Podcast appearances and mentions of martin luther kings

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Best podcasts about martin luther kings

Latest podcast episodes about martin luther kings

From Us To You
EP:272-GUILTY AS CHARGED

From Us To You

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2025 109:17


Another week, another opportunity to drop some content. The FUTY boyz have hot takes on how fast TikTok came back to the US, Sexy Red pissing off Martin Luther Kings daughter, and was Katt Williams jokes on Martin Lawrence too far? In music… RIP to DJ Unk, Sexy Red(again) and Bruno Mars drop a new track, ASAP Rocky jury has been chosen for his case, and what does Akademiks got going on? In sports… Mark Andrews most wanted man in Baltimore, Kurt Angle doesn't like the nickname “Perc” Angle, and we get Benavidez vs. Morrell this weekend! Enjoy

Rak höger med Ivar Arpi
Trump vill göra Amerika stort igen, igen – men ingår Grönland?

Rak höger med Ivar Arpi

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2025 75:23


Igår svors Donald Trump in som USA:s 47:e president och inledde därmed sin andra mandatperiod i Vita huset. I sitt invigningstal målade han upp en vision av en ny era för amerikansk styrka, med löften om att ena landet och leverera resultat. Till skillnad från hans tal 2017, där han talade om "American carnage", betonade han nu optimism, nationell enhet och att uppfylla Martin Luther Kings dröm om lika möjligheter för alla. Samtidigt var budskapet tydligt: kriminalitet, illegal invandring och det han kallar den korrupta politiska eliten ska bekämpas med full kraft.I dagens avsnitt av Rak höger diskuterar jag detta med två gäster som båda har följt amerikansk politik noggrant, men ur olika perspektiv. Ronie Berggren, författare och grundare av podden Amerikanska nyhetsanalyser, var en av de första svenskarna att öppet stödja Trump inför valet 2016. Han har bland annat skrivit boken Donald Trump - en synnerligen amerikansk president (Nomen 2020) och driver i dag Bulletins USA-podd. Han menar att Trump är en missförstådd ledare som nu, mer erfaren och strategisk, kan driva igenom de reformer han tidigare stoppades från.Min andra gäst är Arvid Hallén, som är samhällsdebattör och chef för tankesmedjan Oikos. Till skillnad från Berggren ser han Trumps återkomst med en mer skeptisk blick. Han pekar på att Trump fortfarande bär på samma svagheter som tidigare – en splittrande ledarstil och en oförmåga att bygga långsiktiga strukturer.Vi pratar om hur Trumps budskap har förändrats från 2017 till 2025. Är han en mer försonande ledare idag? Ronie ser ett tydligare fokus i Trumps nya linje, medan Arvid ifrågasätter om presidenten verkligen har förmågan att leverera mer än kulturkrig. Vi diskuterar också vad Trumps återkomst betyder för den konservativa rörelsen både i USA och här i Europa. Samt om han kommer köpa Grönland eller inte, och vad det i så fall innebär för europeisk säkerhet. Det handlar också om tullar, Kina och handelskrig.Men nu till dagens samtal. Du lyssnar på Rak höger med mig, Ivar Arpi.Prenumerera eller stötta Rak högerI takt med att fler blir betalande prenumeranter har Rak höger kunnat expandera med fler skribenter och mer innehåll. Vi får inget presstöd, vi tar inte emot pengar från någon intresseorganisation eller lobbygrupp. Det är endast tack vare er prenumeranter vi kan fortsätta vara självständiga röster i en konform samtid. Så stort tack för att ni är med, utan er hade det inget av detta varit möjligt.Den som vill stötta oss på andra sätt än genom en prenumeration får gärna göra det med Swish, Plusgiro, Bankgiro, Paypal eller Donorbox.Swishnummer: 123-027 60 89Plusgiro: 198 08 62-5Bankgiro: 5808-1837Utgivaren ansvarar inte för kommentarsfältet. (Myndigheten för press, radio och tv (MPRT) vill att jag skriver ovanstående för att visa att det inte är jag, utan den som kommenterar, som ansvarar för innehållet i det som skrivs i kommentarsfältet.) This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.enrakhoger.se/subscribe

For The Love With Jen Hatmaker Podcast
Sharon McMahon: “America's Government Teacher,” Hope for Better Things

For The Love With Jen Hatmaker Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2024 70:13


Friends, today's episode is a powerhouse! We've got Sharon McMahon, aka “America's Government Teacher,” bringing some serious wisdom from her new book, "The Small and the Mighty." Even the drafters of the Constitution worried about chaos, but they hoped for better things—and Sharon's here to show us how twelve lesser-known heroes in American history made a huge impact on democracy. She's drawing parallels to how we can still shape our future today, no matter how small we feel. Get ready to be inspired, y'all! Let's dive in! In this hope-filled chat: Jen and Amy muse around which historical figures they would most like to meet and we get a glimpse of their preferred election night routines Sharon highlights the arc of her career from an award-winning yarn influencer known as the Yarnista, to a photographer, to “America's Government Teacher” We discuss the need for reliable sources of factual information in a world filled to the brim with fake news and disinformation Sharon explains why we shouldn't sit out during state and local elections We talk about a variety of ways to engage in democracy beyond just voting And Sharon fields questions from members of our audience. *** Thought-provoking Quotes: “We're all tired, we're exhausted from the endless partisanship and the fake news and the disinformation and vitriol.” – Jen Hatmaker “I started noticing that there were a lot of people that were just really confidently wrong on the internet, saying things like ‘the electoral college is a university you can graduate from'.”– Sharon McMahon “There's a big list of people, especially women, who never, ever get the credit when it comes to the civil rights movement – it's the attorneys, it's the Thurgood Marshalls, it's the Freddie Grays,  it's the Martin Luther Kings.,and, of course, what they did is incredibly important but… there are a lot of women with whom this hot air balloon does not get off the ground. There is no leaving the ground without the significant contributions of women.” – Sharon McMahon “We have to stop viewing this as a zero sum game in which our enemies must be defeated or destroyed. That's an onramp to dictatorship.” – Sharon McMahon “There are many ways to be involved in democracy. It's not just voting and running for office. There's not one prescription for how to be involved. Do things you are good at and contribute in your own way. We can't all be parade goers.” – Sharon McMahon “We tend to put all of our eggs in this basket of who will win the presidential election but who gets elected in your state matters so much. The things that really affect your daily life are defined at the state and local level.” – Sharon McMahon Resources Mentioned in This Episode: The Henry Fite House of Baltimore - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Fite_House The Angry Trout Cafe, Grand Mariais, MN - https://www.angrytroutcafe.com/ The Small and the Mighty: Twelve Unsung Americans Who Changed the Course of History, from the Founding to the Civil Rights Movement by Sharon McMahon - https://amzn.to/3NsoqjI Guest's Links: Sharon's website - https://sharonmcmahon.com/ Sharon's Newsletter, The Preamble - https://thepreamble.com/ Sharon's Governerds Book Club - https://sharonmcmahon.com/products/governerds-insider Sharon's Here's Where It Gets Interesting Podcast - https://sharonmcmahon.com/podcast Sharon's Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/sharonsaysso Sharon's Twitter - https://x.com/sharon_says_so Sharon's Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/sharonsaysso/ Sharon's YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/@sharonsaysso Connect with Jen! Jen's website - https://jenhatmaker.com/ Jen's Instagram - https://instagram.com/jenhatmaker Jen's Twitter - https://twitter.com/jenHatmaker/ Jen's Facebook - https://facebook.com/jenhatmaker Jen's YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/user/JenHatmaker The For the Love Podcast is presented by Audacy. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

