Podcasts about Free Speech Movement

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Best podcasts about Free Speech Movement

Latest podcast episodes about Free Speech Movement

This Week in America with Ric Bratton
Episode 3347: GOD'S EXISTENCE: DEEPER THOUGHTS FOR GREATER INSIGHTS by Gary R. Lindberg

This Week in America with Ric Bratton

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2025 31:19


God's Existence: Deeper Thoughts for Greater Insights by Gary R. LindbergThe book God's Existence: Deeper Thoughts for Greater Insights seeks to more deeply examine God's existence through science and the Old Testament books of Genesis and Exodus. We examine some of the major issues that have generated controversy to search for clearer truth about them. Does evolution contradict the Bible, or is it another tool God used for Creation? Why was the Old Testament written? What should Genesis actually tell us about creation? How should we look at certain issues raised in Genesis such as Adam and Eve, missing people, descendants of Adam, and even the Great Flood? We want to evaluate whether or not Moses was real, and whether or not the Exodus really happened. When did the alleged Exodus actually occur? We seek answers to these and other questions to get a better understanding of those events so long ago. The answers may be shocking, surprising, or different than what we were told. A profound book that is “on fire' to discover new truths to age-old questions.Gary R. Lindberg is a graduate of the University of California, Berkeley with a degree in U.S. history during the hectic days of the Free Speech Movement. He responded to Director Sargent Shriver's call to volunteer. However, after graduation, before being drafted, he started to apply for the Air Force until he received his invitation to join the Peace Corps. After his service, he entered the Navy instead of accepting his draft notice, went to San Francisco State University to get his Master of Business Administration (MBA) degree with a concentration in Management and Personnel, and began a forty-three-year career in human resources. He retired in November 2019 to pursue personal interests.AMAZONhttps://garyrlindberg.comhttps://www.ecpublishingllc.comhttp://www.bluefunkbroadcasting.com/root/twia/52225glec.mp3   

at home in my head
Mario Savio || Bodies Upon the Gears

at home in my head

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2025 40:39


Mario Savio: The Spark That Set Berkeley on FireHe wasn't just a student—he was the voice that made the Free Speech Movement impossible to ignore. In this episode, we break down the life, battles, and legacy of Mario Savio: the man who jumped on a police car and challenged a university, a governor, and the FBI—all for the right to speak out.

Uncommon Sense with Ginny Robinson
Exposing Government Corruption with Teddy Pierce, Author of Dethrone Davos: Save America

Uncommon Sense with Ginny Robinson

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2025 20:16


Today I'm joined by Teddy Pierce, author of Dethrone Davos: Save America, to discuss the shocking waste, fraud, and abuse that the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) has been uncovering. From reckless spending to blatant money laundering, we're breaking down how our government has been misusing our hard-earned tax dollars—and why this corruption must be stopped. Transparency and accountability aren't just buzzwords; they're essential for restoring actual integrity to our system. Tune in as we expose what's really going on behind the scenes and why this fight matters for all of us.—Buy Teddy's book, Dethrone Davos: https://www.amazon.com/Dethrone-Davos-America-Theodore-Pierce-ebook/dp/B0D5NKGGNC—https://www.thebrandsunday.com/collections/all

cancel culture transparency exposing censorship freedom of speech financial freedom world economic forum davos doge new world order deep state great reset financial independence american politics america first secret societies great awakening rothschild gold standard christian nationalism wef self reliance election fraud decentralization puppet master money laundering tax reform homesteading self sufficiency civil liberties save america false flags media bias hidden power election integrity national debt klaus schwab constitutional rights investigative journalism hidden agendas truth seekers federalism dark money cfr breaking the chains government spending cyberwarfare economic collapse economic justice decentralized finance financial crimes investigative reporting biblical justice dethrone independent media fraud prevention ruling class one world government intentional communities special interests corporate greed tax fraud economic inequality shadow government government corruption political corruption alternative media financial responsibility american independence tax havens sound money class warfare government accountability crony capitalism fiscal responsibility economic warfare bilderberg group government waste taxpayer money trilateral commission foreign influence money in politics conservative politics wealth preservation government surveillance controlled opposition woke capitalism government transparency ballot harvesting globalist agenda government oversight liberty movement american patriotism justice warriors moral leadership political persecution economic resilience small government financial accountability rebuilding america political accountability shadow banking alternative finance fraud investigation balanced budget wealth redistribution american decline free speech movement moral economy free market capitalism alternative news parallel economy underground economy government ethics narrative control civil resistance esg scores black budget american restoration davos agenda honest money economic liberty regenerative economy populist movement fair taxation
The Fanzine Podcast
Ep. 32: Search & Destroy

The Fanzine Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2025 72:36


It's time for a new episode of The Fanzine Podcast, and we start 2025 off with one of the pioneers from the explosion of punk zines in 1977: V. Vale, editor and publisher of San Francisco's legendary Search & Destroy along with its successor, RE/Search Publications.Now in his late 70s, Vale – who grew up in foster homes in the Midwest and found refuge in public libraries – has been active in the U.S. counterculture pretty much all his life. He attended U.C. Berkeley during the Free Speech Movement of 1964-65, was active on the city's hippy scene, worked at the equally legendary City Lights book/magazine shop, and was on hand when San Francisco's first punk bands – Crime, Nuns, The Avengers, Sleepers, Negative Trend among others – emerged in 1977, at which point he decided to document the culture. Basing Search & Destroy on the format of Andy Warhol's Interview magazine (founded in 1969), Vale's preferred newspaper print and unadulterated Q&A format combined with the energy of those interviews and the explosive visuals of its layout to make Search & Destroy a must-read zine far beyond the city's borders. This was just as well given that Vale reckons it took two years to get 200 people on board the SF punk scene but that he printed 5000 copies of that debut issue, helped by donations from Allen Ginsberg and Lawrence Ferlinghetti. ...To read on, to see examples of Search & Destroy and RE/Search, please visit https://tonyfletcher.substack.com/p/search-and-destroyTo order from RE/Search Pubs, visit researchpubs.comThanks to Noel Fletcher for the theme music, and Greg Morton at Omnibus Press for the logo template.The Best of Jamming! is available via https://omnibuspress.com/products/the-best-of-jamming-published-on-23rd-september-2021 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

VINTAGE PEOPLE PODCAST
ME AND MY BIG IDEAS - Intervista a LEE FELSENSTEIN

VINTAGE PEOPLE PODCAST

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2025 113:13


Lee Felsenstein è un pioniere nell'ambito della tecnologia informatica, noto per il suo contributo alla creazione di uno dei primi computer, il SOL 20, e per la sua influenza sul movimento hacker degli anni '70 e '80. Oltre a essere un innovatore nel campo delle tecnologie è anche un pensatore e un attivista che ha promosso l'idea che la tecnologia debba essere al servizio delle persone, democratizzandola e rendendola accessibile. Il suo libro, Me and My Big Ideas, offre uno sguardo approfondito sulle sue esperienze e riflessioni. È una combinazione di memorie personali, aneddoti e concetti che hanno definito il suo approccio unico alla tecnologia e al cambiamento sociale. #leefelsenstein #meandmybigideas #interview #intervista DOVE ACQUISTARE IL LIBRO: https://felsensigns.com/books/ https://amzn.eu/d/8t5c8Sw CONTATTA IL MUSEO DEL CALCOLATORE DI PRATO: https://www.museodelcalcolatore.it/ LINK RAPIDI: 00:00 - Cold Open 01:38 - Presentazione Lee Felsenstein 02:20 - Perché il suo libro è importante 04:48 - Berkeley e il Free Speech Movement 26:03 - La nascita di Community Memory 52:40 - Ampex e Steve Jobs 1:15:27 - Homebrew Computer Club 1:28:35 - Qual'è l'eredità che l' Homebrew Computer Club ha lasciato all'industria 1:45:15 - Chiusura e ringraziamenti La LIVE dei Vintage People va in onda una volta al mese o anche di più, dipende da quanto ce la sentiamo calda. La sigla è stata concessa da Stefano Gargiulo: https://www.youtube.com/c/StefanoGargiulo_Compositore Seguiteci sui nostri podcast, tiktok, instagram. TELEGRAM: https://t.me/VNTGPPLNTWRK TWITCH: / https://www.twitch.tv/vintagepeoplenetwork INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/simone_atariteca/ https://www.instagram.com/mike_arcade/ https://www.instagram.com/quantigiga/ https://www.instagram.com/elderbarabba/ https://www.instagram.com/crazyjimmy3720/ FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/sim.guidi/ https://www.facebook.com/michele.colucci.733 https://www.facebook.com/piermarco.rosa THREADS: https://www.threads.net/@mikearcade.it SITI: https://www.ataritecapodcast.it https://mikearcade.it/ https://elderbarabba.blogspot.com https://www.museodelcalcolatore.it/ #VintagePeople #VP

Discovery Panel
Lieblingsfolge: Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (Teil 8)

Discovery Panel

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2025 76:54


Was haben das Free Speech Movement, Carjackings und Macho-Actionhelden mit Star Trek IV zu tun? Wir klären auf – mit nerdigen Fakten, Filmfehlern und einem Blick auf die gesellschaftlichen Umbrüche der 80er!

The Castle Report
The Anti-Free Speech Movement

The Castle Report

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2024 13:10


Darrell Castle talks about the fate of the First Amendment, especially the freedom of Americans to speak their minds without running their thoughts through a government-controlled censor. Transcription/Notes: THE ANTI-FREE SPEECH MOVEMENT Hello, this is Darrell Castle with today's Castle Report. This is Friday the 11th day of October in the year of our Lord 2024. I will be talking about what is perhaps the most important issue on the ballot this November and that is the fate of the First Amendment especially the freedom of Americans to speak their minds without running their thoughts through a government-controlled censor. Should the federal government be the arbiter of what the public should be able to read or hear. That is the question I will talk about especially how some prominent Democrats have answered that question. Some of the richest and most powerful people on planet earth are now calling for Americans to be censured. That word sounds so benign that it has to be defined before it has any impact. The First Amendment to the United States Constitution guarantees that the government can not legally prevent Americans from speaking their minds or expressing their opinions verbally or in print. In other words, the government is not legally permitted to censor us. That is the basic foundation of free people and it is the First Amendment for a reason. Hillary Clinton seems to have taken the lead in the campaign to restrict our freedom and she has taken her efforts globally by encouraging other countries to restrict the speech of their citizens. She recently asked European governments to censor Elon Musk because he permitted unregulated speech on X. She also went on CNN to talk about how discouraging it is that censorship is such a tough sell to the American people. She said the road the anti-free speech advocates have traveled on has been a rocky and difficult one. “There are people who are championing it, but it has been a long and difficult road to getting anything done.” Yes, I can see why all those anti-freedom Democrats have had such a difficult time because it is not easy to convince free people to give up their freedom. I think it was Abraham Lincoln who said that to be considered a great man one has to free enslaved men or enslave free men so I suppose we are back to fighting those battles again. She is not the only one of course, only the point person for the effort. Even NPR has gotten on the anti-free speech, anti-truth bandwagon. The new CEO of NPR wants to get things done it seems but truth sometimes gets in the way. Yes, those Democrats want to get things done and the pesky First Amendment stands there as an impediment to their noble efforts. This argument goes right to the heart of the cultural and spiritual war now raging in the West. Do you believe truth and freedom are a priority or just a hindrance to getting things done. To quote the new CEO of NPR; “Our reverence for the truth might be a distraction getting in the way of finding common ground and getting things done.” Well, I don't think I would like walking on a common ground built on lies but that seems to be what he wants. That's a mild position compared to what some other prominent Democrats have been saying. So, perhaps the most important issue in this coming election is whether or not we as Americans will protect the Constitution and its guarantee of freedom or whether we will surrender to the one party, one mindset that many Democrats are trying to build. Given the control that mainstream media has over information, the freedom to speak our minds in opposition, especially on social media is vital. Things are bad around the world right now with wars, famines, and other such government instituted madness, but as long as we are free we have at least a fighting chance so of course, the enemies of freedom are working overtime to take that away from us. John Kerry, speaking to the World Economic Forum:

Conversing
Protest and Presence in Berkeley, CA / A Conversing Short by Mark Labberton

Conversing

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2024 5:32


“I'm here because you're here.” Berkeley, California is known for being the home to the Free Speech Movement of the 1960s. It was and is the site of many protests, drawing vocal minorities to Sproul Plaza and People's Park for demonstrations, activism, and public assembly. So it's come to symbolize what it means to speak out and be heard. But what does it mean to minister to an energized public square? In this Conversing Short, Mark Labberton thinks back to his time ministering in Berkeley, CA. First Presbyterian Church remains a close neighbor to the University of California, Berkeley campus. He describes an approach to public engagement marked by generous listening, a desire to know the individuals so moved to protest and speak out, and offer faithful presence to a community dedicated to protest and activism. About Conversing Shorts “In between my longer conversations with people who fascinate and inspire and challenge me, I share a short personal reflection, a focused episode that brings you the ideas, stories, questions, ponderings, and perspectives that animate Conversing and give voice to the purpose and heart of the show. Thanks for listening with me.” About Mark Labberton Mark Labberton is the Clifford L. Penner Presidential Chair Emeritus and Professor Emeritus of Preaching at Fuller Seminary. He served as Fuller's fifth president from 2013 to 2022. He's the host of Conversing. Show Notes Berkeley, CA People's Park Sproul Plaza (site of famous Free Speech Protests of the 1960s) How to intensify their thirst? “What I really wanted was a conversation.” “Listening to God, which is what the life of Christian worship actually is.” “Living a life of listening, which is central to all Christian discipleship.” “I'm here because you're here.” “I wish there had been a lineup of protesters outside first press asking, ‘How dare you?'… why are we not gathering protestors?” “I was wanting to so authentically speak and preach and live the gospel, that we would be the peculiar people that would cause people to say, ‘Why are you so peculiar?'—not just in that sense of church oddness, but in that deeper sense of why are you the peculiar people of unexplained mercy, unexplained forgiveness, unexplained passion for justice, unexplained sensitivity to individuals, and to societal, social, and systemic needs.” Production Credits Conversing is produced and distributed in partnership with Comment Magazine and Fuller Seminary.

Berkeley Talks
Legal scholars on free speech challenges facing universities today

Berkeley Talks

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2024 101:16


In Berkeley Talks episode 209, renowned legal scholars Erwin Chemerinsky, dean of Berkeley Law, and Nadine Strossen, professor emerita of the New York School of Law and national president of the ACLU from 1991 to 2008, discuss free speech challenges facing universities today. They covered topics including hate speech, First Amendment rights, the Heckler's Veto, institutional neutrality and what steps universities can take to avoid free speech controversies. The conversation, which took place on Sept. 11, was held in celebration of the 60th anniversary of the Free Speech Movement, in which thousands of students protested successfully for their right to free political speech at UC Berkeley. Instead of having a moderator, the speakers were given a list of questions they each posed to each other, and took turns answering them. At one illuminating moment, Chemerinsky asked Strossen what steps she might take to reduce the harmful effects of polarized political speech on campus. “I think that punishment is not an effective way to change somebody's attitudes,” Strossen answered, “which is what we are concerned about, especially in an educational environment. Treating somebody like a criminal or even shaming, shunning and ostracizing them is not likely to open their hearts and minds. So I think it is as ineffective as a strategy for dealing with discrimination as it is unjustified and consistent with First Amendment principles.“But there are a lot of things that universities can and should do — and I know from reading about your campus, that you are doing … It's gotten justified nationwide attention.”Strossen went on to emphasize the importance of education, not only in free speech principles, but in other civic principles, as well, like the history of discrimination and anti-Semitism. Beyond education, Strossen said, “universities have to show support for members of the community who are the targets of hateful speech by raising their own voices, but also by providing psychological and other counseling and material kinds of support.”The event was sponsored by HxA Berkeley and Voices for Liberty, of George Mason's Antonin Scalia Law School. It was co-sponsored by Berkeley Law's Public Law and Policy program, the Berkeley Liberty Initiative and the Jack Citrin Center for Public Opinion Research.Read the transcript and listen to the episode on UC Berkeley News (news.berkeley.edu/podcasts).Music by Blue Dot Sessions.Screenshot of HxA Berkeley video. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Nonviolence Radio
Lessons Learned from the Free Speech Movement

Nonviolence Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2024 24:29 Transcription Available


“I failed to realize that the vast majority of people, even in a progressive environment, such as what Berkeley claimed itself to be – I sometimes wonder – there was a tremendous fear of disruption without constructive program. And that took me years, really, after the movement to learn. That you have to not only incorporate but lead with constructive program. Meaning, what are you going to build and not just what you are going to tear down?”

