the weakened forms we already have, for the stronger forms found in other developed countries, and for comprehensive democratic socialism that would be of great benefit to the American people.

This radio special/podcast is produced by Eric T. Olson. It was recorded at the University of Maine on Thursday October 30, 2008 and broadcast on WERU Weekend Voices for November 1. Panelists include U Maine faculty and Bangor/Orono area community organizers. They are

  • Professor Amy Fried, Political Science
  • Professor Michael Howard, Philosophy
  • Ilze Petersons, Program Coordinator, Peace and Justice Center of Eastern Maine
  • Professor Doug Allen, Philosophy

The event was part of the Fall 2008 Socialist & Marxist Studies Thursday Controversy series.

Here are links to online resources mentioned in the program.

Bailout! A Case for Economic Democracy And Clearing the Path to Socialism
By David Schweickart – Progressives for Obama

“Washington can act with breathtaking urgency when the right people want something done. In this case, the people are the Wall Street titans, who are scared witless at the prospect of their enormous implosion. Congress quickly agreed to enact a gargantuan bailout, with more to come, to calm the anxieties and halt the deflation of the Wall Street giants. Put aside partisan bickering, no time for hearings, no need to think through the deeper implications. We haven’t seen ‘bipartisan cooperation’ like this since Washington decided to invade Iraq.” –William, Greider, The Nation, August 18, 2008

TrueMajority.org
“Wall Street has actually convinced a lot of us that what’s good for the Dow Jones Average is good for us real people. But for eight years while bankers raked in billions, ordinary Americans have seen their real wages drop, jobs sent overseas, health insurance rates skyrocket, and now thousands are losing their homes.

We need our government to actively work for US in fixing this mess, so let’s tell Congress it’s time to start over and pass a New Deal for Main Street.”

National Priorities Project
“According to a new report from National Priorities Project (NPP), the United States is spending between $97 and $215 billion dollars annually on military action to defend access to oil and natural gas reserves around the globe. The Military Cost of Securing Energy provides a critical analysis of the military cost of defending U.S. energy concerns overseas. The report estimates that the military spends up to 30 percent of its annual budget to secure access to energy resources internationally.”

 
icon for podpress  WERU special [57:26m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Alex Grab on Israel, Palestine, and Iran

Professor Alex Grab of the University of Maine Department of History gave an informative talk Thursday September 18 in the Memorial Union on the Orono campus, “Going to War: Israel, Palestine and Iran.” The talk was the second featured in the Fall 2008 Thursday Controversy Series.

All those [Israeli] policies are the main obstacle, especially the settlements, are the main obstacle … to any agreement between Israelis and Palestinians. …

A large number of Israelis feel insecure in light of this sort of position by the president [of Iran] and the fact that Iran is trying to develop nuclear power. … So the question is, Is Israel going to attack in the next few months … Is the United States going to attack Iran?

 
icon for podpress  Israel - Palestine - Iran [73:38m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download