RHETORIK MACHT ERFOLG
#46 - Rhetorische Stilmittel Teil 1 - mit Martin Luther King Jr.

RHETORIK MACHT ERFOLG

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2024 19:36


In dieser Podcastfolge zeige ich dir 7 der wichtigsten rhetorischen Stilmittel am Beispiel von Martin Luther Kings berühmter Rede "I Have a Dream". Erfahre, welche Techniken King meisterhaft einsetzt, um seine Botschaft kraftvoll und unvergesslich zu machen. Von der Anapher bis zur Metapher – wir analysieren, wie diese Techniken wirken und was wir daraus für unsere eigenen Reden lernen können. Möchtest du noch weitere Stilmittel kennen lernen? Hier findest du eine Liste aller rhetorischen Stilmittel. SHOWNOTES:   ⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Kostenlose Erstberatung buchen⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠Infos zum 1:1 Rhetorik-Coaching ⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠Infos zum 1:1 Kommunikation-Coaching ⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Schlagfertig in 3 Schritten (E-Book für 0€)⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Michaels Website ⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Michaels Instagram-Profil⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Email-Kontakt ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

P3 Soul
Mavis Staples del 1

P3 Soul

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2024 118:33


I två avsnitt gräver vi oss djupt ner bland soul- och R&B-rötterna (100 år), och får samtidigt berättelsen om den amerikanska erfarenheten. Mavis Staples som växte upp i kyrkan och vid frontlinjen av medborgarrättsrörelsen påverkade gospel och soul för evigt. Förkroppsligade kampen för ett värdigt liv i en ovärdig värld. En kraftgärning med ett pris. Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play. Staple Singers serverade opolerad musik bland stål och skyskrapor i ett hårt segregerat Chicago. Det lät mystiskt och gammalt, högtidligt och lantligt på samma gång. Ett mörkt, glest och nästan spöklikt ljud olikt något annat inom gospeln utvecklades, och influerade alla från Bob Dylan och Rolling Stones till Sly Stone och Prince. Mavis Staples gripande uttryck bidrog också till att föra fram Martin Luther Kings budskap, och blev ljudspåret till en dramatisk tid. Det är där vi befinner oss i den första delen som även innehåller ett möte med patriarken Pops Staples.

WDR 5 Scala - Hintergrund Kultur
Biografie: Das Leben Martin Luther Kings

WDR 5 Scala - Hintergrund Kultur

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2024 11:29


Martin Luther Kings Rede über seinen Traum von der Überwindung des Rassismus ist weltberühmt. Nun hat der Journalist Jonathan Eig eine große Biografie über den US-Bürgerrechtler geschrieben. Simone Hamm hat mit ihm über das Leben Kings gesprochen. Von Simone Hamm.

The Joyce Kaufman Show
The Joyce Kaufman Show 12/8/23

The Joyce Kaufman Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2023 37:35


Joyce honors the US military, and talks about Israeli troops releasing a video of Hamas terrorist. She also talks about University Presidents testimony on the safety of Jewish students on campus, news coverage of the Israel/Gaza war, the gag order against Donald Trump and whether his age will be a factor in his run for the presidency, California inditing Hunter Biden on federal tax charges, job numbers, and the woman who attempted to burn down the Dr. Martin Luther Kings' birth home. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoicesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

The Joyce Kaufman Show
The Joyce Kaufman Show 12/8/23

The Joyce Kaufman Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2023 40:05


Joyce honors the US military, and talks about Israeli troops releasing a video of Hamas terrorist. She also talks about University Presidents testimony on the safety of Jewish students on campus, news coverage of the Israel/Gaza war, the gag order against Donald Trump and whether his age will be a factor in his run for the presidency, California inditing Hunter Biden on federal tax charges, job numbers, and the woman who attempted to burn down the Dr. Martin Luther Kings' birth home. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Independent Riot
Did the FBI Assassinate Martin Luther King? (Investigator William Klabber Interview... Part 1)