Political Breakdown
The Campus Protests from the Eyes of Student Journalists

Political Breakdown

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2024 30:01


Campus protests over Israel's war in Gaza, and universities' response to them, have attracted international attention. Months after it began, the movement shows no signs of slowing down, even as the school year comes to an end. Scott is joined by two student journalists who have been on the frontlines covering the protests at UC Berkeley, where the Free Speech Movement began in the 1960s, and UCLA, where the actions of police officers and counterprotesters are under scrutiny after a violent confrontation last week. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Arroe Collins
International Award Winning Joan Gelfand Releases Outside Voices A Memoir Of The Berkley Revolution

Arroe Collins

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2024 18:54


In November 1972 as Ms. Magazine hit the newsstands with its inaugural issue, Joan Gelfand left the comforts of Forest Hills, NY and summers in the Catskills for a trip to San Francisco. That vacation became a journey that lasted a lifetime, and a moment in history that is unparalleled. In OUTSIDE VOICES: A Memoir of the Berkeley Revolution (January 28, 2024; Post Hill Press; ISBN: 979-8888450048; $28.99 Hardcover), Joan Gelfand, award-winning author and nationally acclaimed literary citizen, shares her story of awakening-artistically, sexually, and spiritually-during a radical time in a remarkable place. Writing with honesty and lyrical grace, Joan recounts a story of healing from devastating loss while honing her craft as a poet in the midst of cataclysmic social change in which the Beat Generation was born. Finding a 'room of her own' in a quiet, wood shingled house in Berkeley, she finds her tribe: like-minded feminists and artists. Says Joan, "Women are creating safe spaces where they can find their voices in art, books, music, recording, feminist theory, or just plain banging a hammer and competing in a world typically run by men."Bolstered by new friends Cloud, a poet and artist with a tinkling laugh, and Nancy, a working musician, Outside Voices gives a backstage view of artists and thinkers who went on to great things, including a young waitress named Suze (Orman), film maker Barbara Hammer, writers Judy Grahan, Gloria Andaluza, Pat Parker and musicians Mary Watkins, Linda Tillery and more. Hard on the heels of the Free Speech Movement, the Summer of Love and the Beats' disruption of culture and literature, Berkeley was a fertile proving ground. OUTSIDE VOICES tells the coming-of-age story of a damaged teenager putting the pieces back together as she explores independence and self-definition while grappling with sexuality, Jewish identity, and the lingering trauma of her father's death.

Arroe Collins Like It's Live
International Award Winning Joan Gelfand Releases Outside Voices A Memoir Of The Berkley Revolution

Arroe Collins Like It's Live

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2024 18:54


In November 1972 as Ms. Magazine hit the newsstands with its inaugural issue, Joan Gelfand left the comforts of Forest Hills, NY and summers in the Catskills for a trip to San Francisco. That vacation became a journey that lasted a lifetime, and a moment in history that is unparalleled.In OUTSIDE VOICES: A Memoir of the Berkeley Revolution (January 28, 2024; Post Hill Press; ISBN: 979-8888450048; $28.99 Hardcover), Joan Gelfand, award-winning author and nationally acclaimed literary citizen, shares her story of awakening-artistically, sexually, and spiritually-during a radical time in a remarkable place. Writing with honesty and lyrical grace, Joan recounts a story of healing from devastating loss while honing her craft as a poet in the midst of cataclysmic social change in which the Beat Generation was born.Finding a 'room of her own' in a quiet, wood shingled house in Berkeley, she finds her tribe: like-minded feminists and artists. Says Joan, "Women are creating safe spaces where they can find their voices in art, books, music, recording, feminist theory, or just plain banging a hammer and competing in a world typically run by men."Bolstered by new friends Cloud, a poet and artist with a tinkling laugh, and Nancy, a working musician, Outside Voices gives a backstage view of artists and thinkers who went on to great things, including a young waitress named Suze (Orman), film maker Barbara Hammer, writers Judy Grahan, Gloria Andaluza, Pat Parker and musicians Mary Watkins, Linda Tillery and more. Hard on the heels of the Free Speech Movement, the Summer of Love and the Beats' disruption of culture and literature, Berkeley was a fertile proving ground. OUTSIDE VOICES tells the coming-of-age story of a damaged teenager putting the pieces back together as she explores independence and self-definition while grappling with sexuality, Jewish identity, and the lingering trauma of her father's death.

The Long Thread Podcast
Susan Druding, Straw into Gold (classic)

The Long Thread Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2023 54:57 Very Popular


Susan Druding was a graduate student at the University of California-Berkeley when she first learned to spin and weave. In the Bay Area of the 1960s, fiber interest and social tensions both ran high. Without a business plan but with a lease on a small storefront, Susan and a business partner opened Straw Into Gold, a store devoted mostly to spinning and dyeing. Spinning legend Bette Hochberg, author of Handspinner's Handbook and Spin Span Spun, was a regular, and legendary spinning wheel maker Alden Amos set up shop in the basement. Award-winning spinner Celia Quinn ran the old carding machine that they used to create rainbow batts. They became the first United States distributor of Ashford spinning wheels and equipment. Whether as a shop owner or storyteller, Susan Druding has yarns like nobody else. This episode was originally released in 2021. This episode is brought to you by: Treenway Silks Treenway Silks is where weavers, spinners, knitters and stitchers find the silk they love. Select from the largest variety of silk spinning fibers, silk yarn, and silk threads & ribbons at TreenwaySilks.com (https://www.treenwaysilks.com/). You'll discover a rainbow of colors, thoughtfully hand-dyed in Colorado. Love natural? Treenway's array of wild silks provide choices beyond white. If you love silk, you'll love Treenway Silks, where superior quality and customer service are guaranteed. Anson County Fiber Arts Festival The Anson County Fiber Arts Festival is the place to discover the wonderful world of cotton and hemp fibers, and so much more! You'll find fibers from animal and plant, plus a vendor hall, workshops, used equipment sale, a engaging fiber shed, and activities for the entire family. Plus, the town's historical society will take you on a journey of the town's deep roots as a textile town. Join them September 22-23 at their inaugural event in historic, uptown Wadesboro, North Carolina. For more information, visit ansoncountyfiberartsfestival.com (https://ansoncountyfiberartsfestival.com) or follow them on Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100090568583693&locale=hi_IN&paipv=0&eav=AfabFyZchm6Yvmp-etfgtk3xE3IQtUfGaU4jkfFNMuOJ0UdwJ0XqIsThH9i7mFi4NtI).

Clearing the FOG with co-hosts Margaret Flowers and Kevin Zeese
New Broad Anti-Colonial Free Speech Movement Demands 'Free The Uhuru3'

Clearing the FOG with co-hosts Margaret Flowers and Kevin Zeese

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2023 60:01


Nearly one year ago, on July 29, 2022, the FBI simultaneously conducted a heavily-militarized raid on seven facilities associated with the African People's Socialist Party and the Uhuru Movement in Missouri and Florida. The federal government seized computers, phones and archival material. This was later used to fabricate federal charges against three members, Chairman Omali Yeshitela, Penny Hess and Jesse Nevel. Clearing the FOG speaks with Chairman Yeshitela about the raid and prosecution and the new anti-colonial free speech coalition launched this month. Chairman Yeshitela explains why the coalition is specifically anti-colonial and why this broad movement is necessary to protect our First Amendment rights to free speech and assembly.  He also urges everyone to support Black is Back's November 4 March on the White House. For more information, visit HandsOffUhuru.org and PopularResistance.org. 

The California Report Magazine
Encore: Mapping a Radical Legacy of South Asian Activism in California

The California Report Magazine

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2023 29:47


This week we're bringing you one of our favorite stories from 2022. You've probably heard of Bobby Seale and The Black Panthers. Or Mario Savio and the Free Speech Movement. But what about Kartar Singh Sarabha and the Ghadar Movement? Or Kala Bagai and the fight against redlining? This week we dive deep into the hidden history of early South Asian activism in our state. How Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi and other South Asian immigrants and their children laid the groundwork for social movements that still resonate today in California. Host Sasha Khokha teams up with KQED politics correspondent Marisa Lagos, and they meet a couple who created the Berkeley South Asian Radical History Walking Tour.

Morning Wire
Campus Free Speech Movement | Saturday Extra | 5.20.23

Morning Wire

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2023 9:39


College campuses should be safe harbors for a wide range of opinions and arguments but instead many universities are pushing to silence speakers. While some schools are calling for censorship and content warnings, others are fighting the progressive notion that speech can be violence.  We speak with an education expert about the state of free speech on college campuses. Get the facts first on Morning Wire. Balance of Nature: Get 35% OFF Your Preferred Order Use Promo Code ‘WIRE' at BalanceOfNature.com 

The Munk Debates Podcast
Munk Dialogue with Nadine Strossen: Academic Freedom in Higher Education

The Munk Debates Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2023 45:12


60 years ago, university students were leading the protest in defense of free speech. The 1960's Free Speech Movement at the University of California at Berkeley has been credited with paving the way for the civil liberties movement of the 1960's and widespread social and political change. These days, however, free speech has taken on a new meaning. University students are being criticized for shutting down speech that doesn't align with their progressive and left leaning principles. So how do free speech laws play into the current free speech debate? Where do we draw the line between speech that offends and speech that causes harm? For this conversation, we're joined by one of the most important free speech advocates in America. Nadine Strossen served as President of the American Civil Liberties Union from 1991 to 2008, and is now a senior fellow at FIRE - the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression.    The host of the Munk Debates is Rudyard Griffiths - @rudyardg.   Tweet your comments about this episode to @munkdebate or comment on our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/munkdebates/ To sign up for a weekly email reminder for this podcast, send an email to podcast@munkdebates.com.   To support civil and substantive debate on the big questions of the day, consider becoming a Munk Member at https://munkdebates.com/membership. Members receive access to our 10+ year library of great debates in HD video, a free Munk Debates book, and ticketing privileges at our live events. This podcast is a project of the Munk Debates, a Canadian charitable organization dedicated to fostering civil and substantive public dialogue - https://munkdebates.com/ Senior Producer: Ricki GurwitzEditor: Kieran Lynch

Nightlife
The Free Speech Movement

Nightlife

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2022 34:29


Dom Knight talks to Robert Cohen about The Free Speech Movement's invisible women, myths, and memorialisation struggle

BASTA BUGIE - Politica
Perchè ci sono partiti che vogliono liberalizzare la droga

BASTA BUGIE - Politica

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2022 8:50


TESTO DELL'ARTICOLO ➜ www.bastabugie.it/it/articoli.php?id=7118PERCHE' CI SONO POLITICI E PARTITI CHE VOGLIONO LIBERALIZZARE LA DROGA? di Roberto MarchesiniDi droga se ne parla fin dagli anni Settanta; e non si è mai venuto a capo di niente. Quindi perché dedicare a questo argomento un nuovo articolo? Per tentare di affrontare l'argomento da un punto di vista insolito; dall'idea, cioè, che la droga non sia altro che la continuazione della politica con altri mezzi (parafrasando, ovviamente, von Clausewitz).Partiamo da un romanzo celeberrimo che i gentili Lettori avranno sicuramente in mente: Il mondo nuovo, di Huxley. Nella distopia dell'elitista britannico, le persone erano tenute schiave tramite una droga, il Soma, distribuita dal governo; ogni volta che una persona "pensava" o mostrava irritazione o scontentezza per una situazione, interveniva il Soma a ridare serenità e docilità al potere. Curiosamente ma non troppo, Soma era anche il nome di una bevanda sacrificale che, secondo le religioni vediche, aveva il potere di unire alle divinità. Fatto sta che Huxley ha dedicato gran parte della sua vita a studiare e diffondere sostanze psicotrope che, nelle sue intenzioni, avrebbero permesso all'umanità di compiere un ulteriore salto evolutivo. Tra i suoi interessi, ad esempio c'era l'uso dell'Lsd, la sostanza che mise fine al Free Speech Movement statunitense, ossia al movimento che contestava il potere politico e la guerra del Vietnam. Forse qualcuno ancora non sa che fu sicuramente la Cia a inondare di questa sostanza le comunità universitarie americana; era infatti l'agenzia a detenere il monopolio di fatto sull'Lsd.LA PRODUZIONE DI OPPIOAbbiamo citato il Vietnam: forse giova ricordare che la produzione di oppio in questo paese aumentò vertiginosamente dopo che l'Inghilterra ne assunse il controllo nel 1886, esercitando il monopolio della sostanza dal 1910, con l'Opium Act. Nel secondo dopoguerra, la situazione del sud-est asiatico divenne incandescente proprio per il controllo del traffico di droga; in quel contesto, si inserirono gli Stati Uniti. Ma cosa se ne facevano gli inglesi (e chi gli succedette, tra francesi e statunitensi) di tutto quell'oppio? Beh, ad esempio serviva a inondare di droga gli stati che volevano depredare, per esempio la Cina. Se qualcuno ha sentito parlare di "Guerre dell'Oppio" dell'Ottocento, sa che ci riferiamo esattamente a questo: la Cina imperiale si oppose alla depredazione economica e alla riduzione in schiavitù (per dipendenza dall'oppio) della maggior parte della popolazione da parte dei britannici; gli inglesi reagirono brutalmente (seguiti da Francia e Stati Uniti) ed ecco le guerre. In seguito a questi conflitti, Hong Kong divenne una colonia britannica fino al 1997.Nel nuovo millennio la produzione di oppio si è spostata dal Triangolo d'Oro (Myanmar, Laos e Tailandia) alla Mezzaluna d'Oro (Afghanistan, Iran e Pakistan). Da quando, di preciso? Casualmente, da quando gli Stati Uniti hanno occupato l'Afghanistan. Nel 2001, quando i primi soldati americani misero piede in quel paese, la produzione di oppio si estendeva su circa 8.000 ettari; vent'anni dopo, quando gli ultimi di loro se ne andarono, era di 224.000. A proposito: come mai, dopo vent'anni di guerra per esportare la democrazia in quel paese così straordinariamente vocato per la produzione di eroina, gli americani se ne sono andati? Forse perché l'ossicodone (nome commerciale OxyContin), ufficialmente un miracoloso antidolorifico, è stato soppiantato da una nuova droga, il Fentanyl. L'OxyContin è un oppiaceo prodotto dalla casa farmaceutica Purdue Pharma, della famiglia Sakler (patrimonio stimato: 13 miliardi di dollari); il Fentanyl, invece, prodotto in Cina, è completamente sintetico. A voler pensare male, si direbbe che, a questo punto, non vale più la pena di occupare militarmente l'Afghanistan, visto che si può produrre ottima droga senza oppio... Ah, mi sono dimenticato di citare l'ultima coincidenza: la Purdue ha annunciato la chiusura proprio nel 2020.E vogliamo parlare dello scandalo Iran-Contra [lo scambio di armi con ostaggi che ha coinvolto gli Usa, l'Iran e i Contras in Nicaragua, NdR]? No, rischieremmo di diventare noiosi.UNA MAREA DI HIPPY SBALLATIMa torniamo un attimo alla morte del Free Speech Movement quando, cioè, giovani intellettuali contestatori sono stati soppiantati da una marea di hippy sballati e completamente innocui dal punto di vista politico. Facile, governare i movimenti politici. Basti pensare a ciò che è rimasto al movimento per i diritti civili dei neri dopo le morti (per mano di pazzi isolati, ovviamente) di Malcolm X e Martin Luther King. Dopo la loro morte ci pensò Hollywood a fornire ai giovani neri un nuovo modello: il pappone, che sfrutta le donne nere (ma ha una fidanzata bianca), consuma e spaccia droga, ascolta disco-music, si veste in modo sgargiante e kitsch, si muove ciondolando e adora la auto veloci. Questo è, infatti, il ritratto dei protagonisti delle serie cinematografiche Shaft e Superfly, che rappresentano l'inizio e il vertice più alto (o più basso) della cosiddetta blaxploitation. Terminato questo fenomeno cinematografico, verso la fine degli anni Settanta, la comunità nera fu sommersa da un'ondata di crack, una droga pericolosa e di bassa qualità, derivata dalla cocaina, particolarmente accessibile ai giovani neri. Incidentalmente: almeno di quest'ultima calamità che si abbatté sulla comunità nera la responsabilità ricade sull'Fbi e sulla sua operazione Cointelpro (Counter Intelligence Program).E la marea di eroina che si diffuse in Italia negli anni Settanta, e che fu la pietra tombale del cosiddetto Sessantotto? Secondo un documentario RaiStoria, anche questa era un'operazione targata Usa: operazione Bluemoon. Il documentario completo è disponibile su YouTube.Restiamo in Italia, dove, da anni, i radicali si battono per liberalizzare la droga. Lascio al lettore ricostruire genesi e ascendenze del Partito Radicale; per ora occupiamoci di questa loro campagna. L'argomento principale (oltre a quello filosofico-liberale, per cui non esistono né bene né male e ognuno è libero di fare ciò che gli pare e piace) è questo: liberalizzando (attenzione alle parole...) la droga si toglie quel monopolio alla malavita organizzata. E chi si prenderebbe questa fetta di mercato che vale decine di miliardi di euro? Le aziende farmaceutiche, non sazie dei guadagni dei vaccini? Almeno pagherebbero le tasse, si risponde. Beh, non in Italia, certamente. E poi... cosa cambierebbe, per la società? A proposito di mafie... chi ricorda che Falcone e Borsellino furono uccisi quando cominciarono a capire che la mafia non era un fenomeno locale ma con moltissimi collegamenti internazionali e guidato da «menti raffinatissime»?In somma e in conclusione: molti danno una lettura della storia moderna e contemporanea alla luce della ricerca e controllo delle risorse energetiche, petrolio in primis. Forse è il caso di ampliare quella visione introducendo anche il mercato della droga e il suo uso politico. Perché la droga è certamente un male; ma, forse, è anche una «struttura di peccato», secondo la definizione che ne ha dato Giovanni Paolo II nell'enciclica Sollicitudo Rei Socialis (30 dicembre 1987).

