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Independent investigative journalism, broadcasting, trouble-making and muckraking with Brad Friedman of BradBlog.com
Independent investigative journalism, broadcasting, trouble-making and muckraking with Brad Friedman of BradBlog.com
Independent investigative journalism, broadcasting, trouble-making and muckraking with Brad Friedman of BradBlog.com
Independent investigative journalism, broadcasting, trouble-making and muckraking with Brad Friedman of BradBlog.com
On this week's episode of The Waves, Slate senior writer Christina Cauterucci looks back to the first Women's March that took place on Jan. 21, 2017. She talks to New York Magazine's Rebecca Traister about what the march accomplished for progressive organizing and the role protests can have going forward. Then she sits down with Angela Peoples, an activist and organizer who went to the march with a sign saying “White Women Voted for Trump”—and went viral. In Slate Plus, Christina and Angela continue their conversation and talk about the connection between the Women's March and the Black Lives Matter protests during the summer of 2020. Podcast production by Cheyna Roth with editorial oversight by Susan Matthews and June Thomas. Send your comments and recommendations on what to cover to thewaves@slate.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On this week's episode of The Waves, Slate senior writer Christina Cauterucci looks back to the first Women's March that took place on Jan. 21, 2017. She talks to New York Magazine's Rebecca Traister about what the march accomplished for progressive organizing and the role protests can have going forward. Then she sits down with Angela Peoples, an activist and organizer who went to the march with a sign saying “White Women Voted for Trump”—and went viral. In Slate Plus, Christina and Angela continue their conversation and talk about the connection between the Women's March and the Black Lives Matter protests during the summer of 2020. Podcast production by Cheyna Roth with editorial oversight by Susan Matthews and June Thomas. Send your comments and recommendations on what to cover to thewaves@slate.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On this week's episode of The Waves, Slate senior writer Christina Cauterucci looks back to the first Women's March that took place on Jan. 21, 2017. She talks to New York Magazine's Rebecca Traister about what the march accomplished for progressive organizing and the role protests can have going forward. Then she sits down with Angela Peoples, an activist and organizer who went to the march with a sign saying “White Women Voted for Trump”—and went viral. In Slate Plus, Christina and Angela continue their conversation and talk about the connection between the Women's March and the Black Lives Matter protests during the summer of 2020. Podcast production by Cheyna Roth with editorial oversight by Susan Matthews and June Thomas. Send your comments and recommendations on what to cover to thewaves@slate.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On this week's episode of The Waves, Slate senior writer Christina Cauterucci looks back to the first Women's March that took place on Jan. 21, 2017. She talks to New York Magazine's Rebecca Traister about what the march accomplished for progressive organizing and the role protests can have going forward. Then she sits down with Angela Peoples, an activist and organizer who went to the march with a sign saying “White Women Voted for Trump”—and went viral. In Slate Plus, Christina and Angela continue their conversation and talk about the connection between the Women's March and the Black Lives Matter protests during the summer of 2020. Podcast production by Cheyna Roth with editorial oversight by Susan Matthews and June Thomas. Send your comments and recommendations on what to cover to thewaves@slate.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
We’re going to be seeing a lot more of Senator Kamala Harris this election season. We talk about Biden’s vice presidential pick. Sharon Wright Austin, Anthony Brooks, Angela Peoples and Joel Payne join Jane Clayson.
She's a self proclaimed "mom, bad b*tch and entrepreneur". And we can certainly co-sign every part of that. Angela Peoples is the D.C. based activist who you've seen go viral on your timelines while holding up in-your-face signage at protests like "Don't forget, white women voted for Trump!" Now, she's founded & co-founded multiple organizations that are all finding solutions for and putting in the work on behalf of progressive black mothers and black women. Black women and black mothers are directly impacted by so many policies or the lack thereof, so Angela and Natasha chop it up about what those issues are and how we hold accountable our sitting politicians and candidates begging for our vote. The two talk about the differences in parenting black boys and black girls, important women's healthcare legislation, her sit down with former Presidential candidate Elizabeth Warren, who (or if) she's endorsing anyone now, whether it's worth voting on party lines or voting your conscious, the "Black Mamas March," and more. What moves can we make politically to change the harmful narratives aimed at black children that affect them for the rest of their lives psychologically? Natasha & Angela get into it all. You can follow, donate to & support Angela's orgs below! https://www.thisthesouth.com/ https://www.instagram.com/the___south/ https://www.instagram.com/blackwomxnfor/?hl=en Welcome to the new YBF POLITICS vertical!