The Independent Riot

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2023 95:27


Author, researcher, journalist, radio and podcast host William Klabber is one of the world's leading experts on the three earth-shaking 1960's assassinations of John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King Jr, and Robert F. Kennedy.In this amazing interview, Bill Klabber graciously gives his time to explain the truth behind who killed Martin Luther King, Jr, and why it's nothing like you've been led to believe. Bill takes an extremely detailed and fact-based approach to all of his work, and in regards to Martin Luther Kings' death the evidence will most likely shock and disturb you. It includes the involvement of the FBI, a group often referred to as the "Dixie Mafia," and court-proven facts refuting that James Earl Ray was responsible for MLK's death.If you are intrigued by this interview, we highly encourage you to check out Bill's multi-part series on the reality of King's murder in the MLK Tapes in order to better understand the full picture. In this award-winning podcast published by Tenderfoot TV, Bill merges in detailed evidentiary explanations compiled by the late-great attorney William Pepper, and actual interviews with many of the central players involved in the plot to kill King, including members of the Dixie Mafia and eye-witnesses to the events.Because of Bill Klabber's vast knowledge of not only MLK's death, but also JFK and RFK, we've broken his interview with us into two parts. This first part deals briefly with JFK, but then centers mostly on an explanation of the truth of MLK's murder. In part 2 of the interview (soon to be published) we will go into more detail about Bobby Kennedy's assassination. Please subscribe to the show to be automatically alerted when part 2 of the interview is released.And again, if you are fascinated by the potentially hidden truths of these events, we strongly suggest checking out Bill Klabber's full podcast of The MLK Tapes, as well as his book "Shadow Play: The Unsolved Murder of Bobby Kennedy."In the meantime, sit back and enjoy this excellent interview with expert William Klabber, and ponder why we still never hear any debate or discussion of these disturbing facts in mainstream media.*New Email Alert*Contact the show at independentriot@protonmail.com*New Podcast Alert*Please also consider checking out and subscribing to our new podcast "Your Best True Story," where we'll be playing all types of listener true stories (paranormal, funny, survival, etc) from around the world, and letting the audience vote on whose is best. You can even submit your own true story to be played on the show and possibly win money!Subscribe to the "Your Best True Story" podcast on your favorite podcast player.Please subscribe to the "Your Best True Story" podcast on your favorite podcast player, and considering recording and submitting your own true story right now through this link or go to www.YourBestTrueStory.com to learn more.Thanks!Support the show

Studio Ett
Studio Ett kväll 28 augusti

Studio Ett

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2023 101:00


EU vill stoppa fisket på sill. Årets Kristallengala. Spionåtal. Spanska fotbollskyssen. PFAS i sugrör. 60 år sedan Martin Luther Kings marsch och stridsplan i Ukraina. Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play.

Studio Ett
Studio Ett 28 augusti

Studio Ett

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2023 103:00


Spionåtal, spanska fotbollskyssen, vad gör man om man möter en björn?, postcovidmottagning för barn hotas, PFAS i sugrör, cancerscreening - meningsfullt eller ej?, Pusher Street stängs, bönderna reser sig i Nederländerna, 60 år sedan Martin Luther Kings marsch och stridsplan i Ukraina. Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play.

Theo.Logik - Religion inside
Vor 60 Jahren - Martin Luther Kings „I have a dream“

Theo.Logik - Religion inside

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2023 53:06


Sie ist eine der berühmtesten Reden der Menschheit. Und trifft bis heute ins Herz. Der Weg zur Erfüllung aber führt über die Gewaltlosigkeit. Wird daran zum Jubiläum auch gedacht?

WDR ZeitZeichen
"I have a dream" - Martin Luther Kings berühmte Vision

WDR ZeitZeichen

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2023 14:44


Am 28.8.1963 hält Martin Luther King in Washington seine visionäre Rede "I have a dream". Er fasst darin die Forderungen der US-Bürgerrechtsbewegung zusammen. Von Almut Finck.

Henry läser Wikipedia
James Earl Ray - Martin Luther Kings mördare?

Henry läser Wikipedia

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2023 5:21


Han erkände mordet på Martin Luther King för att bara tre draga senare ta tillbaka det. Vem var han? Varför drog han tillbaka sitt erkännande? Och vad är egentligen sanningen?Wikipedia säger sitt om James Earl Ray. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Kampen om historien
Martin Luther King - frihedshelt eller Onkel Tom?

Kampen om historien

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2023 56:35


"Jeg har en drøm om, at mine fire små børn en dag vil blive bedømt, ikke på deres hudfarve, men på deres karakteregenskaber". Sådan sagde præsten og borgerrettighedsforkæmperen Martin Luther King i sin mest berømte tale 28. august 1963 i Washington. Frem til sin brutale død 4. april 1968 i en alder af blot 39 år var Luther King manden, som personificerede de sorte amerikaneres kamp for ligestilling i et samfund, der bryster sig at bygge på frihed og kristne værdier. Men han oplevede også modstand fra både hvide tilhængere af et raceopdelt USA og fra sorte amerikanere, der anså ham for at være alt for blød og føjelig. Hvad var egentlig Martin Luther Kings drøm? Var han så radikal som hvide kritikere hævdede eller snarere en Onkel Tom-type, sådan som sorte kritikere påstod? Og i en æra som vores, hvor historiske personers karaktertræk gennemgås ned i mindste detalje, er Luther King Jr. så stadig en moderne helgenfigur? Det er spørgsmålene i denne uges udgave af Kampen om historien, hvor Adam Holm taler med forfatter og professor i amerikanske studier Jørn Brøndal. I udsendelsen medvirker også den herboende amerikaner Dale Smith, der var aktiv i borgerrettighedsbevægelsen i starten af 1960'erne. Musik: Adi Zukanovic. (Sendt første gang 25. april).

P3 Soul
Mavis Staples del 1

P3 Soul

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2022 110:39


I två avsnitt gräver vi oss djupt ner bland soul- och R&B-rötterna (100 år), och får samtidigt berättelsen om den amerikanska erfarenheten. Mavis Staples som växte upp i kyrkan och vid frontlinjen av medborgarrättsrörelsen påverkade gospel och soul för evigt. Förkroppsligade kampen för ett värdigt liv i en ovärdig värld. En kraftgärning med ett pris. Staple Singers serverade opolerad musik bland stål och skyskrapor i ett hårt segregerat Chicago. Det lät mystiskt och gammalt, högtidligt och lantligt på samma gång. Ett mörkt, glest och nästan spöklikt ljud olikt något annat inom gospeln utvecklades, och influerade alla från Bob Dylan och Rolling Stones till Sly Stone och Prince. Mavis Staples gripande uttryck bidrog också till att föra fram Martin Luther Kings budskap, och blev ljudspåret till en dramatisk tid. Det är där vi befinner oss i den första delen som även innehåller ett möte med patriarken Pops Staples.

Tech This Out News
Is Everybody Microdosing To Build Web 3.0?