The California Report Magazine
Mapping a Radical Legacy of South Asian Activism in California

The California Report Magazine

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2022 29:40


You've probably heard of Bobby Seale and The Black Panthers. Or Mario Savio and the Free Speech Movement. But what about Kartar Singh Sarabha and the Ghadar Movement? Or Kala Bagai and the fight against redlining? This week we dive deep into the hidden history of early South Asian activism in our state. How Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi and other South Asian immigrants and their children laid the groundwork for social movements that still resonate today in California. Host Sasha Khokha teams up with KQED politics correspondent Marisa Lagos, and they meet a couple who created the Berkeley South Asian Radical History Walking Tour.

The Charlie Kirk Show
The Charlie Kirk Show Takes on UC-Berkeley — Here's What We Saw

The Charlie Kirk Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2022 29:31 Very Popular


After a raucous day confronting the most radical of leftists on the campus of UC-Berkeley, Producer Andrew fills in for Charlie as he takes  a well-deserved day of rest in the midst of his West Coast swing on the Turning Point USA, “Educate Don't Mandate” college tour. Before being joined by TPUSA Contributor JoBob and diving into what Charlie and the crew experienced at the former seat of the Free Speech Movement in America, Andrew unpacks a sorely overlooked, important victory emanating from the State of Florida where Ron DeSantis, yet again, knocks it out of the park and wins a redistricting battle for the ages.  Support the show: http://www.charliekirk.com/support See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Unstoppable Mindset
Episode 1 – Unstoppable Mindset