**Show Note** The political views expressed on this show are solely those of host, Mika Gadsden and do not reflect the opinions or beliefs of Ohm Radio Station or any other organization On this episode of Mic'd Up, host MIka speaks with organizer and strategist, Angela Peoples, to discuss her work with Black Womxn For. For More Information, Visit: https://www.blackwomxnfor.com Elizabeth Warren in Atlanta: https://youtu.be/6_H-ZbV2tyY New to the show? Check out these previous episodes: bit.ly/MicdUpChapterAndVerse or bit.ly/JeanellNicoleReads I run on love & community support: bit.ly/SupportCAN , $mikagadsden on CashApp Get exclusive content by supporting this podcast via Patreon: patreon.com/ChsActNet Follow the Charleston Activist Network on Social Media: FB: @charlestonactivistnetwork IG: @charlestonactivistnetwork Twitter: @ChsActNet Email Mika: Tamika@charlestonactivistnetwork.com Website: www.charlestonactivistnetwork.com
This month on Outward hosts Christina Cauterucci, Bryan Lowder, and New America’s Brandon Tensley find out what it means to be radical. October is Gay History month and so we’re honoring those radical queers who started to advocate for gay rights. First they’ve got a compilation of radicalization moments from important queer figures, those times the felt pulled into the fight. Thank you to the Making Gay History podcast for the use of their archival tape. Then they sit down with Angela Peoples formerly of No Justice No Pride, and Brandon Cuicchi of Reclaim Pride to discuss how Pride parades have become commercialized and what they’re doing to take them back. Finally, the gang plays the game ‘Radder Than Thou’ where they debate which of two topics are more radical. Podcast production by Daniel Schroeder Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This month on Outward hosts Christina Cauterucci, Bryan Lowder, and New America’s Brandon Tensley find out what it means to be radical. October is Gay History month and so we’re honoring those radical queers who started to advocate for gay rights. First they’ve got a compilation of radicalization moments from important queer figures, those times the felt pulled into the fight. Thank you to the Making Gay History podcast for the use of their archival tape. Then they sit down with Angela Peoples formerly of No Justice No Pride, and Brandon Cuicchi of Reclaim Pride to discuss how Pride parades have become commercialized and what they’re doing to take them back. Finally, the gang plays the game ‘Radder Than Thou’ where they debate which of two topics are more radical. Podcast production by Daniel Schroeder Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This month on Outward hosts Christina Cauterucci, Bryan Lowder, and New America’s Brandon Tensley find out what it means to be radical. October is Gay History month and so we’re honoring those radical queers who started to advocate for gay rights. First they’ve got a compilation of radicalization moments from important queer figures, those times the felt pulled into the fight. Thank you to the Making Gay History podcast for the use of their archival tape. Then they sit down with Angela Peoples formerly of No Justice No Pride, and Brandon Cuicchi of Reclaim Pride to discuss how Pride parades have become commercialized and what they’re doing to take them back. Finally, the gang plays the game ‘Radder Than Thou’ where they debate which of two topics are more radical. Podcast production by Daniel Schroeder Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Welcome to the radio magazine that brings you news, commentary and analysis from a Black Left perspective. I’m Glen Ford, along with my co-host Nellie Bailey. Coming up: Police in Buffalo, New York are up to the same tricks as were exposed in Ferguson, Missouri, saturating the Black community with police checkpoints to fatten the city treasury; New York City cops use a secret list of 42 thousand alleged gang members to justify mass arrests in Black neighborhoods; and, most people on the planet think it’s a good idea for the U.S. and Russian presidents to have a summit meeting – except for the Democrats and U.S. corporate media. Cities around the country are going deeply in debt, selling bonds to speculators to pay for judgments and settlements against cops that brutalize their citizens. The Action Center on Race and the Economy did case studies in Chicago, Los Angeles, Milwaukee, Cleveland and Lake County Indiana, showing that these so-called “Brutality Bonds” are costing these localities almost 2 BILLION dollars. Angela Peoples is director of the Action Center’s campaign. She’s also with the