Tech This Out News

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2022 54:01


Silicon Valley also has a long history of psychedelic drug use to boost creativity: technology big dogs Steve Jobs and Bill Gates both famously experimented with LSD. Psychedelic drugs have played a key role in societal breakthroughs. It's been reported that micro dosing heightens alertness, energy and creativity. What if Dr. Martin Luther Kings, “I Have a Dream,” was enhanced by LSD? What if Jesus didn't drink wine instead, he ate a mushroom?We sit with global thought leader and futurist Aline Frankfort and co-host Myla Tkachenko to discuss the relationship between Web 3 entrepreneurs and micro dosing? Reports suggest that what started off as an underground practice in Silicon Valley may be spreading rapidly into pop culture.

Napkin Scribbles: A Podcast by Leonard Sweet
Hymns Every Christian Should Know: Precious Lord Take My Hand

Napkin Scribbles: A Podcast by Leonard Sweet

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2022 11:27


Do you know what Dr. Martin Luther Kings favorite hymn was? Join Professor Sweet as he explores the healing hymn of Thomas Dorsey on this episode of Napkin Scribbles. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/napkinscribbles/message

P3 Soul
Mavis Staples del 1

P3 Soul

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2022 116:37


I två avsnitt gräver vi oss djupt ner bland soul- och R&B-rötterna (100 år), och får samtidigt berättelsen om den amerikanska erfarenheten. Mavis Staples som växte upp i kyrkan och vid frontlinjen av medborgarrättsrörelsen påverkade gospel och soul för evigt. Förkroppsligade kampen för ett värdigt liv i en ovärdig värld. En kraftgärning med ett pris. Staple Singers serverade opolerad musik bland stål och skyskrapor i ett hårt segregerat Chicago. Det lät mystiskt och gammalt, högtidligt och lantligt på samma gång. Ett mörkt, glest och nästan spöklikt ljud olikt något annat inom gospeln utvecklades, och influerade alla från Bob Dylan och Rolling Stones till Sly Stone och Prince.Mavis Staples gripande uttryck bidrog också till att föra fram Martin Luther Kings budskap, och blev ljudspåret till en dramatisk tid. Det är där vi befinner oss i den första delen som även innehåller ett möte med patriarken Pops Staples.

Lesart - das Literaturmagazin - Deutschlandfunk Kultur
Martin Luther Kings "I Have a Dream - Ich habe einen Traum" in neuer Übersetzung

Lesart - das Literaturmagazin - Deutschlandfunk Kultur

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2022 10:15


Kraft, Marionwww.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, LesartDirekter Link zur Audiodatei

Holy Shit Improv
Holy Shit Improv June 20th 2022 Juneteenth Jumpoff Presented by Lemon Pepper Wet

Holy Shit Improv

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2022 68:46


The best improv in Los Angeles at the best bar in Silverlake HOLY SHIT IMPROV – Monday @ 8pm Juneteenth Jumpoff Presented by Lemon Pepper Wet with performances by   Ronnie Adrian, Rod Benson, Zora Bikangaga, Acquah Dansoh, Priscilla Davies, Chris Eddins, Choni Francis, Phil Augusta Jackson, Jiavani, Vince Peagler III, Aricia Skidmore, Leonard Smith Jr., Carl Tart, Genetra Tull, Jaclyn Uweh, Sean Will, Ahsohn The DJ, Lamar Woods   (00:00) Team 1 - Madame CJs Walkers (19:45) Team 2 - George Washington Carvers (42:45) Team 3 - Martin Luther Kings   Tune into live-stream at 8PM PT/11PM ET at twitch.tv/holyshitimprov

Henry läser Wikipedia
James Earl Ray - Martin Luther Kings mördare?

Henry läser Wikipedia

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2022 5:21


Han erkände mordet på Martin Luther King för att bara tre draga senare ta tillbaka det. Vem var han? Varför drog han tillbaka sitt erkännande? Och vad är egentligen sanningen?Wikipedia säger sitt om James Earl Ray. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Hudson Mohawk Magazine
HMM 02 - 23 - 22

Hudson Mohawk Magazine

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2022 58:55


Today, on the Hudson Mohawk Magazine, We begin with an update of the push to vacate and sell the public housing complex in Cohoes across the street from Norlite incinerator. Then, for our peace bucket we talk with Medea Benjamin, co-founder of Code Pink, about Ukraine. Later on, we have a live interview with Willie Terry about the showing of a film about Martin Luther Kings' Labor work on Thurs Feb 24 in Troy. After that, Jody Cowen speaks to with Pink Nois, aka Jorim Motley about his brand new musical single "Pining." Finally, Emily Curro speaks with Ione about the Digital Altar event that she is a part of at the Sanctuary.

NEO420's Podcast
NMG Archives - Dr Martin Luther King Jr. "The poor blacks & whites are still perishing".

NEO420's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2022 2:19


PC decided to post this segment from Dr Martin Luther Kings speech.  Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s 1967 speech at the National Conference on New Politics in Chicago. Dr King spoke many times about the challenges that poor people of all skin colors face. And that is never more relevant than today as the criminal*cabal tries to use "ignorance" and wealth discrepancies as reason to treat people how they do. ___________Please go back and listen to our previous episodes all on our website for free. Listen and learn as we have an extensive coverage within our reporting and analysis.  The link is here http://neo420.com/talks-podcast/And the link to our video channel is here. https://odysee.com/@NEO420TALKS:4IT IS TIME FOR WE THE PEOPLE OF THE WORLD TAKE DOWN the criminal cabal. WE know who they are, and now it is time to bring them to JUSTICE!!!________________________________________________________________________JOIN US TODAY IN EXPOSING THE CRIMINALS & ARRESTING THE CRIMINALS!!!"STAND FOR SOMETHING OR DIE FOR NOTHING"Go to GOD for discernment and wisdom. Know the Truth as the Truth will make you free! (John 8:32)__________________________________________________________________________NEVER FORGET!!!9/11 was a day that global*cabal*conspired to take our freedoms!!!Celebrate the lives of any lost that day!!! Keep good thoughts about them!!!The criminal*coup*cabal consists of military, finance, politicians, fake media, and other criminals in line with UNagenda2030 plus other multi layered cabal plans that they are conspiring on.Rumsfeld admitted $2.3 Trillion missing from Pentagon.  https://odysee.com/@NEO420TALKS:4/rumsfeld-2.1Trillionunaccountedforb-ccriminalsstoleit:7Planes did NOT bring down the two towers.AE911Truth.orgGeorge Bush Sr was CIA director before being Vice President then President. George Bush Jr did not know b/c he is stupid and the criminals in control wanted to have him respond genuinely. MANY are a part of this crime against US.Towers that fell:-Building 1-Building 2-Building 7 (seldom reported even though BBC reporter reported building down before it happened) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J0VFMqinkcsSTOP watching paid actors & STOP listening to useful idiots about what to do during this criminal*coup against WE THE PEOPLESupport the show (https://neo420.com/shop-cbd/donation/)