Unstoppable Mindset

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2021 66:41


Michael Hingson, shares his Keynote speech created on October 3 2019 at an event sponsored by San Joaquin County Office of Education, CEDR Systems help in Monte Ray, CA. There were nearly 1,000 people in attendance at this keynote address delivered by Mr. Hingson to kick off the 2019 Inclusion Collaborative conference. In this presentation, Mike Hingson discussed his life experiences as a student who happened to be blind. He discussed some of the challenges he faced as well as how he prepared to overcome them. As a major part of this talk and our inaugural podcast episode, Mike tells his story of emergency preparation and how he was able to use his knowledge and his unstoppable mindset to survive the terrorist attack on Tower One of the World Trade Center. Some directories do not show full show notes. For the complete transcription please visit: https://michaelhingson.com/podcast About the Host: Michael Hingson is a New York Times best-selling author, international lecturer, and Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe. Michael, blind since birth, survived the 9/11 attacks with the help of his guide dog Roselle. This story is the subject of his best-selling book, Thunder Dog. Michael gives over 100 presentations around the world each year speaking to influential groups such as Exxon Mobile, AT&T, Federal Express, Scripps College, Rutgers University, Children's Hospital, and the American Red Cross just to name a few. He is an Ambassador for the National Braille Literacy Campaign for the National Federation of the Blind and also serves as Ambassador for the American Humane Association's 2012 Hero Dog Awards. https://michaelhingson.com https://www.facebook.com/michael.hingson.author.speaker/ https://twitter.com/mhingson https://www.youtube.com/user/mhingson https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelhingson/ accessiBe Links https://accessibe.com/ https://www.youtube.com/c/accessiBe https://www.linkedin.com/company/accessibe/mycompany/ https://www.facebook.com/accessibe/ Thanks for listening! Thanks so much for listening to our podcast! If you enjoyed this episode and think that others could benefit from listening, please share it using the social media buttons on this page. Do you have some feedback or questions about this episode? Leave a comment in the section below! Subscribe to the podcast If you would like to get automatic updates of new podcast episodes, you can subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts or Stitcher. You can also subscribe in your favorite podcast app. Leave us an Apple Podcasts review Ratings and reviews from our listeners are extremely valuable to us and greatly appreciated. They help our podcast rank higher on Apple Podcasts, which exposes our show to more awesome listeners like you. If you have a minute, please leave an honest review on Apple Podcasts. Transcription Notes: Michael Hingson 00:00 Access Cast and accessiBe Initiative presents Unstoppable Mindset. The podcast we're inclusion, diversity and the unexpected meet. Hi, I'm Michael Hingson, Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe and the author of the number one New York Times bestselling book, Thunder dog, the story of a blind man, his guide dog and the triumph of trust. Thanks for joining me on my podcast as we explore our own blinding fears of inclusion unacceptance and our resistance to change. We will discover the idea that no matter the situation, or the people we encounter, our own fears, and prejudices often are our strongest barriers to moving forward. The unstoppable mindset podcast is sponsored by accessiBe, that's a c c e s s i  capital B e. Visit www.accessibe.com to learn how you can make your website accessible for persons with disabilities. And to help make the internet fully inclusive by the year 2025. Glad you dropped by we're happy to meet you and to have you here with us. Michael Hingson 01:19 I really am honored to be here. I am, I guess in a sense, a product of special education in California. Let me tell you a little bit about me. In all seriousness, I was born in 1950, February 24 1950. You can do the math. Yes, I'm 69. People say I don't sound it. So I'm very happy about that. And I hope that that continues for a long time. But I was born sighted. But I was born two months premature. And the result of that was that I was put in an incubator with a pure oxygen environment. You've probably heard something about what today is called retinopathy of prematurity, which back in the day, I don't where that expression came from, but it was called retro dentro fibro pleasure. It was something that was discovered and named by Dr. Arnold Patz at the Wilmer Eye Institute. I had the pleasure of meeting him a few years ago before he passed, and we discussed what was originally called rlf, which is now our LP, but the bottom line is, is I was put in an incubator, the retina malformed and I became blind after about two days. We didn't know that for a while. I certainly didn't know it, but my parents didn't know it. About four months after I was born, an aunt said to my mother, you know, he's not really reacting to sunlight. I wonder if there's something wrong with his eyes? Well, sure enough, we went to the hospital and the doctors eventually came out and said, PSC is blind, you can't see. And you should send him to a home because you shouldn't keep him with you. If you do, he will not be good for your family. He'll certainly make it harder for your older son who can see who was two years old, you should send him to home. My father had an eighth grade education. My mother had a high school diploma and they told the learning Medical Society in Chicago nuts, too, you were taking him home. The doctor said he'll never be able to contribute to society and they said sure he will. It doesn't matter if he's blind or not. What matters is what he learns. These people who certainly didn't have the the vast knowledge of the learned medical profession in Chicago, bucked the system, I did go home. I was born on the south side of Chicago. Michael Hingson 03:47 If we if we take geraldo rivera into account two blocks from Al Capone's private vault, but I was born in Chicago, I grew up there for five years, went to the candy store when I was old enough to do it with my brother and cousins, who lived next door every day and walked around the neighborhood and so on and did it just like anyone else. I never even thought about it because my parents didn't think about it. They were risk takers, although I'm sure they didn't think of it that way. But they were they let me go outside and be a part of the rest of the kids in the neighborhood and growing up. They although I didn't know it early on, were a part of a group of parents who fought for special education classes for blind kids see, there were a number of premature births. During the baby boomer era, it actually brought the average age of blind people down from 67 to 65. Because there were so many, but there were enough in Chicago, my parents fought with other parents for special education classes. Well, kindergarten starts at age of four in Chicago. And so at four years old, I went to Korea In the garden in a special class with a teacher who was going to teach me and a bunch of other blind kids something about school, I actually began to learn Braille in kindergarten. I remember I wish I still had it. I remember, she, in teaching me Braille said, the best way for you to learn Braille is to write something. I'm going to read you a story about nasturtiums. Anybody know how to spell illustrations, I don't remember. But I had to write the story down that was in what was called grade one or uncontracted Braille. I had learned grade two yet, but I learned the Braille alphabet in kindergarten, hello. And then my father was offered a job in Southern California and we moved to California, Palmdale, California. And the problem with moving to Palmdale, California was that there were no provisions at all for blind or any other kinds of kids with what we call today's disabilities, or special needs, or whatever you politically want to call it. I'm not really a great fan of political correctness. So let me be real blunt, I am blind, I'm not vision impaired, I don't have a visual handicap, I am blind. By the way, I am trying to help start a movement, what I am not is visually impaired. The last time I checked, being blind didn't have any effect on how you looked. So visually impaired really doesn't count. If you're going to do it, vision impaired is more accurate than visually impaired because I really probably would look the same. If I am blind or sighted. We'll deal with the glasses later. I normally don't wear glasses, but that's another story and we'll get to it. vision impaired I understand visually impaired really is ridiculous. But it's the term that people have used. So you need to help us change the habit. But in reality, I am blind. Let me define blind. A person is blind when they lose enough of their eyesight that they have to use. Let me rephrase that, that they will use alternative techniques to eyesight in order to accomplish tasks, whether it be reading or whatever, yes, you can get very thick lens glasses or CCTVs, and so on, to help a person use their eyesight to read, but they're blind by any standard of intelligence. If you think about it, they are blind, not that they don't have any eyesight, but they have to use alternative techniques. And they don't have to use eyesight. I have been in environments I've been involved in projects as an adult, where I've been in special education, schools where we've been discussing how to teach Braille reading and so on. And I've had teachers who would come up to me and talk about the fact that they have kids who are blind and kids who have some eyesight. They're legally blind, but not totally blind. Sally has some eyesight Johnny doesn't have any Sally gets to reprint Johnny has to read Braille. Michael Hingson 08:05 That attitude is so backward, or it should be considered backward. The problem is Sally may get to reprint, but she's going to have headaches, she's going to read very slow. And if Johnny gets to truly learn Braille, he's going to be reading at several 100 words a minute, while Sally is kind of poking along, and having headaches and not doing very well. I have no problem with children or adults using their eyes. If they have eyesight, I do have a problem with them not also having the opportunity to learn the techniques that blind people use. Because if they learn those techniques, then you they can use both worlds to live much more productive lives. And so for those of you who are special ed teachers, even if your children have some eyesight, and even if the parents resist, try to push back, they need to learn Braille. A lot of special education teachers have said to me well, but blind people don't need Braille anymore. It's passe. You can listen to books and so on. You've got recordings we've now got Of course, files and you can use synthetic speech to hear the books read. Yeah, listen to one of those books with synthetic speech and see how much you enjoy it. But But yes, it's available. But my question to any of those people is tell me why you still teach sighted kids to read print? My they could watch cartoons, they could watch TV? Why do they need to learn to read print? The bottom line is blindness isn't the problem that I face. The problem I face consists truly of the attitudes and misconceptions that people have about blindness and it still comes back down to the fact that in reality people think That blind people can't truly be as productive in society as people who can see. Ah, and I wanted to do something before we go on how many heroes special ed teachers? Let me just see. Alright, how many are HR people? All right, a few of you get it. So I'm going to stop right now and say for those of you who didn't clap, how many of you think it's bright when a lecturer asks you a question and they're blind that you raise your hands? And you prove my point. So the bottom line is blindness isn't the problem. There are so many people in the world who are blind who have accomplished every bit as much if not more than most people in society, because they've learned that eyesight isn't really the gating factor. The gating factor are our attitudes about blindness. Jacob Salatin was a cardiologist who didn't live a long life. I think he died at 36. He was in the early he lived in the early 1900s. He was blind. And he was one of the most famous heart doctors in the Chicago area. There's a book about him called the good doctor, you gotta try to find it and read it. It's fascinating read. There are so many others. Jacobus tenbroek, was the founder of the National Federation of the Blind. He was born in Canada, but lost his eyesight at the age of seven lived most of his life in the United States. Dr. Tim Brooke, was taught by Dr. Newell Perry in in Albany at the School for the Blind at that time, and learned that in fact, he could do whatever he chose to do blindness was the problem. Dr. Tim Brooke went through the standard education courses and eventually had I had taken lectureships in at the University of California at Berkeley, did his undergraduate work there, he wanted to go into law. But when he graduated, and expressed that interest, the school said, No, you can't because a blind person can't do that. You could get a degree in psychology, you can get your PhD in psychology. But you can't get a law degree because blind people can't do that way too much reading way too complicated. So Dr. Tim Britt bowed to the pressure and got his degree in psychology, and then was hired to teach at UC Berkeley. Michael Hingson 12:29 I don't remember the exact year but somewhere along the line, he was asked to chair the speech department at the University of California at Berkeley. Now Dr. Tim Brooke, who was by then married to his wife, Hazel was pretty bright guy and kind of guy. Dr. Hambrick, accepted the position and said to the entire university, I want faculty members to join my speech department. But if you're going to join this department, what you need to understand is that you have to undertake a discipline, different from your discipline of education. So if you're a physicist, for example, and you want to join my department, you got to do research on something other than physics, you can tie it back to physics, but you have to do something other than physics is your main effort of work in our department. Well, Dr. Turmeric was one of these guys who believed in practicing what he preached, what do you think that he decided to do his discipline on? Dr. temperate became one of the foremost constitutional law scholars of the 20th century. There are still many cases that use his treatise is on tort law. And many examples of his works on discrimination and so on, are used today. In 1940, he formed with others, the National Federation of the Blind, the largest organization of blind people, consumers in the United States. And we don't have time to go into a lot of his work. But the point is, it didn't matter that he was buying, he did get to law. And he did it in a roundabout way. But he did it in a way that the university had to accept. And they loved him for it, in fact that Dr. Tim Burke was one of the few people in California who has ever been asked by both political parties to run for the United States Senate. And that happened after senator Claire angle, had a stroke and and he obviously could not continue as a senator and passed away. Dr. Tamarack was asked by both parties to run and he refused. Because he was enjoying his work with the National Federation of the Blind. He was involved in forming the Free Speech Movement at UC Berkeley and so on and doing so much constitutional law work. He knew that's what he needed to do. blindness isn't the problem. And so the question that all of you need to consider is are you going to hold people back? Or are you going to truly embrace a positive philosophy That says bind people bind students can do whatever they choose. And we're going to challenge them just like we would challenge any other student. And we're going to challenge them to do the best that they can truly do. And we're going to help teach them what they need. And sometimes that's going to mean you need to do as much work to educate parents. Because parents are frightened. They don't know. They're victims. I won't say products. They're victims of the same society that has negative attitudes about blindness. And I know there's only so much you can do, but you can set the tone. All of you here, not just in special education, but all of you here can set the tone. To give you an example of the kinds of attitudes that I faced. We moved to Victorville California in 2014. Where do you live in Victorville? Where do you live? Okay, we live in Spring Valley lake. Yeah. Other side. We chose property and build a house on it. My wife happens to be in a wheelchair and it's been in a chair her whole life. So we, we knew that if you buy a house and modify it, it costs a lot of money. If you build a house, it doesn't cost anything to build in the accessibility. And we found a piece of property very close to the Victorville Spring Valley Lake Country Club. So we get to walk to breakfast, or to go to dinner when we want to go out to eat, which is great. Anyway, before we moved to Victorville, in 2013, my wife and I were in an IKEA store with a couple of other people. And this young 13 year old boy comes up to me and he says, I'm sorry. And I stood there for a second. I said, Well, what are you sorry about? Well, because you can't see. I didn't know this kid. But that was his attitude. And I probably didn't answer in the best way that I could. But I said, Well, I'm sorry that you can because you don't get what I get. Michael Hingson 17:05 And by that time, his mother saw that he was tying this blanket and called him away and told him that not bothered the blind man. But you know, the bottom line is, we're no different than anyone else. We don't have the disability that all of you house. You know, in the 1800s, Thomas Edison invented the electric light bulb. Why did he do that? Because as we now understand, with the Americans with Disabilities Act, it was a reasonable accommodation for light dependent people who can't function in the dark. Michael Hingson 17:39 You light dependent people I know there are more of you than there are of me. But we're gonna get you in a dark alley one night, and we'll see if we can read. You know, again, it isn't. It isn't a blindness issue. I did go to college, I graduated I had several jobs that eventually led me to be in the World Trade Center on September 11 2001. I was there as the Mid Atlantic region sales manager for quantum Corporation, which was a fortune 500 computer company. I had been hired two years before to open an office for quantum in New York City. I was living back there because I had been transferred by another company from California to sell in New York City because I had been doing it by phone. And I made the case for the fact that we needed to do it on site. So I was asked to open an office because I had been recruited by quantum to do that. We opened the office on the 78th floor of tower one of the World Trade Center. The 78th floor is what's called a skylounge a sky lobby. That meant that elevators would go straight from floor one to 78 without stopping the World Trade Center. The way it was structured was that you could take elevators to go from floor one up to some number of floors but there were also direct elevators to floor 44 and floor 78. The 44th floor was where the cafeteria was the Port Authority cafeteria that everyone use 78 was the next jumping off point. You would then go to other elevators to go to other floors are you take the stairs, or in our case we were fortunate to have our office right on the 78th floor and on September 11 we were going to be holding some sales seminars to teach some of our resellers how to teach how to sell our products. I Arctic con they are excuse me quantum the company that worked for then artic con move me to the east coast but quantum work through a two tier distribution and sales model. So typically most of our products were sold to a few very large distributors and they in turn sign the smaller resellers and the major distributor we worked with Ingram micro wanted to make sure that their resellers knew how to sell our products. So they asked if we do the seminar and we set it up for of course September 11. By that time, I Had my fifth guide dog Roselle was that was a yellow lab. Roselle was also a dog with a great sense of humor, she loved to steal socks. She wouldn't eat them, she hid them. And I was warned by her puppy raisers that she'd like to do that. And she did. She stole my wife slippers once and hid them. And we had to find them. So in any case, we we in, Roselle and I were matched in 1999. And in 2001, she was very used to working in the World Trade Center with me, I had spent a lot of time when we started the office and started preparing to open the office, I had spent a great deal of time learning where everything in the World Trade Center was that I could possibly want to know about, I knew what was on most every floor, especially that would be a place where we might want to reach out and, and try to sell. I knew how to get around. I spent a lot of time studying emergency evacuation procedures. And almost every day when I went into the office, I remember thinking, if there's an emergency today, how am I going to get out? What am I going to do? And I made sure I knew the answers to those things. Because many times I would be in the office alone, nobody else would be there. Because I had a staff working for me great sales guys. And their job was to go out and sell and support their manager, right. So that was me. And my job was to be inside supporting them going on sales calls with them from time to time. But a lot of times I would be in the office alone, fielding their questions, helping them in any way that I could, working to make sure that I knew everything that they might need to know so that I could enhance them out in the field. In fact, every salesperson I ever hired, I said, Look, I know you're working for me. But I want you to understand that I view myself as a second person on your sales team. And what you and I need to do is to learn how we work together so I can add value to you and enhance what you do. My favorite example of that was with a guy named Kevin, who I hired. Michael Hingson 22:14 I really liked Kevin, because when we were doing the interview, I said to him like I did to everyone, tell me what you're going to be selling for us and how you're going to do it. Now the typical answer for most people was, well, you're selling tape drives, we're going to be selling the tape drives, I'm going to learn all about those. And I'm going to go off and tell people how to do it. And what what they need to know so that they can buy it. That's the typical answer. Kevin's answer was the only person who ever gave it and it was the answer I wanted to hear. The only thing I have to sell is me and my reputation. And I need your support. I won't do anything without telling you. But when we agree on something, I'm going to go sell me and through them will and through that we'll sell the products. But if they don't believe me, they're not going to be interested in our products. And I have to rely on you. What an answer. But it was the right answer truly. So one day Kevin comes into my office and he says, Hey, we have sales opportunity at Salomon Brothers. I said, Okay. He said, they want me to come out and talk about our products for a project they have, I'm not sure that our products will really be what they want. But they want us to come and talk about it. And they wanted me to bring my manager along a decision maker. I said, Okay, he said, so they don't know you. So I didn't tell him you're blind. Michael Hingson 23:51 So we got to the meeting. We entered the building right at 10 o'clock. We I wanted to arrive a minute or so late. I knew what Kevin meant. When he said I didn't tell him you're blind. Because we were going to hit him right between the eyes with that. So about 1001 we're walking down the hallway here, a bunch of people talking a few and we're going where are these quantum people in all that we walk in the door and the room goes totally silent. We stand there for a moment. And I turned to Kevin, I said, So where are we going to do this? He says all right up here in the front. So we went up to the front I had a laptop projector in hand on my laptop also opened up the cases took things out and says where do we plug this stuff in? And he says I'll take it and he plugs it in. And meanwhile, I'm standing there facing this audience. And so I turn to my left. And I said to the person sitting right in the front row on the corner who I heard as we walked by, I said, Hi my name is Mike Kingston, who are you? Nothing. Really, who are you? Nothing. So I kind of walk over near him and I'm looking straight at him. And I said I heard you when I walked by, who are you? So finally he said, Oh, my name is Joe. I said, Good, glad to meet you. And when I shook his hand, I said, you know, doesn't matter whether I'm blind beside, I know you're there. I don't know a lot about you yet, but I'm gonna learn about you. So tell me, Joe, why are you interested in our tape drives? I didn't ask if he was interested. I asked him why? Because I knew from my Dale Carnegie sales course you don't answer ask yes or no questions unless you really know the answer. But you don't ask yes or no questions. That doesn't give you a lot of information. So Joe, kind of hemmed and hawed and finally gave me an answer to that. And then I said, So tell me a little bit more about the project, if you will. And he did. And then I went to the next person, and I went around the room. And I talked to those people, learning a lot, including our product wasn't gonna do anything to help these people. But we were there. So we did the presentation. I did the presentation, I had a script, I did the PowerPoint show. And on my script was in incredible detail. And it said, everything that I needed to know including even on the screen, what picture appeared where so I could point over my shoulder and say, on the left side of your screen, you'll see the A TLP 3000, which holds 16 tape drives and 326 tape cartridges, we use a special technology called prism technology, our system is very modular, we can actually connect five of those drives together five of those libraries together, so that you could have a total of 80, tape drives, and 16 120. Tape cartridges, all in one big library. And on the right side of your screen, you can see the ATL p 1000, which is a small single drive library with 30, tape drives, and some things like that, and talk on and on and on. And we went off and we talked and all that, and we did the whole show. And then I said at the end, and as you can see our product won't do what you want. But I wanted you to know about it, because I want you to understand what different systems can do. Now let me tell you a little bit about who has a product that will help you. My bosses would shoot me if they heard me say that. But it's the ethical thing to do. And so we talked about that a little bit. And then we ended the day and people will come up to me and we chatted some and a couple came up and they said we're really angry at you. And I said Why? He said Well, usually when people come in, they do these presentations, we just kind of fall asleep and vege out, you know, because they just keep talking and talking. But you never looked away and looked at the screen. You kept looking at us, we forgot you were blind. We didn't dare fall asleep. And I said, Well, you could have fallen asleep. The dog was down here. You may think he's asleep, but he's taken notes. Anyway, we ended and we went out and Kevin said, How can you know so much about our products? And and you knew some of these later things that I don't know. And I said, Well, did you read the product bulletin that came out last week? Well, no, I really didn't have time. I said, there you go. message received and understood. But about two weeks later, the Solomon people called back and they said, We really do appreciate all that you did and coming out and talking with us. And we have something to tell you. And that is that there's another project. Because of everything that you taught us, we know that your product is perfect for it, we're not even putting it out for bid, just give us a price. That's the ethics of it. That's the way to sell. Michael Hingson 28:31 And that's what we did. So, in any case, I spent a lot of time learning what to do in the case of an emergency, so that I could get out when necessary, because I knew that people like Kevin and the rest of our sales and support staff would be out working a lot of times. And so I knew everything that I could possibly know about what to do in any kind of an unusual situation. On September 10, I went home as usual, I took my laptop, which is what I used in the office, I backed up my data at home. I'm a good Scout, I know how to be prepared, and sometimes I would work at home. So I always made sure I had my data backed up at home as well as on the job. By the way, speaking of scouts as long as I'm bragging, I happen to be an Eagle Scout with two palms and vigil in the order of the arrow. blindness isn't the issue. Michael Hingson 29:33 A lot of fun. I had some great scout leaders who accepted me for who I was and that made all the difference. In any case. I backed up my data later that night we went to bed and about 1230 Roselle started nudging me. Now Roselle was afraid of thunder. And of course we had rain storms in New Jersey. We lived in Westfield, great town. Again there we build our house that was a two story house. We put an elevator in So we could go to the two stories and the basement. So we had this nice elevator and nice house. But Roselle now was bugging me at 1230. And I knew that there must be a storm coming. She usually gave us about a half hour warning because she could sense it, as we know because the static charge would build up on her for as well as the fact that she probably heard the thunder before we do and so Rosa was shaking and shivering and panting and so I took Roselle Karen, my wife was awake by that time and we both agree there must be a storm coming. So we went downstairs to my basement to our basement. I put Roselle under my desk and I sat down and decided to try to do a little bit of work that I was going to do the next day before our sales seminars began. I turned on the stereos and had a pretty loud hopefully masking some of the thunder sounds. But God has a sense of humor. I guess. The storm literally came right over our house. It sounds like bombs going off outside and pours it Roselle was just shaking. At least she didn't see the lightning because she was under the desk. We were there until about two o'clock. Then the storm left. And so I went back up and we got three more hours asleep and then got up to go into the office. I didn't think it was a bad sign of things to come. Some people have said well, didn't you get the warning? No. So we got to the office at 740. And there was a guy there he just pulled up with a cart. He was from the Port Authority cafeteria, he was bringing the breakfast that we ordered for the early arrivals. And for the first group of seminar people we