Washington, DC Chapter of Black Youth Project 100. Civil rights group have filed suit against the city of Buffalo, New York, charging that, for more than five years, Buffalo cops have been saturating Black neighborhoods with police checkpoints for the purpose of extracting millions in fines. According to the suit, 91 percent of the checkpoints operating in Buffalo are located on the Black side of town. We spoke with Keisha Williams, a staff attorney with the Western New York Law Center. She says what’s going on in Buffalo is very much like the systematic draining of the Black community through over-policing and excessive fines that a U.S. Justice Department report documented in Ferguson, Missouri. Black and brown activists in New York City are outraged that the police department maintains a data base of more than 42 thousand names of alleged gang members, The cops have used the list to bring conspiracy charges against hundreds of young people caught up in massive sweeps of poor neighborhoods. Shannon Jones is co-founder of the community organization “Why Accountability.” Her statemnt was read into the record at recent hearings of the City Council on policing in New York. Shannon was interviewed by Black Agenda radio producer Kyle Fraser. Russian President Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump will travel to Helsinki, Finland, July 16, for a summit meeting. Most people in the world think the summit is a good idea, to improve relations between the two nuclear super-powers. But much of the Democratic Party in the United States is negative on the subject. Sara Flounders is with UNAC, the United National Anti-War Coalition. In general, Flounders thinks the summit is a good thing, but she isn’t optimistic about the immediate outcome.
Expert journalist Brody Levesque gives his in depth perspective on the breaking news out of Washington. Also, today in MetroWeekly, Angela Peoples writes "Today, Pride has become an institution. Corporations eager to market their products to affluent LGBTQ people have stepped in to provide funds that promise to make each coming Pride celebration larger, more elaborate, and more expensive than ever before. In exchange, corporations and state institutions get to wrap themselves in the rainbow flag and showcase their “allyship.” But in pursuing “bigger” and “better,” Capital Pride has abandoned the principles of freedom, liberation, and self-determination that make Pride a tradition worth celebrating." Do you agree? We discuss.
Expert journalist Brody Levesque gives his in depth perspective on the breaking news out of Washington. Also, today in MetroWeekly, Angela Peoples writes "Today, Pride has become an institution. Corporations eager to market their products to affluent LGBTQ people have stepped in to provide funds that promise to make each coming Pride celebration larger, more elaborate, and more expensive than ever before. In exchange, corporations and state institutions get to wrap themselves in the rainbow flag and showcase their “allyship.” But in pursuing “bigger” and “better,” Capital Pride has abandoned the principles of freedom, liberation, and self-determination that make Pride a tradition worth celebrating." Do you agree? We discuss.
It’s a new dawn, it’s a new day and no one is feeling good. Mentioned in the episode: Angela Peoples won’t let us forget that 53% white women didn’t show up for themselves, no less anyone else. Welcome to the party. Will we see you at the next social justice movement? Donald Is like Chris Brown... Other articles, videos, and a reading list to open your eyes and promote action post-march: @feministajones reads and slays in Philly #womensmarch Pre-March reading list (pssssttt it’s still good after the march.) What I witnessed at the march Follow Black Girl Magic Twitter and Facebook Subscribe and leave a review on iTunes | Hit the heart on Soundcloud | Listen via Acast (we’re giving you ALL THE CHOICES) Email us with questions, topics you want to hear our thoughts on, comments, music, and shout outs atblackgirlmagicpod@gmail.com Find us online and say hi! Ciji (Twitter & Tumblr) | Danielle (Twitter & Facebook) | Lauren (Twitter & Tumblr)
On this episode of Your Blackest Hour, Barack Obama has been gone for only FOUR DAYS and we are already feeling the repercussions of being #BlackInTheAgeOfTrump. We think Angela Peoples sign at the Women's March on Washington was EXACTLY what people of color have been thinking since the election. Tyson's knockouts aint got shit on what happen to Richard Spencer and there seems to be a buzz about this New Edition BET movie are you watching tonight?