Bare Bones
Is Foreplay important? Dr Martin Luther Kings Legacy… and can a man be with a dominate woman?

Bare Bones

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2022 96:27


In this episode Ray , Kyla , and Neeky dive into the topics of foreplay , Dr King and women with dominant personality traits. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/kyla-aujeant351/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/kyla-aujeant351/support

Affirm America Podcast
Joe Bidens Hate Speech in Georgia

Affirm America Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2022 27:23


Joe Biden gave the most hateful, devisive speech of any president in history in Georgia on the month of Martin Luther Kings birthday in Atlanta. Listen to an excerpt of his speech and the response from political leaders. You can't make this stuff up. The radical leftists and the woke crowd have all gone koo koo!

Power English
lesson. This one is called "Leaders Make Mistakes" and it comes from a book called Leadership by Tom Peters.

Power English

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2021 13:49


Leaders Make Mistakes Main Text Hello, this is AJ, welcome to the next lesson. This one is called "Leaders Make Mistakes" and it comes from a book called Leadership by Tom Peters. Tom Peters is one of my favorite business writers. The reason I like Tom Peters is that he's very passionate. He's not a boring businessperson. Most business books are boring, but not Tom Peters. His books are excellent and they're full of passionate, emotional language and words and emotional passionate ideas about how to make business into something more, something special, not just greedy little people trying to get more money, but really trying to contribute and help people and do great things. So that's what Tom Peters writes about and it's why I really like him. He's got a great Website TomPeters.com and he's got a lot of great books. And this book that I'm talking about today is called Leadership. And there's a little section and the section is called "Leaders Make Mistakes", so l'm going to read this small section and then l'll talk about it more. So here we go. "Leaders make mistakes and they make no bones about it. On the wall of my writing studio in Vermont hangs a quotation by David Kelly, "Fail faster, succeed sooner." Next to that quote hangs another by Diane Arbus who told her students “Learn not to be careful." In placid times leaders may think they have all the answers. In turbulent times leaders must have the best questions, questions that encourage others to undertake voyages of mutual discovery and the essence of that process is letting people screw up. If you try new stuff you screw up. If you try a lot of new stuff you screw up a lot. In fact, the best leaders make big mistakes. Mistakes are not enough, big mistakes are mandatory. My all-time favorite PowerPoint slide is this 'Reward excellent failures, punish mediocre successes.' These tumultuous times beg for bold initiatives. While thoughtless recklessness is not to be applauded, the word reckless must be examined carefully. Most people who change the world -- Martin Luther King, Galileo, and Picasso -- they were indeed reckless, but not thoughtless. The Martin Luther Kings of the world, the Galileo's, the Picasso's, the Churchill's, the de Gaulle's, they attempted to create an

Christian Parent, Crazy World
How Does the Christian Worldview Create a World We All Want to Live In? – Episode 9

Christian Parent, Crazy World

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2021 30:15


This episode is the culmination of all the hard work we have done in the last three episodes! We are going to look at why the other worldviews we've looked at begin to fall apart because they don't accurately explain and represent reality. Resources and Articles Mentioned in This Episode: 1. Eric Metaxas interview with John Smirak 2. John Smirak article: Is the Woke Cult Just a Spastic Reaction to Darwinism? 3. Christian Headlines article on Richard Dawkins, Atheist Richard Dawkins Says Its 'Wise and Sensible' to Abort Babies with Down Syndrome, Serious Disabilities 4. Five Worldview Comparison Chart from Xenos.org 5. Postmodernists deny that there "are objective, or absolute, moral values.” 6. William Wilberforce's Christian faith and crusade to end the slave trade. 7. The testimony of John Newton 8. Martin Luther Kings' 'I Have a Dream' Speech“ *** Follow Catherine at https://catherinesegars.com/ *** Episode Image Credit: Getty/