had 50 people scheduled during the day to come to one of four seminars. by eight o'clock. Some of our distribution people from Ingram micro arrived along with David Frank from our corporate office, David was in charge of the distribution sales, then he was there to help the Ingram micro people talk about pricing. I was there because of course I'm the technical contact the guy who would be on site in New York all the time. David was from New York, but he transplanted to California. And so so he was there and I was there we were the two quantum people, the Ingram micro people were there for about five Ingram micro people, six, actually, I guess. And then one of them decided about quarter after eight or 830, to go downstairs and to wait in the lobby, and a score our distribution people to where they needed to go. The last thing we needed to do before the seminars or to start was to create a list of all the people who would be attending that day, if you wanted to go to the World Trade Center and go up and see anyone at that time, because of the bombing in 1993, you either had to have your name on a previously prepared list that was created on stationery from the company where you were going. So they could check your name off after looking at your ID, or they would have to call us and say is so and so allowed to come up. We didn't want to have 50 phone calls. So it was easier to create the list. David and I finished the list and at 845 in the morning I was reaching for stationery to create the list and print it out when suddenly we felt a muffled thump. And the building sort of shuttered a little a minor kind of explosion not overly loud. And then the building began to tip. As I'm tipping my hand and it just kept tipping and tipping and tipping. We actually moved about 20 feet. Michael Hingson 33:37 The building kept tipping. David said What's going on? I said I don't know what do you think? I said do you think it was an explosion? You said it didn't sound like it? He said was it an earthquake? I said no. Because the building's not shaking from side to side or anything it's going in one direction. Now I knew that building the towers were made to buffet and winds although I wasn't really thinking about that at the time. But the building kept tipping and hey I grew up in Palmdale right building musco Santa doorway, so I went and stood in the doorway to my office. Yeah, a lot of good that's really going to do your 78 floors up but hey, there I was. David was just holding on to my desk. Roselle was asleep under my desk. And finally, David, I say goodbye to each other because we thought we were about to take a 78 floor punch to the street. Then the building slowed down and it stopped. And it came back the other way. And I remember as soon as the building started to move back, I let out my breath. I didn't even realize I was holding it. The building eventually got to be vertical again. As soon as it did, I went into my office and I met my guide dog Roselle coming out from under my desk. I took her leash and told her to heal, which meant to come around on my left side just like Alamo did good boy, he gets a reward for sitting and Roselle came and sat and was just wagging your tail And about that time, the building Straight down about six feet. Because as we know, the expansion joints went back to their normal configuration. We didn't really think about that at the time, but that's what they were doing. As soon as that occurred, David let go of the desk, turned around and looked around outside and said, Oh my god, Mike, there's fire and smoke above us. There are millions of pieces of burning paper falling outside the window. We got to get out of here right now. We can't stay here. I said. Are you sure? Yeah, I can see the fire above us. And there millions of pieces of burning paper falling outside our windows. I heard stuff, brushing the windows, but I didn't know what it was. Now I did. And our guests began to scream the ones that were in eating breakfast, waiting for the seminar to start, they started moving toward our exit and I kept saying slow down, David. No, we got to get out of here right now. The buildings on fire. Slow down. David will get out. Just be patient. No, we got to get out of here right now. We can't stay here. For me, emergency preparedness training kicked in. Because I, as you know, kept thinking What do I do? Emergency Well, here it was. Then David said the big line Mike, we got to get out of here. And I said slow down. He says no, you don't understand you can't see it. The problem wasn't what I wasn't seeing. The problem was what David wasn't seeing when I tell you about Rozelle with thunderstorms. She wasn't doing any of that she was wagging her tail and Jani and going, who woke me up. She wasn't giving any fear indication at all. And so I knew that whatever was occurring, we weren't imminently immediately threatened. So I finally got David to focus and say, get our guests to the stairs and start them down. And he did. While he was doing that, I called Karen, my wife and said, there's been an emergency and something happened. We're going to be evacuating, I'll let you know later What's going on? And she said, what's, what is what is going on? I said, Oh, no. The airplane hit 18 floors above us on the other side of the building. Afterward, when reporters started interviewing me. They said, Well, of course you didn't know what happened because you couldn't see it. I said, Wait a minute, helped me understand. The plane hit on the 96th floor roughly. On the other side of the building from us the last time I heard there really wasn't such a thing as x ray vision. None of us knew blindness had nothing to do with you can't justify that. None of us knew. And on the stairs, none of us knew. And we were with a whole bunch of people on the stairs. Anyway, David came back. I just disconnected with Karen. We swept the offices to make sure we didn't miss anyone. We tried to power down some equipment, didn't really have time to do a lot of that and we just left a went to the stairs and started down. Almost immediately I began smelling an odor and it took me a little while to recognize that what I was smelling was burning jet fuel. I traveled a lot through airports about 100,000 miles a year. So I knew that smell but I didn't associate it with the World Trade Center. Now suddenly, I smelled it and I recognize it finally after about four floors, and I observed it to others who said yeah, that's what it is. You're right. Michael Hingson 38:12 So we kept walking down the stairs. Got down about 10 floors and then from above us we heard Brian victim coming through move to the side let us by the stairs were wide enough that you could walk like two or three abreast but we moved to the outer wall stood facing in and a group of people passed us and David described how they were surrounding a woman who is very badly burned over the upper part of her body, probably from the little vapor droplets that can busted as she was standing in front of an elevator. We then started walking again and then we heard it again burned record coming through moving to the side, let us buy and another group pass us with someone who is burn. As David said even worse, we knew it had to be pretty bad above us. We kept walking down some conversation. We got to about the 50th floor David wasn't talking very much. And suddenly he said Mike we're gonna die. We're not going to make it out of here. And I just said stop it David if Roselle and I can go down the stairs. So can you see I took that secret teacher course that that all of you as teachers have never told anybody about because you're sworn to secrecy, right? voice 101 where you learn to yell at students, right? And so I literally very deliberately spoke very harshly to David. And he told me that that brought him out of his funk. But then David made a decision, which I think is still one of the most profound and incredible decisions and follow throughs that I experienced that day. David said, You know, I got to keep my mind on it on what's going on. But I don't I don't want to think about this. I want to think about something else. So I'm going to walk the floor below you and shout up to you everything that I see on the stairs, okay. And I said Sure, go ahead. Did I need David to do that? No. Right, you're going down the stairs, what can you do, but it was okay. And I'm glad to have more information. I love information. And so I thought it was fine. But the reason that I thought that what David did was so incredible will come up in a moment. So suddenly I'm on the 49th floor when I walked down the floor and David walked ahead of us and suddenly, Hey, Mike, I'm on the 48th floor, everything is good here going on down. I'm on 49 go into 48 get to 48 David 47th floor all clear. What David was doing, although he was shouting up to me, he was providing information that hundreds or 1000s of people on the stairwell could hear. He gave everyone a focus point. Anyone who could hear him knew that somewhere above them or below them on the stairs, someone was okay. And that it was clear and they could keep going. He gave everyone something to focus on. And I think that that was the one thing more than anything else. That had to keep more people from possibly panicking like he started to do on the stairs. We didn't have any other incidents that that after David started shouting 46 floor all clear. Hey, I'm on 45 everything is good here. 44th floor This is where the Port Authority cafeteria is not stopping going on down. Michael Hingson 41:31 And we continue down the stairs. We eventually got to the 30th floor. And when we did actually David did and I was at 31 he said I see I see firefighters coming up the stairs. We're going to have to let them by everybody moved to the side while I went down to where he was and they hadn't got there yet. I said what do you see? And he said, Well I just see him coming up the stairs they got heavy backpacks on and they're carrying shovels oxygen cylinders by our axes the first guy gets to us and he stops right in front of me and when let me bike goes hey buddy you okay? You know that's how you sound in New York right? Hey buddy. Yo, in New Jersey, it's yo and I said yeah I'm fine well that's really nice we're gonna send somebody down the stairs which should make sure you get out and I said you don't need to do that I'm good. What's really nice we're gonna send somebody which anyway I said Look, I just came down from the 78th floor here we are at 30 I came down 48 floors I'm really good. Wow, it's really nice. We're gonna send somebody down the stairs which I said Look, I got my guide dog Roselle here and and everything is good. We're doing fine. Now what a nice dog and he reaches out and he starts petting Roselle. It wasn't the time to give him a lecture don't pet a guide dog and harness. But I'll give you the lecture dump had a guide dog and harness, dog and harness do not come up Don't say name don't interact with even don't make eye contact dog in harness is working harness is symbol of work. Don't distract dog. If you do, I will first correct the dog before I deal with you. Because rose Alamo should know better. He is still a puppy though. And dogs love to interact. And so when you start trying to talk with them, they're going to talk to you, they're going to try and then I have to bring him back and focus him. I don't want to do that. So don't deal with a guide dog and harness. Now as I said before, when we're out selling books later harness will come off, and you're welcome to visit with him all you want. Of course, I'd love you to buy books too. And take business cards because if any of you know anyone who needs a public speaker, whether it's in your district or or their organizations, I would love you to to let me know or let them know, because this is what I do. And I really would love your help to do more of this to educate people. We can talk more about that later. Any case wasn't the time to give them that lecture and it wasn't the time to say to the fire person. blindness isn't the problem. It's your attitude, you know, so I finally just played the card. Look, I got my friend David over here David can see we're working together okay. And he turns to David here with him. David goes yeah, leave him alone. He's good. He says okay, and he goes, then he pets Roselle a few more times. She gives him a few more kisses. And he goes on up the stairs. Probably just having received the last unconditional love he ever gotten his life. Michael Hingson 44:21 And I remember that. Every time I say it. I don't know I never heard whether they survived or not. But don't know that he did. But he was gone. Other firefighters were coming up 50 men and women pastors going up the stairs to fight that fire. Several of us on one or more occasions said can we help you guys and they just said no Your job is to go down and get out ours is to go deal with this. We got it. David we assumed a scouting position and we kept going down the stairs. Finally David said well at about the 26th floor by the way Somebody started passing up water bottles. Roselle was panting I was getting pretty warm with all the the massive human bodies. So we we gave Roselle some water somebody passed up bottles and David brought one up and he took some drinks I took some drinks we gave Roselle some we made our hands into kind of cups and so everybody got some water and then we continued and finally he got to the first floor. I was on four second floor two and he said hey Mike, the water sprinklers are on here you're going to have to run through a curtain and water to get out of the stairwell. And the water was running to create a barrier so fire wouldn't get in or out depending on if it ever broke out. He was gone. I got to the first floor picked up the harness results forward hopper speed up, which is the command to give. we raced through this torrential downpour of water and came out the other end soaking. But we were in the lobby of tower one. Normally a very quiet building and quiet lobby office type environment. But now people were shouting dunk on that way. Don't go outside go this way. megaphones don't go over their gun this way. Go to the doors into the rain, main part of the complex don't go outside. They didn't want anyone going out because that would have put them right below where people were jumping. We didn't know that at the time. So this guy comes up to David and me. And he says, Hey, I'm with the FBI. I'll get you where you need to go. And I'm sitting there going the FBI. What did I do? I didn't do it. sighs I'm not talking to anybody about McGarrett from five Oh, I didn't think that. Anyway, I said What's going on? He said no time to tell you just come with us. So he ran us through the whole complex and out a door after going up an escalator by borders, books as far away from the towers as we could be. And we made it outside. And we were told to leave the area. But David looked around and said, Mike, I see fire in tower two. I said what? Yeah, there's fire in the second tower. Sure. Yeah. And I went, what's going on? We had no idea where that came from. We didn't feel thing in our building when we were going down the stairs. So we thought perhaps it was just fire that jumped across from our building when the building tipped it was mashing pointed toward tower to we didn't know. So we left the area we walked over to Broadway, we walk north on Broadway and eventually we got to Vesey street where we stopped because David says see the fire and tower to really well. We're only 100 yards away. I want to take pictures. So we stopped. He got out his camera. I got out my phone. I tried to call Karen. I couldn't get through the circuits were busy because as we now know everyone was everyone was saying goodbye to loved ones. But I couldn't get through to Karen. I had just put my phone away and David was putting his camera away when a police officer to get out of here it's coming down and we heard this rumble that quickly became this deafening roar I described the sound is kind of a combination of a freight train and a waterfall. You could hear glass tinkling and breaking metal clattering in is white noise sound as tower to collapse it pancake straight down. David turned and ran. He was gone. Everyone was running different directions. I bodily lifted, Roselle turned 180 degrees and started running back the way we came. Come on was I'll keep going good girl keep going. We ran got to Fulton Street, turned right onto Fulton Street. And now we're going west. At least we had a building between us and the towers. I ran about maybe 100 feet or so. And suddenly there was David. It turns out we had both run in the same direction. And then he realized that he had just left me he was going to come back and try to find me. But I found him first and he started apologizing. I said David, don't worry about the buildings coming down. Let's keep going and we started to run. And then we were engulfed in the dust cloud all the dirt and debris in the fine particles of tower two that were collapsing that we're that we're coming down. And so David and I were now engulfed in this cloud. He said he couldn't see his hand six inches in front of his face. I could feel with every breath I took stuff going through my mouth and through my nose into my throat and settling in my lungs. That's how thick it was. I could feel it settling in my lungs. Michael Hingson 49:19 So we kept running and we knew we had to get out of that. So I started telling Roselle right? Right with hand signals and voice I don't know whether she could hear me and because of the dust. I don't even know if she could see me. Right? Roselle right? But I was listening for an opening on my right and the first opening I heard I was gonna go into it. And obviously Roselle didn't know what I want because when that first opening appeared, I heard it but she immediately turned right she took one step and she stopped and she wouldn't move. Connor was I'll keep going, she wouldn't move. And I realized there must be a reason. So I stuck a handle on a wall and stuck out a foot and realized and discovered that we were at the top of a flight of stairs. She had done her job perfectly. We walked down two flights of stairs and found ourselves in little arcade, a lobby of a subway station. We continued to well, we just stayed there for a while. And then this guy comes up. He introduced himself as Lou, an employee of the subway system. And he took us down to the lower levels of the subway station to an employee locker room. And when we got to the locker room, there were benches there were about eight or nine of us who were in the lobby at that point, that little arcade, there were other people that he had already escorted down. So we were all in this employee locker room, there was a water fountain, there were benches, there was a fan. We were all hacking and trying to get rid of stuff from our lungs, and not saying much what the heck was going on. None of us knew. We were there for a few minutes. And then a police officer came and he said, the air is clear up above you're gonna have to, to leave and and go out of here right now. So we followed him up the stairs, he went to that little arcade lobby where we had been, and then he went on up the stairs. He said the air is a little bit better up there. And we just followed him. And finally we went outside after getting to the top. David looked around, and he said, Oh my god, Mike. There's no tower to anymore. And I said, What do you see? And he said, All I see are pillars of smoke where the tower was it's gone. Pretty sure. Yeah, it's gone. We stood there for a moment. And then we just turn and continue to walk west on Fulton Street. We walked for about maybe a quarter of a mile. And we were in this little Plaza area. Just still trying to figure out what was happening when suddenly we heard that freight train waterfall sound again, and we knew it was tower one collapsing, David looked back and saw it. And he saw a dust cloud coming toward us again, it was still pretty concentrated. So we kind of ran to the side to get out of most of it hunkered down behind a wall and just waited until everything passes by and the wind subsided, the noise stop. And then we stood up. Turn, David looked around and said, Oh my god, Mike. There's no World Trade Center anymore. I said what do you see? And he said, fingers of fire and flame hundreds of feet tall and pillars of smoke, the towers are gone. We're gone in three hours before less than three hours before just to do our job. But now in the blink of an eye, it was gone. No clue why we stood there for a moment. And then I decided I better try to call Karen and this time I got through. And after some tears on both sides of the phone, she told us how to aircraft had been crashed into the towers went into the Pentagon and a fourth was still missing over Pennsylvania. We walked up toward Midtown and eventually got near Midtown Manhattan to the subway station and the train station at 33rd and sixth and seventh Avenue. And David and I set parted and went different ways. I wanted to get back home to Westfield he wanted to get up to the Upper East Side to his sister's house, which is where he was staying when I was back in New York. And so we went our separate ways. Michael Hingson 53:42 And never, never thinking that that was the end. And a lot of ways. We did try to reopen the office elsewhere, but didn't get a lot of support from the company and decided that, for me, it was time to do something different. The reason I decided that was that the day after September 11, the 12th. Karen said you want to call the folks from Guide Dogs for the Blind. That's where you've gotten all your guide dogs got to let them know that you were in the trade center and got out because eventually they would remember it a number of them had visited us in our office, because it's such a cool view. I don't know how to tell you about the view so much other than to say we were so high up that on the Fourth of July, people would go to our office to look down on the fireworks displays. So I called them and talked to a number of people including their public information officer, Joanne Ritter, who wanted to do a story and I said sure, and she said, You know, you're probably going to get request to be on TV. What TV show Do you want to start with? So yeah, I'm not really thinking about that sort of stuff, right? kind of still in shock. So I just said Larry King Live. Two days later on the 14th. We had the first of five interviews with Larry King. And so we started doing that and eventually Guide Dogs asked me to come and be a public spoke serve their public spokesperson. And I was being asked by that time to travel and speak and tell my story. And people said, we want to hire you. Being a sales guy, I'm sitting there going, you want to hire me just to come and talk. That sounds a whole lot more fun than working for quantum. And we wanted to move back to California anyway. So I accepted Guide Dogs position, and I've been speaking ever since. Other things have happened along the way very quickly, including I was asked in 2015, by a startup company, AIRA, a IRA to join their advisory board and AIRA makes a product called a visual interpreter. It consists of an app on a smartphone. And it may also include smart glasses with a high resolution video camera. And what I wrote allows me to do is to contact an agent who has been hired and vetted and trained to describe whatever the camera sees, and whatever information I need so they can help with an accessible websites. They helped me put together products when the instructions were all visual pictures, the Chinese have learned from IKEA, and in so many other ways that literally now, any visual information becomes available with AIRA. I just really want to quickly show you like hierro and we can we can talk more about AIRA this afternoon in the the session at 345. I want you to see what AIRA does. So hopefully AIRA 56:37 connecting to agent Kenyon starting video we're gonna wait. Oh, Michael, thanks for calling. I read this is Kenyon. What would you like to do today? Michael Hingson 56:48 I'd like you to tell me what you see. AIRA 56:50 I see a very large crowd, right? Michael Hingson 56:54 Yeah, what else? AIRA 56:56 podium to mic. And it looks like a very large auditorium, see some doors toward the back exit signs, and very captive crowds. Michael Hingson 57:09 Here's the real question. Do they look like they're awake? AIRA 57:16 They are now. So we're good. Michael Hingson 57:21 So tell them what you do. AIRA 57:26 I assist those who are sight challenged with independence on a daily basis. We allow them to be more independent in their daily lives to get around with minimal help. And we basically help them to see Michael Hingson 57:41 how do you do that? What do you do? 57:44 We use descriptives we use, we call in as we did now. And we ask them, What would you like to do and we assist them with whatever their task may be for that day, whether it be for reading, navigation, calling an Ubers, travel, descriptives, you name it, we can do it. We do that through either, believe you're using the glasses right now. We have horizon glasses we use and then or through technology in the phones, we use remote cameras, to help them to see the world around them and describe it to them. And to help them navigate through Michael Hingson 58:17 it to real quick stories. One, one IRA agent helped someone once while they were on an African safari to describe what was going on. But my favorite IRA story is that a father once wanted to find out if his daughter was really doing her homework. So he activated IRA. And he went in with the agent and said, How are things going? And she said, Oh great. I'm almost done with my homework. And the Irish said Irish and said, No, she's playing a game on her iPhone. AIRA 58:48 Yes, we also bust children whenever we need to. Michael Hingson 58:54 Kenny, I appreciate your time. I'm going to go ahead and finish chatting with these folks. But appreciate you taking the time to chat today. AIRA 59:02 You bet. Thanks for calling AIRA. Michael, we'll talk to you again soon. Michael Hingson 59:04 Thank you, sir. Bye. And that's what and that's what I read is all about. The whole the whole point is that I get access to all the information I otherwise don't have access to. Because ironically, in our modern technological world, sometimes it's actually becoming harder for me to get access to information. Too many websites are inaccessible and shouldn't be too many books may be scanned, but they're not put in a textual form that I have access to. There have been lawsuits over that. But the bottom line is that IRA creates access, or I should say it creates inclusion it gives me access to the information that I otherwise wouldn't have access to. So be glad to show that to any of you What I'd like to do is to end this now, with some words from Dr. Tim Brooke, that the person I mentioned earlier, this is part of a speech that he gave at the 1956 convention of the National Federation of the Blind in San Francisco. So it is a convention of blind people. But what I'm reading to you now could just as easily apply to any group. And I'm sure that Dr. Tim Burke intended it that way. And this is what he wrote. In the 16th century, john Bradford made a famous remark, which has ever since been held up to us as a model of Christian humility, and correct charity, and which you saw reflected in the agency quotations I presented earlier, seeing a beggar in his rags creeping along a wall through a flash of lightning in a stormy night, Bradford said, but for the grace of God, there go I compassion was shown. Pity was shown, charity was shown. Humility was shown. There was even an acknowledgment that the relative positions of the two could and might have been switched. Yet, despite the compassion, despite the pity, despite the charity, despite the humility, how insufferably arrogant there was still an unbridgeable gulf between Bradford and the beggar. They were not one but two, whatever might have been, Bradford thought himself Bradford, and the beggar a beggar one high, the other low one Why's the other misguided, one strong, the other weak, one virtuous, the other depraved. We do not and cannot take the Bradford approach. It is not just that beggary is the badge of our past, and is still all too often the present symbol of social attitudes toward us, although that is at least a part of it. But in the broader sense, we are that bigger, and he is, each of us, we are made in the same image. And out of the same ingredients, we have the same weaknesses and strengths, the same feelings, emotions, and drives. And we are the product of the same social, economic and other environmental forces. How much more constant with the facts of individual and social life, how much more a part of a true humanity to say, instead, there within the grace of God, do go I. And I want to leave you with that, because I think that sums it up as well as I can possibly do. We're all on the same world together. And you have the awesome responsibility to help children. And perhaps their parents grow, and truly become more included in society. So this afternoon, I'll be talking about the concept of moving from diversity to inclusion, and I'll tell you why choose that title. And I'll tell you now, when you watch television, you hear all about diversity. How often do you ever hear disabilities mentioned? You don't? Hollywood doesn't mention us. The candidates aren't mentioning us in all the political debates. Michael Hingson 1:03:46 Even though 20% of the population has some sort of a disability, not concluding politicians who have their own disabilities, but we want to go we need to demand and we ask your help to create a true inclusive society. I challenge you to do that. I hope we get to chat later. Come to the presentation this afternoon and come and see us. We'll be selling Thunder dog books, and you can visit with Alamo. And also again, if you know anyone else who needs a speaker, it's what I do, as you can tell, did you all feel you'll learn something today? vendors and everyone like Thanks very much, and I hope we get to chat some more. Thank you. Michael Hingson 1:04:43 You have been listening to the Unstoppable Mindset podcast. Thanks for dropping by. I hope that you'll join us again next week, and in future weeks for upcoming episodes. To subscribe to our podcast and to learn about upcoming episodes, please visit www dot Michael hingson.com slash podcast. Michael Hingson is spelled m i c h a e l h i n g s o n. While you're on the site., please use the form there to recommend people who we ought to interview in upcoming editions of the show. And also, we ask you and urge you to invite your friends to join us in the future. If you know of any one or any organization needing a speaker for an event, please email me at speaker at Michael hingson.com. I appreciate it very much. To learn more about the concept of blinded by fear, please visit www dot Michael hingson.com forward slash blinded by fear and while you're there, feel free to pick up a copy of my free eBook entitled blinded by fear. The unstoppable mindset podcast is provided by access cast an initiative of accessiBe and is sponsored by accessiBe. Please visit www.accessibe.com. accessiBe is spelled a c c e s s i b e. There you can learn all about how you can make your website inclusive for all persons with disabilities and how you can help make the internet fully inclusive by 2025. Thanks again for listening. Please come back and visit us again next week.

Instant Trivia
Episode 147 - Taking A "Bath" - Odd Words - Berkeley In The '60S - Where The "H" Are We? - Poetry Potpourri

Instant Trivia

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2021 6:54


Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 147, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: Taking A "Bath" 1: It attracts feathered friends. Birdbath. 2: It's what the baby shouldn't be thrown out with. the Bathwater. 3: This vehicle can take you under the sea. Bathyscape. 4: Extreme sentimentality. Bathos. 5: It's the chemical rinse that keeps photographic film from overdeveloping. Stop bath. Round 2. Category: Odd Words 1: A person described as loquacious does this a lot. Talks. 2: Something that displays eutexia does this easily, like ice cream. Melt. 3: An opera extra, when not carrying one of these, can set it in a fewter. Spear. 4: Stipple means to draw or paint with these instead of lines; Seurat was a master. Points (Pointilism). 5: In this sport, a "firstbrun" is a jump turn at right angles. Skiing. Round 3. Category: Berkeley In The '60S 1: In October 1965 Oakland police turned back over 10,000 marchers protesting this war. Vietnam War. 2: This actor won the California governorship in 1966 using the unrest at Berkeley as a campaign issue. Ronald Reagan. 3: Mario Savio was an informal leader of the FSM, a group named for this constitutional right. Free Speech Movement. 4: It completes the protest slogan "I am a UC student: do not fold, bend or" this. Mutilate. 5: In May 1960, the San Francisco meeting of this House committee was disrupted by protesters from Berkeley. the House Un-American Activities Committee. Round 4. Category: Where The "H" Are We? 1: Parker Ranch,Kilauea Volcano,Monument to Captain Cook. Hawaii. 2: Victoria Peak,Kai Tak Airport,Kowloon Shangri-La Hotel. Hong Kong. 3: Lake Balaton,Bela Bartok Memorial House,Buda Concert Hall. Hungary. 4: Senate Square,Mannerheim Museum,Sibelius Park. Helsinki. 5: The Malecon,Morro Castle,Revolution Square. Havana. Round 5. Category: Poetry Potpourri 1: He married Minnehaha, the "Loveliest of Dacotah Women". Hiawatha. 2: Milton work that begins, "Of man's first disobedience, and the fruit of that forbidden tree...". "Paradise Lost". 3: An 8-line stanza, it's usually the first 8 lines in an Italian sonnet. Octave. 4: Secretary to the Lord Deputy of Ireland, he idealized his boss as a knight in "The Faerie Queene". Edmund Spenser. 5: She described her nervous breakdown in her 1960 poetry collection "To Bedlam and Part Way Back". Anne Sexton. Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia!

The Long Thread Podcast
Susan Druding, Teacher, Shop Owner, Activist

The Long Thread Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2021 53:25


Susan Druding was a graduate student at the University of California-Berkeley when she first learned to spin and weave. In the Bay Area of the 1960s, fiber interest and social tensions both ran high. Without a business plan but with a lease on a small storefront, Susan and a business partner opened Straw Into Gold, a store devoted mostly to spinning and dyeing. Spinning legend Bette Hochberg, author of Handspinner's Handbook and Spin Span Spun, was a regular, and legendary spinning wheel maker Alden Amos set up shop in the basement. Award-winning spinner Celia Quinn ran the old carding machine that they used to create rainbow batts. They became the first United States distributor of Ashford spinning wheels and equipment. Whether as a shop owner or storyteller, Susan Druding has yarns like nobody else.

Madness Radio
Nothing About Us Without Us | Jay Mahler | Madness Radio

Madness Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2021 126:48


Jay Mahler was one of the originators of the psychiatric survivors movement in the 1960s, joining protests with the Free Speech Movement at the University of California Berkeley- the beginnings of protest against the US war in Vietnam – and then dedicating his life to ending forced treatment and protecting psychiatric patient rights. He was […]

Community Signal
Lessons from Community Memory, the First Publicly Available Social Media System

Community Signal

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2021 44:27


Lee Felsenstein’s work in tech and social organizing led to the creation of the Community Memory project, the first publicly available social media system and public computerized bulletin board system. Mr. Felsenstein was also a founding member of the Homebrew Computer Club, and he helped develop the personal computer. So, what was the first publicly accessible computerized bulletin board like? Mr. Felsenstein was less concerned with metrics around volume and recalls more specifically the diversity of interactions that happened through Community Memory. “We found somebody who did some typewriter graphics on it, [using] the teletype to laboriously draw a picture of a sailboat. That was not anticipated. We found all manner of people asking questions and giving answers to questions.” (Go to 7:07 in the discussion to hear more.) Mr. Felsentein also describes in great detail how he helped onboard people to Community Memory. Psychedelic posters, a cardboard box covering, and a person that stood near the terminal at all times who served as a promoter, tech support, and a bodyguard all helped people walking by Community Memory in its first home, a record store, use a virtual bulletin board for the first time. There are many takeaways from this episode of Community Signal, but let’s start with one –– Community Memory’s approach to onboarding and tech education helped many take their first steps with computers and with virtual message boards. How can we carry this example forward, when for a lot of us, access to the internet comes by way of our mobile devises. Mr. Felsenstein is thinking about this and other community builders should, too. Mr. Felsenstein and Patrick also discuss: The Free Speech Movement of the ’60s The origin and story of Community Memory Lee’s involvement with The WELL Our Podcast is Made Possible By… If you enjoy our show, please know that it’s only possible with the generous support of our sponsor: Vanilla, a one-stop shop for online community. Big Quotes How would people react to a computer popping up in their record store in 1973? (5:25): “I thought we would have to [physically] defend the [Community Memory] machine. How dare you bring a computer into our record store? I like to say that we opened the door to cyberspace and determined that it was hospitable territory. Of course, it took more to open the door than just a greeting.” –@lfelsenstein Who were the Community Memory early adopters? (6:27): “We saw a much broader diversity of uses [on Community Memory] than we had anticipated. We thought that there would be three categories: Jobs, cars, and housing. The first thing that happened, as far as I can tell, is that the traffic from the musicians’ paper bulletin board moved over to the machine. … The musicians were making their living from this and so they were very quick to recognize a better technology for what they needed.” –@lfelsenstein The first question seeded on Community Memory (8:05): “We seeded the [Community Memory] system with a question, ‘Where could you get good bagels in the Bay area?’ … We got three answers; two of which were the expected lists of places where you could get bagels. The third was the kicker. That one said, if you call the following phone number and ask for the following name, an ex-bagel maker will teach you how to make bagels. This was validation of the concept of a learning exchange.” –@lfelsenstein The tragedy of the commons (13:53): “Those who talk about the tragedy of the commons are blowing hot air, as far as I’m concerned, because they’re talking about a commons without regulation. Well, that’s a tragedy waiting to happen. Then they say any concept of commons is therefore illegitimate because it will obviously turn into a tragedy and fail. Well, no, the commons in which you do not have regulation will [fail]. We’ve seen a lot of this happen on online applications.” –@lfelsenstein Moderation as a practice (19:32): “Having no gatekeepers [in a digital space] is a bad idea. We pretty much are all seeing what that results in. You have to work out how to involve the consent of the user in the gatekeeping process. You can’t just say, ‘Here is the gatekeeper.'” –@lfelsenstein Facebook and the papyrus scroll method (34:11): “I think Facebook is a regression. I have to keep tearing myself away from it because it’s designed and built to feed the addiction of novelty. We need a lot more than novelty in organizing human society or software advancement.” –@lfelsenstein About Lee Felsenstein Lee Felsenstein has been both a witness and active participant in numerous historically significant moments for social justice and technology. In addition to his work on Community Memory, he was one of the original members of the Homebrew Computer Club, designed the first mass-produced portable computer, the Osborne 1, as well as numerous other examples of pioneering computing technology, and advising in the creation of The WELL, one of the most popular examples of an early online community. Related Links Sponsor: Vanilla, a one-stop-shop for online community Lee Felsenstein’s website Lee Felsenstein’s Patreon Lee Felsenstein on Wikipedia Community Memory Community Memory overviews and promotional material Resource One: Technology for the People newsletter Artists and Hackers: Community Memory and the Computing Counterculture Community Memory: Precedents in Social Media and Movements Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution, by Steven Levy The Homebrew Computer Club The WELL Deschooling Society, by Ivan Illich Free Speech Movement Archive Gail Ann Williams on Community Signal Howard Rheingold on Community Signal The Virtual Community, by Howard Rheingold Big Sky Telegraph Transcript View transcript on our website Your Thoughts If you have any thoughts on this episode that you’d like to share, please leave me a comment, send me an email or a tweet. If you enjoy the show, we would be so grateful if you spread the word and supported Community Signal on Patreon.

Wiki Politiki with Steve Bhaerman
Mark Crispin Miller - Propaganda

Wiki Politiki with Steve Bhaerman

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2021 56:18


Propaganda Expert Is In Trouble For… Teaching About PropagandaIrony Deficiency and Truth Decay in “Not-See” AmericaAired Tuesday, April 27, 2021 at 2:00 PM PST / 5:00 PM ESTDisclaimer: The views expressed on this show are those of the host and guests and do not necessarily reflect the views of OMTimes Media.Interview with Author, Journalist and Professor Mark Crispin Miller“Notseeism: Deadly disease of the body politic where people choose to not see what is too uncomfortable to look at.” — Swami BeyondanandaAs the Swami has been telling us for years now, the body politic is one sick puppy, suffering from irony deficiency … truth decay … electile dysfunction … and most recently from bi-polar disorder.As a result, what we used to call democracy is in the intensive care unit – and those who intensively care about its survival are finding themselves more and more marginalized. Fortunately, we still have that bastion of truth, academia, where in the spirit of the Free Speech Movement more than half a century ago, academic freedom is alive and well as professors and students freely and frankly discuss the most divisive issues of our time.Oh … wait a minute.That must be happening in a parallel universe.In this universe, a professor who has literally written the book on propaganda – or at least wrote the preface to one – is on the verge of being fired for teaching about propaganda. His crime? Pointing out the propaganda being promoted by the university itself.Fortunately, his colleagues at the university have bravely rallied around him, and …Oh … OK. That too is happening in a parallel universe.Oh, well. All’s well that ends Orwell.Our guest today, Mark Crispin Miller, has been fighting “notseeism” for decades, courageously pointing out those uncomfortable truths that others choose to not see. Now he is embroiled in his own battle to keep his position at NYU, after unmasking the propaganda about masking, and being guilty of “hate speech” – now defined as saying anything that the power structure hates to hear.Mark Crispin Miller earned his bachelor’s degree from Northwestern University in 1971, and his doctorate in English from Johns Hopkins University in 1977. He is currently a Professor of Media, Culture and Communication at New York University. He is the author of several books, including, The Bush Dyslexicon: Observations on a National Disorder, Cruel and Unusual: Bush/Cheney’s New World Order and Fooled Again: The Real Case for Electoral Reform (2007).Miller is the editor of Forbidden Bookshelf, an e-book series that revives important works now out of print, most of which were variously killed at birth. He also wrote the introduction to the 2004 edition of Edward Bernays’ book Propaganda. He is also editor of News From the Underground.If you believe in the credo of the Great Upwising, the truth shall UPSET you free, please join us this Tuesday, April 27th at 2 pm PT / 5 pm ET.To watch an eye-opening and jaw-dropping conversation about Mark’s ordeal, please go here: https://www.corbettreport.com/interview-1633-mark-crispin-miller-exposes-propaganda-in-the-academy/And to find out about and support his libel lawsuit, go here: https://markcrispinmiller.com/Support Wiki Politiki — A Clear Voice In the “Bewilderness”If you LOVE what you hear, and appreciate the mission of Wiki Politiki, “put your money where your mouse is” … Join the “upwising” — join the conversation, and become a Wiki Politiki supporter: http://wikipolitiki.com/join-the-upwising/Make a contribution in any amount via PayPal (https://tinyurl.com/y8fe9dks)Go ahead, PATRONIZE me! Support Wiki Politiki monthly through Patreon!Visit the Wiki Politiki Show page https://omtimes.com/iom/shows/wiki-politiki-radio-show/Connect with Steve Bhaerman at https://wakeuplaughing.com/#MarkCrispinMiller #Propaganda #SteveBhaerman #WikiPolitiki

Dr. Dan's Freedom Forum Radio
E119: Richard Salazar - Free Speech and the Information Monopoly (Part 1 of 4)

Dr. Dan's Freedom Forum Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2021 21:15


Dr. Dan  talks with Richard Salazar, Chairman of Speak Freely America, the Free Speech Movement designed to "cancel the cancel culture" by supporting every American's right to speak freely. E119: Richard Salazar - Free Speech and the Information Monopoly (Part 2 of 4)E119: Richard Salazar - Free Speech and the Information Monopoly (Part 3 of 4)E119: Richard Salazar - Free Speech and the Information Monopoly (Part 4 of 4)