7 Tage 1 Song
#63 Bob Dylan - Goodbye Jimmy Reed

7 Tage 1 Song

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2021 17:22


Am 24.Mai wurde Bob Dylan 80 Jahre alt. Den Song, den ich mir für diesen Tag ausgesucht habe, stammt von seinem letzten Album. Ich mag ihn, einmal wegen der vielen religiösen Bezüge aber vor allem der markanten Zeile „I can't play the record 'cause my needle got stuck“ – manchmal stecken wir fest und es geht nicht weiter. Dann können wir zum Berg gehen und „the real story“ hören – straightforward der pure reine Stoff. Vom Berg hören wir Mose mit den Regeln für ein Leben in der Freiheit, Jesus mit seiner Bergpredigt wo es darum geht für die Entwurzelten einzustehen und aufzustehen, die Machtstrukturen und Unterdrückungsmechanismen zu durchbrechen. Und natürlich Martin Luther Kings letzte Rede: „I´ve been on the mountaintop” – hier geht es darum, dass MLK das zukünftige Land vom Berg aus gesehen hat, es jetzt darum geht, mit friedlichen Aktionen für seine Ziele zu kämpfen. Am Ende des Songs gibt es eine Referenz zu einem Song von Jimmy Reed, Down in Virginia, im Song ist Virginia das Land, wo das grüne Gras wächst, das Land der Hoffnung sozusagen – und vielleicht geht der Sänger des Songs eben auch nach Virginia weil, da der Mann am Boden liegt - wenn ich das Wappen von Virginia ansehe, liegt da der Tyrann besiegt am Boden. Einfach, geradeaus, wahr – so sollte für Bob Dylan die Botschaft sein. Nicht schlecht finde ich das, was er da allen Verkünder*innen ins Stammbuch schreibt, außerdem geht es um „die Real Story“, sie wird im Song vom Berg verkündet. Bis wir dann ans Ziel kommen, erleben wir einen wilder Ritt, mit Religion, Blues und Gospel, leichtbekleideten Frauen, sexuellem Begehren, Scheitern und Kämpfen. Ich finde aber, am Ende ist einer ans Ziel gekommen und für mich ist sogar ein Tyrann besiegt. Stark finde ich, wie Bob Dylan hier immer wieder die Perspektiven wechselt, Bilder einführt und sie dann gleich wieder in Frage stellt, sich identifiziert und wieder entfernt. Es hat unheimlich viel Spaß gemacht mit Thomas über diesen Song nachzudenken. Nutzt wirklich das 7Tage1Song Konzept und gönnt euch jeden Tag etwas Zeit mit diesem Song. Alle von Thomas im Podcast erwähnten Songs findet ihr in einer besonderen Playlist zu dieser Folge: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/64LFpgEIq2Nf7XruxTilYl?si=ddb39740e7394cac Jakob Kasprzyck hat nach einem Gespräch mit mir ein Bild zu diesem Song gemalt – auf meiner Facebookseite könnt ihr es sehen. Im Podcast mit dabei ist Thomas Waldherr, checkt mal seine Seiten www.cowboyband.blog, www.country.de, www.keywestmagazin.com Außerdem ist er Jurymitglied der Liederbestenliste der deutschsprachigen Musik.In den Shownotes zum Podcast findet ihr eine Playlist mit allen Songs, die Thomas erwähnt. Foto: © Alberto Cabello Mayero (CC BY 2.0) Homepage: https://7tage1song.de Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/7tage1song/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pg/7tage1song/ Kontakt: post@7tage1song.de Link zum Song: https://songwhip.com/bob-dylan/goodbye-jimmy-reed Spotify Playlist: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/0M5tOXTC0lM8RVycUBQnjy?si=idKC-CFaRp2ZD992gvWvsQ

Utalk Radio
Let's Talk Current Events

Utalk Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2021 35:54


The Utalk crew Steve, Larissa, and Kati got together for a conversation about current events.Topics that came up included the inauguration, quarantine life, mask life, the new normal we are living, Dr Martin Luther Kings quotes to live by and what's trending.Leave us your thoughts on what's going on currently in the world and check out our social media @utalkradio and our website utalkradio.com for more.

WBAI News with Paul DeRienzo
011821 MLK Jr. Day of Service, Capitol scare, COVID and race, UN tribunal

WBAI News with Paul DeRienzo

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2021 28:54


The president and Vice President elect celebrate Rev. Martin Luther Kings’s birthday with service… a scare at the Capitol… COVID and King… and a United Nations tribunal on America’s killer cops.

Common Thread Church
Romans -Dr. Martin Luther Kings Jr's "Who is My Neighbor?"

Common Thread Church

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2021 19:54


In this podcast we explore what it looks like to Replace Power & Privilege with Peace through the eyes of Martin Luther King Jr.

Spiritual Awakening ⏰
Live from Martin Luther Kings House

Spiritual Awakening ⏰

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2020 28:09


Look for the Energy Answers. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/Awakening /support

Sag's Pauly
Die Folge mit dem Patenkind von Martin Luther King, Teil 1

Sag's Pauly

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2020 40:25


Martin Luther King ist für sie "Uncle Martin", ihr Patenonkel. Seine Frau nennt sie "Aunt Coretta". King's Tochter Yolanda war ihre beste Freundin. Und ihr Vater Ralph Abernathy war Martin Luther Kings bester Freund und sein Nachfolger und der Mitbegründer der friedlichen Bürgerrechtsbewegung in den USA. Juandalynn Abernathy hat dieses Stück Weltgeschichte miterlebt. Am Küchentisch der Eltern entstanden die Flugblätter, die Strategietreffen mit Martin Luther King fanden in ihrem Zuhause und in ihrer Kirche statt. Im ersten Teil dieser Doppelfolge berichtet Juandalynn Abernathy, die seit 40 Jahren in Baden-Württemberg lebt, von ihrer außergewöhnlichen Kindheit und vom Verhältnis zwischen ihrer und der Familie Kings. Sie erzählt, wie sie selbst einen Bombenanschlag des Ku-Klux-Klan wie durch ein Wunder überlebte und wie sie den Tag der Ermordung ihres berühmten Patenonkels im Jahr 1968 erlebt hat.

Studio Ett
Studio Ett kväll 28 augusti

Studio Ett

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2020 97:55


Protester i Washington på årsdagen av Martin Luther Kings tal. Oroligheter i Malmö efter koranbränning. Så bevakas gängkriminaliteten i Sverige. Coronaläget inom sjukvården. Programledare: Mattias Rensmo Producent: Martina Lindvall Tekniker: Jari Hänninen

WDR Feature-Depot
Die Ermordung Dr. Martin Luther Kings und das FBI

WDR Feature-Depot

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2020 53:07


Der Tod des Afroamerikaners George Floyd hat aktuell in den USA zu einer Welle von Protesten geführt. Rassismus und Polizeigewalt gegen Schwarze haben in den USA eine historische Dimension. Die Ermordung Martin Luther Kings im Jahr 1968 zeugt ebenfalls davon. // Von Claus Bredenbrock // Produktion: WDR 2018 - www.WDR5.de

Dok 5 - das Feature
Die Ermordung Dr. Martin Luther Kings und das FBI

Dok 5 - das Feature

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2020 53:07


Der Tod des Afroamerikaners George Floyd hat aktuell in den USA zu einer Welle von Protesten geführt. Rassismus und Polizeigewalt gegen Schwarze haben in den USA eine historische Dimension. Die Ermordung Martin Luther Kings im Jahr 1968 zeugt ebenfalls davon. // Von Claus Bredenbrock // Produktion: WDR 2018 - www.WDR5.de