Dr. Dan's Freedom Forum Radio
E119: Richard Salazar - Free Speech and the Information Monopoly (Part 2 of 4)

Dr. Dan's Freedom Forum Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2021 21:15


Dr. Dan  talks with Richard Salazar, Chairman of Speak Freely America, the Free Speech Movement designed to "cancel the cancel culture" by supporting every American's right to speak freely. E119: Richard Salazar - Free Speech and the Information Monopoly (Part 1 of 4)E119: Richard Salazar - Free Speech and the Information Monopoly (Part 3 of 4)E119: Richard Salazar - Free Speech and the Information Monopoly (Part 4 of 4)

Dr. Dan's Freedom Forum Radio
E119: Richard Salazar - Free Speech and the Information Monopoly (Part 3 of 4)

Dr. Dan's Freedom Forum Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2021 21:15


Dr. Dan  talks with Richard Salazar, Chairman of Speak Freely America, the Free Speech Movement designed to "cancel the cancel culture" by supporting every American's right to speak freely. E119: Richard Salazar - Free Speech and the Information Monopoly (Part 1 of 4)E119: Richard Salazar - Free Speech and the Information Monopoly (Part 2 of 4)E119: Richard Salazar - Free Speech and the Information Monopoly (Part 4 of 4)

Dr. Dan's Freedom Forum Radio
E119: Richard Salazar - Free Speech and the Information Monopoly (Part 4 of 4)

Dr. Dan's Freedom Forum Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2021 21:15


Dr. Dan  talks with Richard Salazar, Chairman of Speak Freely America, the Free Speech Movement designed to "cancel the cancel culture" by supporting every American's right to speak freely. E119: Richard Salazar - Free Speech and the Information Monopoly (Part 1 of 4)E119: Richard Salazar - Free Speech and the Information Monopoly (Part 2 of 4)E119: Richard Salazar - Free Speech and the Information Monopoly (Part 3 of 4)

Black Agenda Radio
Black Agenda Radio - 03.08.21

Black Agenda Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2021 53:34


Welcome to the radio magazine that brings you news, commentary and analysis from a Black Left perspective. I’m Margaret Kimberley, along with my co-host, Glen Ford. Coming up: Calls are mounting to abolish the cops on US college campuses. And, where does the US get the right to dictate who governs Haiti? We’ll speak with a longtime fighter for Haitian sovereignty. But first – It’s been confirmed that the nation’s best known political prisoner, Mumia Abu Jamal, has been infected with Covid-19. Abu Jamal is a senior citizen prisoner, having spent the last 39 years in the Pennsylvania prison gulag. Longtime Mumia supporter Dr. Johanna Fernandez held a press conference to demand that Abu Jamal and all elderly inmates and political prisoners be set free. Fernandez was joined by Mumia’s movement doctor, Ricardo Alvarez, and Rev. Kieth Collins, who has known Abu Jamal since they were both youngsters in Philadelphia. Dr. Fernandez said setting Mumia freeis good medicine, as well as justice. That was Rev. Keith Collins, speaking from Philadelphia. The modern Free Speech Movement began on California college campuses in the Sixties, and soon led to demands that campuses be free of police. But instead, cops have become even more deeply entrenched and militarized at US colleges, just as in the larger society. Dylan Rodriquez is a professor of Media and Cultural Studies at the University of California at Riverside, and he has plenty of experience combating the cops. Dr. Rodriguez says both the university system and its campus police are undergoing a crisis of legitimacy. That was Professor Dylan Rodriguez, speaking from the University of California, at Riverside. The Haitian people have made it plain that they want to be rid of Jovenel Moise, the incredibly corrupt president imposed on Haiti by the United States. Thousands of Haitians have been in the streets for weeks, demanding that Moise step down. But the regime refuses to budge, and has responded with gunfire that has left dozens dead. Dr. Jemima Pierre is an anthropologist in the Department of African American Studies at UCLA, and an activist with the Black Alliance for Peace. Pierre was interviewed by Dr. Jared Ball on his influential podcast, “I Mix What I Like.” She says Washington is the source of Haiti’s misery.

Black Agenda Radio
Black Agenda Radio - 03.08.21

Black Agenda Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2021 53:34


Welcome to the radio magazine that brings you news, commentary and analysis from a Black Left perspective. I'm Margaret Kimberley, along with my co-host, Glen Ford. Coming up: Calls are mounting to abolish the cops on US college campuses. And, where does the US get the right to dictate who governs Haiti? We'll speak with a longtime fighter for Haitian sovereignty. But first – It's been confirmed that the nation's best known political prisoner, Mumia Abu Jamal, has been infected with Covid-19. Abu Jamal is a senior citizen prisoner, having spent the last 39 years in the Pennsylvania prison gulag. Longtime Mumia supporter Dr. Johanna Fernandez held a press conference to demand that Abu Jamal and all elderly inmates and political prisoners be set free. Fernandez was joined by Mumia's movement doctor, Ricardo Alvarez, and Rev. Kieth Collins, who has known Abu Jamal since they were both youngsters in Philadelphia. Dr. Fernandez said setting Mumia freeis good medicine, as well as justice. That was Rev. Keith Collins, speaking from Philadelphia. The modern Free Speech Movement began on California college campuses in the Sixties, and soon led to demands that campuses be free of police. But instead, cops have become even more deeply entrenched and militarized at US colleges, just as in the larger society. Dylan Rodriquez is a professor of Media and Cultural Studies at the University of California at Riverside, and he has plenty of experience combating the cops. Dr. Rodriguez says both the university system and its campus police are undergoing a crisis of legitimacy. That was Professor Dylan Rodriguez, speaking from the University of California, at Riverside. The Haitian people have made it plain that they want to be rid of Jovenel Moise, the incredibly corrupt president imposed on Haiti by the United States. Thousands of Haitians have been in the streets for weeks, demanding that Moise step down. But the regime refuses to budge, and has responded with gunfire that has left dozens dead. Dr. Jemima Pierre is an anthropologist in the Department of African American Studies at UCLA, and an activist with the Black Alliance for Peace. Pierre was interviewed by Dr. Jared Ball on his influential podcast, “I Mix What I Like.” She says Washington is the source of Haiti's misery.

Comes A Time
Episode 36: Denise Kaufman

Comes A Time

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2021 72:03


This week, Comes a Time welcomes Denise Kaufman, musician, yogi, activist, founding member of the all-girl SF band Ace of Cups, Merry Prankster, and so much more. Having joined her first Civil Rights picket line at 14 years old, Denise found herself as a young activist in the 1960's San Francisco in the heart of the same world where the Grateful Dead came to be. Denise shares with Mike and Oteil the incredible tale of meeting Ken Kesey, “getting on the bus,” and getting her Prankster nickname “Mary Microgram.” She also explains what led to her going to music school at 33, her time teaching yoga to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and other celebrities, and opening a private school in Hawaii now in its 44th year of operation. Denise has lived many lives in one with one adventure following the next.  Growing up in San Francisco during the 1960s placed Denise Kaufman at the center of a cultural revolution. Her commitment to social justice and exploratory approach to life led her to adventures in counterculture: from being arrested at UC Berkeley's Sproul Hall protests during the Free Speech Movement, to "getting on the bus” (as "Mary Microgram") with Ken Kesey, the Merry Pranksters and the Grateful Dead; to forming the legendary Ace of Cups—an all-girl band that opened for Jimi Hendrix, The Band, and Janis Joplin; to being one of the seven founding mothers of Island School on Kauai; to studying with Robert Nadeau Shihan, Yogi Bhajan, Bikram Choudhury, Pattabhi Jois, and Paul Grilley and to teaching yoga to Madonna, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Quincy Jones, and Jane Fonda. Denise lives between Venice Beach and Kauai - playing music, teaching yoga, surfing and continuing to learn, channel inspiration and connect all those around her.  This podcast is available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. Please leave us a rating or review on iTunes! Comes A Time is brought to you by Osiris Media. Hosted and Produced by Oteil Burbridge and Mike Finoia. Executive Producers are Christina Collins and RJ Bee. Production, Editing and Mixing by Eric Limarenko and Matt Dwyer. Theme music by Oteil Burbridge. To discover more podcasts that connect you more deeply to the music you love, check out osirispod.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Comes A Time
Episode 36: Denise Kaufman

Comes A Time

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2021 68:07


This week, Comes a Time welcomes Denise Kaufman, musician, yogi, activist, founding member of the all-girl SF band Ace of Cups, Merry Prankster, and so much more. Having joined her first Civil Rights picket line at 14 years old, Denise found herself as a young activist in the 1960’s San Francisco in the heart of the same world where the Grateful Dead came to be. Denise shares with Mike and Oteil the incredible tale of meeting Ken Kesey, “getting on the bus,” and getting her Prankster nickname “Mary Microgram.” She also explains what led to her going to music school at 33, her time teaching yoga to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and other celebrities, and opening a private school in Hawaii now in its 44th year of operation. Denise has lived many lives in one with one adventure following the next. Growing up in San Francisco during the 1960s placed Denise Kaufman at the center of a cultural revolution. Her commitment to social justice and exploratory approach to life led her to adventures in counterculture: from being arrested at UC Berkeley's Sproul Hall protests during the Free Speech Movement, to "getting on the bus” (as "Mary Microgram") with Ken Kesey, the Merry Pranksters and the Grateful Dead; to forming the legendary Ace of Cups—an all-girl band that opened for Jimi Hendrix, The Band, and Janis Joplin; to being one of the seven founding mothers of Island School on Kauai; to studying with Robert Nadeau Shihan, Yogi Bhajan, Bikram Choudhury, Pattabhi Jois, and Paul Grilley and to teaching yoga to Madonna, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Quincy Jones, and Jane Fonda. Denise lives between Venice Beach and Kauai - playing music, teaching yoga, surfing and continuing to learn, channel inspiration and connect all those around her. This podcast is available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. Please leave us a rating or review on iTunes!Comes A Time is brought to you by Osiris Media. Hosted and Produced by Oteil Burbridge and Mike Finoia. Executive Producers are Christina Collins and RJ Bee. Production, Editing and Mixing by Eric Limarenko and Matt Dwyer. Theme music by Oteil Burbridge. To discover more podcasts that connect you more deeply to the music you love, check out osirispod.com See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Comes A Time
Episode 36: Denise Kaufman

Comes A Time

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2021 68:07


This week, Comes a Time welcomes Denise Kaufman, musician, yogi, activist, founding member of the all-girl SF band Ace of Cups, Merry Prankster, and so much more. Having joined her first Civil Rights picket line at 14 years old, Denise found herself as a young activist in the 1960’s San Francisco in the heart of the same world where the Grateful Dead came to be. Denise shares with Mike and Oteil the incredible tale of meeting Ken Kesey, “getting on the bus,” and getting her Prankster nickname “Mary Microgram.” She also explains what led to her going to music school at 33, her time teaching yoga to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and other celebrities, and opening a private school in Hawaii now in its 44th year of operation. Denise has lived many lives in one with one adventure following the next. Growing up in San Francisco during the 1960s placed Denise Kaufman at the center of a cultural revolution. Her commitment to social justice and exploratory approach to life led her to adventures in counterculture: from being arrested at UC Berkeley's Sproul Hall protests during the Free Speech Movement, to "getting on the bus” (as "Mary Microgram") with Ken Kesey, the Merry Pranksters and the Grateful Dead; to forming the legendary Ace of Cups—an all-girl band that opened for Jimi Hendrix, The Band, and Janis Joplin; to being one of the seven founding mothers of Island School on Kauai; to studying with Robert Nadeau Shihan, Yogi Bhajan, Bikram Choudhury, Pattabhi Jois, and Paul Grilley and to teaching yoga to Madonna, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Quincy Jones, and Jane Fonda. Denise lives between Venice Beach and Kauai - playing music, teaching yoga, surfing and continuing to learn, channel inspiration and connect all those around her. This podcast is available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. Please leave us a rating or review on iTunes!Comes A Time is brought to you by Osiris Media. Hosted and Produced by Oteil Burbridge and Mike Finoia. Executive Producers are Christina Collins and RJ Bee. Production, Editing and Mixing by Eric Limarenko and Matt Dwyer. Theme music by Oteil Burbridge. To discover more podcasts that connect you more deeply to the music you love, check out osirispod.com See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Ojai: Talk of the Town
Ojai's Pioneer Families with Tony Thacher

Ojai: Talk of the Town

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2021 53:27


Despite his down-to-earth demeanor and genial wit, Tony Thacher, the farmer and erstwhile geologist, has a distinguished lineage. His grandfather helped start The Thacher School in the 1880s, and his wife, Anne Friend Thacher, is the daughter of legendary citrus rancher Elmer Friend and part of the historic family that were among the first to stake out claims in the Ojai Valley. We talk about the current state of agriculture, Berkeley's Free Speech Movement, water issues, community service, the future of Ojai and steelhead trout. Tony also tells a few tall tales (some which might true-ish), We did not talk about the Buffalo Bills' heart-breaking loss to the Chiefs in the AFC title game, Israeli irrigation technology or UFOs.

Mind Body Health & Politics
Revisiting the Free Speech Movement

Mind Body Health & Politics

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2021 62:47


TODAY ON MBH&P our guest will be Charlie Deist, who has intriguing things to say about free speech, the Free Speech Movement, and the Free Speech Radio Network, of which my program is a part."Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."What does that mean in the 21st century? Tune in to find out.

Transforming America
1964, Barry Goldwater, and the Rise of the Christian Right

Transforming America

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2020 4:51


The Christian Right movement came to be through a number of different factors, one being political upheaval and major social change. This podcast will focus on the political climate of the year of 1964, specifically in regards to the presidential race between Lyndon B. Johnson and Barry Goldwater. During this time period, students at the University of California, Berkeley launched the Free Speech Movement of 1964, spurring a nation-wide movement of student activism. Show Notes: The Free Speech Movement: Civil Disobedience in Berkeley 1964, 20 June 2011. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=28aPyBrP0Yc McGirr, Lisa. Suburban Warriors: The Origins of the New American Right. Princeton University Press, 2001. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/transformingamerica/message

Entrez sans frapper
Entrez sans frapper - Dany Laferrière - 28/09/2020

Entrez sans frapper

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2020 90:33


On fête les 35 ans de la publication de son premier roman « Comment faire l'amour avec un Nègre sans se fatiguer », satire féroce, insolente et drôle des stéréotypes et des clichés racistes. Il est notre invité pour en parler ! « Bagarre dans la Discothèque » dès 11h30, avec Nicolas Herman et Guillermo Guiz. Et dès midi : L'Objet Pop de Nicolas Herman : le Golden Gate Bridge, qui surplombe la ville de San Francisco. L'écrivain canado-haïtien, membre de l'Académie française, Dany Laferrière pour les 35 ans de la publication de son premier roman "Comment faire l'amour avec un Nègre sans se fatiguer". Pour l'occasion, les éditions Zulma le réédite. Dans la moiteur de l'été, deux jeunes hommes paressent dans une chambre poisseuse de Montréal. Ils boivent, mangent, rient, lisent et baisent quand ça se présente. Et ça se présente, car la drague est joyeusement efficace. Torse nu sur son divan, l'un écoute Charlie Parker et Archie Shepp en philosophant, quand il ne dort pas trois jours d'affilée. L'autre rêve de devenir écrivain, il lit Baldwin, Hemingway, Henry Miller ou Bukowski, et s'extasie devant l'appétit sexuel des jeunes filles sérieuses. Ils dissertent sur la beauté et l'origine du désir, sur la Blanche et le Nègre. Et ça fait des étincelles dans un grand éclat de rire jazz. Machine à écrire, ruban neuf, papier immaculé : la vieille Remington 22 qui a appartenu à Chester Himes est riche de promesses... L'écrivain est en route ! "Machins, Machines" d'Hélène Maquet : Berkeley 1964 et le "Free Speech Movement". Le « Mouvement pour la liberté d'expression » est est un mouvement de contestation étudiant qui se manifesta pendant l'année scolaire 1964-1965 sur le campus de l'université de Berkeley. Le Free Speech Movement réclamait la reconnaissance de la liberté d'expression et de la liberté académique des étudiants.

Dr. Carole's Couch
Encore Free Speech Dead on Arrival at U.S. Colleges

Dr. Carole's Couch

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2020 53:55


What has America come to that we need a President's Executive Order to assure free speech on college campuses-former bastions of free speech and debate? How are students supposed to learn if they're prevented from exploring all ideas? Sadly, U.S. campuses have become violently intolerant to anyone expressing Conservative views. Ironically, U.C. Berkeley, once the origin of the Free Speech Movement, is now making headlines for the physical attack of a student trying to recruit others into a Conservative student group. Today's guest, Dr. Michael Busler, a public policy analyst, economic expert and university professor of finance, explains how the college world has turned topsy turvy and the surreal danger it poses for free speech, free thought and democracy itself. He also explores differences between capitalism, socialism and communism, why millennials are finding socialism trendy and how this could signal the demise of forces that built America into a leading economic power.

Dr. Carole's Couch
Free Speech Dead on Arrival at U.S. Colleges

Dr. Carole's Couch

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2019 53:55


What has America come to that we need a President's Executive Order to assure free speech on college campuses-former bastions of free speech and debate? How are students supposed to learn if they're prevented from exploring all ideas? Sadly, U.S. campuses have become violently intolerant to anyone expressing Conservative views. Ironically, U.C. Berkeley, once the origin of the Free Speech Movement, is now making headlines for the physical attack of a student trying to recruit others into a Conservative student group. Today's guest, Dr. Michael Busler, a public policy analyst, economic expert and university professor of finance, explains how the college world has turned topsy turvy and the surreal danger it poses for free speech, free thought and democracy itself. He also explores differences between capitalism, socialism and communism, why millennials are finding socialism trendy and how this could signal the demise of forces that built America into a leading economic power.

Libertarian Radio - The Bob Zadek Show
David Boaz on the Libertarian Ethos

Libertarian Radio - The Bob Zadek Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2018 52:00


Berkeley, California—The home of the “Free Speech Movement” became a center of attention last year when writer and professional provacateur Milo Yiannopoulos ignited protests on campus – testing the city's tolerance of viewpoints outside the progressive orthodoxy. Libertarians, for the most part, have found common cause with these speakers in opposing the new threats to free speech. As Anthony Fisher of Reason has pointed out, groups like Antifa have resorted to violence against innocent parties, and labeled anyone to the left of Bernie Sanders as “fascist.” Unfortunately, the left-wing reaction has caused some libertarians to over-sympathize with members of the so-called “alt-right,” whose aims are also opposed to a free society. David Boaz is Executive vice president of the Cato Institute and author of The Libertarian Mind, The Libertarian Reader, and Libertarianism: A Primer. He visited Berkeley in February to give a warning to students who might be seduced by the alt-right, and to explain why the reactionary philosophy is incompatible with libertarianism. While libertarians have reason to be frustrated by the status quo, there is a danger of this anger congealing into hatred. “Ultimately,” Boaz says, “libertarianism is about peaceful cooperation―markets, civil society, global trade, peace, so it just isn't angry enough for some people.” He joins Bob to make clear how alien the alt-right's thinking is to a truly libertarian mind.

The Michael Knowles Show
Ep. 132 - The Fight For Free Speech On Campus ft. Lt. Gov. Dan Forest

The Michael Knowles Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2018 42:41


The majority of college students oppose free speech, according to recent polls. Yet left-wing commentators want to gaslight us all and insist that the campus free speech crisis is nothing more than a myth. We'll analyze the facts and discuss what can be done about it with North Carolina Lt. Gov. Dan Forest, a driving force behind the “Restore Campus Free Speech Act.” Then, a history of Free Speech Movement, and why leftist activism relies on lies. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

BSD Now
142: Diving for BSD Perls

BSD Now

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2016 96:51


This week on the show, we have all the latest news and stories! Plus an interview with BSD developer Alfred Perlstein, that you This episode was brought to you by Headlines The May issus of BSDMag is now out (https://bsdmag.org/download/reusing_openbsd/) GhostBSD Reusing OpenBSD's arc4random in multi-threaded user space programs Securing VPN's with GRE / Strongswan Installing XFCE 4.12 on NetBSD 7 Interview with Fernando Rodriguez, the co-founder of KeepCoding *** A rundown of the FPTW^XEXT.1 security reqiurement for General Purpose Operating Systems by the NSA (http://blog.acumensecurity.net/fpt_wx_ext-1-a-rundown/) NIST/NSA Validation Scheme Report (https://www.commoncriteriaportal.org/files/ppfiles/pp_os_v4.1-vr.pdf) The SFR or Security Functional Requirement requires that; "The OS shall prevent allocation of any memory region with both write and execute permissions except for [assignment: list of exceptions]." While nearly all operating systems currently support the use of the NX bit, or the equivalent on processors such as SPARC and ARM, and will correctly mark the stack as non-executable, the fact remains that this in and of itself is deemed insufficient by NIST and NSA. OpenBSD 5.8, FreeBSD, Solaris, RHEL, and most other Linux distro have failed. HardenedBSD passes all three tests out of the box. NetBSD will do so with a single sysctl tweak. Since they are using the PaX model, anything else using PaX, such as a grsecurity-enabled Linux distribution pass these assurance activities as well. OpenBSD 5.9 does not allow memory mapping due to W^X being enforced by the kernel, however the kernel will panic if there are any attempts to create such mappings. *** DistroWatch reviews new features in FreeBSD 10.3 (https://distrowatch.com/weekly.php?issue=20160516#freebsd) DistroWatch did a review of FreeBSD 10.3 They ran into a few problems, but hopefully those can be fixed An issue with beadm setting the canmount property incorrectly causing the ZFS BE menu to not work as expected should be resolved in the next version, thanks to a patch from kmoore The limitations of the Linux 64 support are what they are, CentOS 6 is still fairly popular with enterprise software, but hopefully some folks are interested in working on bringing the syscall emulation forward In a third issue, the reviewer seemed to have issues SSHing from inside the jail. This likely has to do with how they got a console in the jail. I remember having problems with this in the past, something about a secure console. *** BSD Unix: Power to the people, from the code (https://www.salon.com/2000/05/16/chapter_2_part_one/) Salon.com has a very long article, chronicling much of the history behind BSD UNIX. It starts with detailing the humble origins of BSD, starting with Bill Joy in the mid-70's, and then goes through details on how it rapidly grew, and the influence that the University of Berkeley had on open-source. “But too much focus on Joy, a favorite target for business magazine hagiography, obscures the larger picture. Berkeley's most important contribution was not software; it was the way Berkeley created software. At Berkeley, a small core group — never more than four people at any one time — coordinated the contributions of an ever-growing network of far-flung, mostly volunteer programmers into progressive releases of steadily improving software. In so doing, they codified a template for what is now referred to as the “open-source software development methodology.” Put more simply, the Berkeley hackers set up a system for creating free software.” The article goes on to talk about some of the back and forth between Linux and BSD, and why Linux has captured more of the market in recent years, but BSD is far from throwing in the towel. “BSD patriots argue that the battle is far from over, that BSD is technically superior and will therefore win in the end. That's for the future to determine. What's indisputable is BSD's contribution in the past. Even if, by 1975, Berkeley's Free Speech Movement was a relic belonging to a fast-fading generation, on the fourth floor of Evans Hall, where Joy shared an office, the free-software movement was just beginning.” An excellent article (If a bit long), but well worth your time to understand the origins of what we consider modern day BSD, and how the University of Berkley helped shape it. *** iXsystems (http://ixsystems.com) #ServerEnvy: It's over 10,000 Terabytes! (https://www.ixsystems.com/blog/serverenvy-10000-terabytes/) *** Interview - Alfred Perlstein - alfred@freebsd.org (mailto:alfred@freebsd.org) / @splbio (https://twitter.com/splbio) Using BSD for projects *** News Roundup .NET framework ported to NetBSD (https://github.com/dotnet/coreclr/pull/4504/files) This pull request adds basic support for the .NET framework on NetBSD 7.x amd64 It includes documentation on how to get the .NET framework installed It uses pkgsrc to bootstrap the required tools pkgsrc-wip is used to get the actual .NET framework, as porting is still in progress The .NET Core-CLR is now available for: FreeBSD, Linux, NetBSD, and OS X *** OpenBSD SROP mitigation – call for testing (https://marc.info/?l=openbsd-tech&m=146281531025185&w=2) A new technique for exploiting flaws in applications and operating systems has been developed, called SROP “we describe Sigreturn Oriented Programming (SROP), a novel technique for exploits and backdoors in UNIX-like systems. Like return-oriented programming (ROP), sigreturn oriented programming constructs what is known as a ‘weird machine' that can be programmed by attackers to change the behavior of a process. To program the machine, attackers set up fake signal frames and initiate returns from signals that the kernel never really delivered. This is possible, because UNIX stores signal frames on the process' stack.” “Sigreturn oriented programming is interesting for attackers, OS developers and academics. For attackers, the technique is very versatile, with pre-conditions that are different from those of existing exploitation techniques like ROP. Moreover, unlike ROP, sigreturn oriented programming programs are portable. For OS developers, the technique presents a problem that has been present in one of the two main operating system families from its inception, while the fixes (which we also present) are non-trivial. From a more academic viewpoint, it is also interesting because we show that sigreturn oriented programming is Turing complete.” Paper describing SROP (http://www.cs.vu.nl/~herbertb/papers/srop_sp14.pdf) OpenBSD has developed a mitigation against SROP “Utilizing a trick from kbind(2), the kernel now only accepts signal returns from the PC address of the sigreturn(2) syscall in the signal trampoline. Since the signal trampoline page is randomized placed per process, it is only known by directly returning from a signal handler.” “As well, the sigcontext provided to sigreturn(2) now contains a magic cookie constructed from a per-process cookie XOR'd against the address of the signal context.” This is just a draft of the patch, not yet considered production quality *** Running Tor in a NetBSD rump unikernel (https://github.com/supradix/rumprun-packages/tree/33d9cc3a65a39e32b4bc8034c151a5d7e0b89f66/tor) We've talked about “rump” kernels before, and also Tor pretty frequently, but this new github project combines the two! Specifically, this set of Makefile and scripts will prep a system to run Tor via the Unikernel through Qemu. The script mainly describes how to do the initial setup on Linux, using iptables, but could easily be adapted to a BSD if somebody wants to do so. (Send them a pull request with the instructions!) All in all, this is a fascinating way to run a Tor node or relay, in the most minimal operating environment possible. *** An update on SSH protocol 1 ("we're most of the way towards fully deprecating SSH protocol 1" (http://lists.mindrot.org/pipermail/openssh-unix-dev/2016-May/035069.html) Damien Miller has given us an update on the status of the “SSH protocol 1”, and the current plans to deprecate it in an upcoming version of openssh. “We've had this old protocol in various stages of deprecation for almost 10 years and it has been compile-time disabled for about a year. Downstream vendors, to their credit, have included this change in recent OS releases by shipping OpenSSH packages that disable protocol 1 by default and/or offering separate, non-default packages to enable it. This seems to have proceeded far more smoothly than even my most optimistic hopes, so this gives us greater confidence that we can complete the removal of protocol 1 soon. We want to do this partly to hasten the demise of this cryptographic trainwreck, but also because doing so removes a lot of legacy code from OpenSSH that inflates our attack surface. Having it gone will make our jobs quite a bit easier as we maintain and refactor.” The current time-line looks like removing server-size protocol 1 support this August after OpenSSH 7.4 is released, leaving client-side disabled. Then a year from now (June 2017) all protocol 1 code will be removed. Beastie Bits Last day to get your BSDNow Shirts! Order now, wear at BSDCan! (https://teespring.com/bsdnow) Move local government (Austin TX) from Microsoft Windows (incl. Office) to Linux and/or PC-BSD (https://github.com/atxhack4change/2016-project-proposals/issues/15) Plan9 boot camp is back... and already at capacity. Another opportunity may come in September (http://lists.nycbug.org/pipermail/talk/2016-May/016642.html) Smaller is better - building an openbsd based router (https://functionallyparanoid.com/2016/04/22/smaller-is-better/) Baby Unix (https://i.redditmedia.com/KAjSscL9XOUdpIEWBQF1qi3QMr7zWgeETzQM6m3B4mY.jpg?w=1024&s=e8c08a7d4c4cea0256adb69b1e7c1887) Security Update for FreeBSD (https://security.freebsd.org/advisories/FreeBSD-SA-16:19.sendmsg.asc) & Another security update for FreeBSD (https://security.freebsd.org/advisories/FreeBSD-SA-16:18.atkbd.asc) Feedback/Questions Eric - The iX experience (http://pastebin.com/ZknTuKGv) Mike - Building Ports (http://pastebin.com/M760ZmHQ) David - ZFS Backups (http://pastebin.com/Pi0AFghV) James - BSD VPS (http://pastebin.com/EQ7envez) Rich - ZFS Followup (http://pastebin.com/p0HPDisH) ***

KPFA - APEX Express
Immigration Detention Hunger Strikes and Alex Hing

KPFA - APEX Express

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2015 46:40


We hear from Paromita Shah from the National Lawyers Guild and Sasha W., from the National Queer Asian Pacific Islander Alliance about the ongoing hunger strikes spreading across the immigration detention system. Though a lot of people are striking, today we're focusing on the Bangladeshi strikers. We also have a rebroadcast of an interview Marie and Salima did with Alex Hing. Alex started a revolutionary organization right here in San Francisco's Chinatown. He was involved with the Civil Rights Movement, the Anti-War Movement, and the Free Speech Movement. He rode buses through the south after Martin Luther king's death and he's currently a union organizer, a chef, and a tai-chi master. He's one of our old school teachers, and he had a lot to share on his experiences as well as some advice for the younger crop of movement leaders. The post Immigration Detention Hunger Strikes and Alex Hing appeared first on KPFA.

Nostalgia Trap
Nostalgia Trap - Episode 25: Steve Brier

Nostalgia Trap

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2014 65:31


Steve Brier is a historian whose work at the American Social History Project helped draw me into the field of working class social history. Steve also has some amazing stories about his father's time fighting fascists on the streets of East London in the lead-up to World War II, his time spent at Berkeley in the middle of the Free Speech Movement in 1964, and his work and friendship with legendary social historian Herbert Gutman.  

KPFA - Womens Magazine
Women’s Magazine: From FSM to Anti-Apartheid (by way of feminism) – September 29, 2014

KPFA - Womens Magazine

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2014 8:58


Twenty years after the Free Speech Movement rocked Berkeley, the University of California, and eventually the culture, UC Berkeley exploded in passionate activism. Students and faculty joined the wave of campus anti-apartheid movements calling for divestment of university pension funds and endowments from South Africa. We explore the origins and lessons of one of the most successful and influential student movements in history, with then-student leaders Andrea Pritchett and Rita Himes and feminist author and faculty activist Ruth Rosen. Also included: excerpts of the film, SOWETO TO BERKELEY, which tells the story of this extraordinary time on the Berkeley campus. The post Women's Magazine: From FSM to Anti-Apartheid (by way of feminism) – September 29, 2014 appeared first on KPFA.

The Food Programme
Alice Waters, a Delicious Revolution

The Food Programme

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2013 27:52


The Californian chef and campaigner Alice Waters shares her story with Sheila Dillon; from early life in the 1960's counter-culture to influencing the food thinking of Presidents.Alice Waters founded the restaurant Chez Panisse in Berkeley in 1971. Her life had been changed forever by experiences as a student in France and at UC Berkeley, where the Free Speech Movement lay the ground for the big political movements of the sixties. Alice and her restaurant went from these humble and idealistic beginnings to international recognition. With a focus on local, organic ingredients and farmers' markets before they were widely celebrated she moved on to educate children and prisoners about growing and cooking food. In her own words Alice's food journey became a 'delicious revolution'.As debates in the US rage about healthcare and the nation's relationship with food, this is a story of one woman's attempts to show the way to an alternative way to eat. It's a story that took her from small French taverns to Californian growers and even to the White House.Producers: Rich Ward & Dan Saladino.