On the Ground w Esther Iverem
‘ON THE GROUND’ SHOW FOR JANUARY 24, 2020: Despite Attacks, Sanders Surges in Polls…The Assault on Reporters, Whistleblowers and Truthtellers…Honoring King on his 91st Birthday…Plus Headlines

On the Ground w Esther Iverem

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2020


With increased attacks on presidential candidate Bernie Sanders by corporate media, and with reporters, whistleblowers and truthtellers around the world under assault, we talk to journalist Jon Jeter about today's world of news, lies and videotape. And on the holiday celebrating what would have been the Rev. Martin Luther Kings 91st birthday, activists marched and rallied for a variety of causes related to human rights and human survival. Plus headlines: -Sanders Surges in Polls -Trump finalized a rule to allow companies to dump pesticides and other pollutants directly into many of the nation's streams and wetlands. -At Davos, Trump tells CNBC that he would consider cutting Medicare and Social Security in a second term. -DC Attorney General Karl A. Racine announced a lawsuit against Trump's inaugural committee. -Starting with this year's Women's March, activists have been in the streets of DC for a variety of issues for human rights and human needs. -Saturday, January 25th at noon, a rally is scheduled in front of the White House as part of the global 'No War with Iran' protests. -The one-woman stage play, The Fannie Lou Hamer Story, Sick and Tired of Being Sick and Tired, will be at Prince George's Community College Center on January 25. This show is made possible only by our volunteer energy, our resolve to keep the people's voices on the air, and by support from our listeners. In this new era of fake corporate news, we have to be and support our own media! Please click here or click on the Support-Donate tab on this website to subscribe for as little as $3 a month. We are so grateful for this small but growing amount of monthly crowdsource funding on Patreon. You can also give a one-time donation on PayPal. Thank you!

Perspektiven | rbbKultur
"I have a dream" - Die Kunst der politischen Rede

Perspektiven | rbbKultur

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2020 55:40


Roman Herzogs Berliner „Ruck- Rede“, Martin Luther Kings „I have a dream ...“, Ciceros berühmte Reden gegen Catilina - politische Reden haben Welten und Gesellschaften verändert. Tun sie es immer noch? Auch in Zeiten der digitalen Kurzbotschaft? Andrea Handels hat mit Politikern, Redenschreibern und Wissenschaftlern darüber nachgedacht, was eine gute politische Rede ausmacht und wer so etwas überhaupt noch hinbekommt.

Feature - Deutschlandfunk Kultur
„Du bist erledigt!“ – Die Ermordung Dr. Martin Luther Kings und das FBI - Rassismus in den USA

Feature - Deutschlandfunk Kultur

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2019 53:08


Vor 50 Jahren tötete ein Präzisionsschuss den schwarzen Geistlichen und Bürgerrechtskämpfer auf dem Balkon seines Motels in Memphis. Ein Einzeltäter, der Schwarze hasste, so lautet noch immer die offizielle Version. Doch Dokumente und Zeugenaussagen in einem Zivilprozess deuten auf eine Staatsaffäre. Von Claus Bredenbrock www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Feature Hören bis: 19.01.2038 04:14 Direkter Link zur Audiodatei

The Land of Make Believe With Old Man Ratchet
The Land of Make Believe with Old Man Ratchet aired 4.6.19 1st hour (of 2)

The Land of Make Believe With Old Man Ratchet

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2019 1197743:57


This is the first hour of The Land of Make Believe with Old Man Ratchet that aired on Saturday April 6th, 2019 from 8 to 9 pm (est) on WOZO 103.9 LP (low powered) FM and streamed online at wozoradio.comThis hour is a very eclectic mix. The Martin Luther Kings jr clips were thanks to my friend Jessica Pettitt of GoodEnoughNow.com who sent me a cd box set of his speeches. Thanks again, Jess!Track Listing:Intro - Remixed of De La Soul's 3 Feet High and Rising IntroNas - If I Ruled the World Instrumental with MLK jr SpeechThe Coup - Not Yet FreeOperation Ivy - UnityRage Against The Machine - Killing In The Name (JFB Scratch Remix)Monkey Mafia - Blow The Whole Joint Up (Coughing Up Fire Remix)Alan Watts - It Starts NowGil Scott Heron - Third World RevolutionOld Man Ratchet - More Buggalo Bell (Interlude)Primus - American LifeThe Dogs featuring Disco Rick - F The PresidentJoey Bada$$ - Land of The FreePublic Enemy - Harder Than You Think (Featurecast Remix)Rashani - Ah Gonna Rebel

West End UMC Podcast Audio Podcast

Most often in this gospel story we focus on Jesus pointing to himself as the subject of the Isaiah passage, as the messiah. But perhaps at least as important is the indicator, today. Its immediacy is rattling and brings to mind a number of other situations in which people have waited and waited, and today is the day that the awaited comes to pass: Martin Luther Kings letter from prison was such a call; and perhaps United Methodisms upcoming conference on the inclusion of LGBTQ people is also such a call.

West End UMC Podcast Audio Podcast

Most often in this gospel story we focus on Jesus pointing to himself as the subject of the Isaiah passage, as the messiah. But perhaps at least as important is the indicator, today. Its immediacy is rattling and brings to mind a number of other situations in which people have waited and waited, and today is the day that the awaited comes to pass: Martin Luther Kings letter from prison was such a call; and perhaps United Methodisms upcoming conference on the inclusion of LGBTQ people is also such a call.

Off The Cuff
Slip of The Tongue

Off The Cuff

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2019 23:01


Episode 246: Adam Banks talks about the TV weatherman who was fired for mispronouncing a Martin Luther Kings name during a live broadcast, Trump serving Fast Food to the Clemson Football team, and addresses the Covingtion Catholic High school controversy that has spread nationwide. Enjoy!

Punching Left!
S2E6: Was Martin Luther King a hero?

Punching Left!

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2019 118:00


Over the years Martin Luther Kings legacy has been inflated to epic proportions.  In fact, there are many things about Martin Luther King that most people do not know and if they did might not consider him a great man at all. We will Discuss MLK otherwise known as Martin Luther King and other topics as we move through this episode of Punching Left! Do people in the Alt Right hate Dr. King? 

Radio Islam
Ep. 658 Speaking for Freedom [01-03-019]

Radio Islam

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2019 57:23


Tariq talks with Human Rights activist Bakary Tandia, the Co-founder of The Abolition Institute about the imprisonment, and subsequent release of Biram Dah Abeidk-- referred to by many as the Nelson Mandela of Mauritania. Biram was recently elected to serve on Mauritania's parliament. In this edition we also have the weekly Jobs Report with Kimberly Pearson of the Chicago Urban League, and Tariq closes out the program with a brief recollection of a speech given by Dr. Martin Luther Kings during The Poor People's Campaign, followed by thoughts on "committing to Truth" in 2019. Guest- Bakary Tandia; Kimberly S. Pearson Host/Producer/Engineer- Tariq I. El-Amin Executive Producer- Abdul Malik Mujahid Music- West in Africa by John Bartmannhttps://bit.ly/2N1Br7r Antony Raijekov - By the Coast (2004) - http://bit.ly/2t2vKZq Improvisations 03_05_12 Part 2 by Split Phase https://bit.ly/2ujecwH Image Tariq I. El-Amin

Connecting the Dots Podcast
Connecting the Dots Podcast 12.18.18 | The Responsibility of Media

Connecting the Dots Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2018 84:35


On this episode of #ConnectingtheDots, we discuss Martin Luther Kings house being sold to National Parks, we give the facts and our opinions on the Cyntoia Brown case, we discuss what we feel the responsibility of media is plus more. Subscribe to Innovative Black on YouTube: https://goo.gl/N1sqiD http://innovativeblackstation.com https://twitter.com/InnovativeBlack https://www.instagram.com/innovativeblackstation/ https://www.facebook.com/innovativeblackstation1/ Innovative Black is an online platform that entertains, educate and provide exposure through original content.

The Madness Continues
Jarrell Scott Barnes 10 - 9

The Madness Continues

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2018 60:22


I sit down and have a conversation with one of my favorite people from the Chicago comedy scene, Jarrell Scott Barnes. I've enjoyed about everything this guy has ever done. He's a member of the Martin Luther Kings of Comedy, a group that's performed all over the city of Chicago at venues as prestigious as the world famous Steppenwolf Theater. He hosts every Friday at the longest running independent comedy show in the city of Chicago, Lincoln Lodge. Find him on instagram: goo.gl/UFyYHu

Grautöne
Grautöne Ep.#19 - Christian Lammert - USA: Rassismus mit System?

Grautöne

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2018 57:54


▼Thema Die Errungenschaften der Bürgerrechtsbewegung und Martin Luther Kings der 1960er Jahre werden als Meilensteine liberaler Demokratien angesehen. Während der Präsidentschaft Barack Obamas sprachen manche Sozialwissenschaftler sogar von der Ära des "Postrassismus". Spätestens seit den Tötungen von Michael Brown und Freddie Gray und den anschließenden Rassenunruhen in Baltimore und Ferguson sowie Berichterstattungen über alltägliche Polizeigewalt gegen Schwarze, rückt das Thema Rassismus wieder verstärkt in den Fokus der öffentlichen Debatte in den USA. Wir diskutieren mit dem Sozialwissenschaftler und Nordamerika-Experten Christian Lammert über die politischen und sozialen Ursachen für die strukturelle Benachteiligung der schwarzen Minderheit in den Vereinigten Staaten und fragen ihn, inwiefern sich deren Situation seit der Bürgerrechtsbewegung verändert hat. Wir besprechen außerdem Chancen und Notwendigkeit einer neuen emanzipatorischen Bewegung in den USA. ▼Gast Christian Lammert ist Institutsratsvorsitzender des John-F.-Kennedy-Instituts der Freien Universität Berlin und Professor für Politikwissenschaft mit dem Schwerpunkt Politische Systeme Nordamerikas. Der USA-Experte kommentiert regelmäßig für den öffentlichen Rundfunk die aktuellen Geschehnisse in den USA. ▼Mehr von und über Christian Lammert John-F.-Kennedy-Institut FU Berlin:http://www.jfki.fu-berlin.de/en/faculty/politicalscience/team/professors/lammert/index.html Persönliche Homepage: https://www.christianlammert.com/presentations/ Interview für die Deutsche Welle über Trump-Anwalt Michael Cohen: https://www.dw.com/de/politologe-man-f%C3%BCrchtet-cohen-hat-noch-mehr-zum-auspacken/a-45180793 Fotorechte liegen bei Grautöne Podcast http://www.grautoene.net

Människor och tro
REPRIS: Medborgarrättsrörelsen och arvet efter Martin Luther King

Människor och tro

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2018 44:35


Det är 50 år sedan pastorn och medborgarrättsrörelsens frontfigur Martin Luther King sköts till döds i Memphis. Vad hände med medborgarrättsrörelsen och Martin Luther Kings vision? Medborgarrättsrörelsen växte sig starkt under 1950 och 1960-talen och Martin Luther King hade en dröm som han stred för och som han sammanlagt hamnade 17 gånger i fängelset för - drömmen om allas lika värde, ett icke segregerat samhälle och lika lön för samma jobb. Hans tålmodiga kamp fördes genom icke våldsprincipen. Då han mördades var han enbart 35 år. Han drev fram flera stora reformer men fick också många fiender. Vilka för hans arv vidare och var växer vår tids medborgarrättsrörelser fram? I dagens Människor och tro medverkar Sören Sommelius, kulturskribent som bland annat skrivit boken Från King till Obama - medborgarrättsrörelsens kamp i USA, Karin Wiborn generalsekreterare i Sveriges Kristna Råd och tidigare pastor i en baptistförsamling precis som Martin Luther King och Araia Ghirmai Sebhatu afrosvensk antirasist och grundare av organisationen Black Coffee. Sveriges utrikeskorrespondenter Fernando Arias och Palmira Koukkari Mbenga bidrar med perspektiv från Selma i USA och Rio de Janerio i Brasilien. Reporter Elias Krantz tecknar ett porträtt av Martin Luther King. Programmet är en repris från den 10 maj 2018.

Människor och tro
Medborgarrättsrörelsen och arvet efter Martin Luther King

Människor och tro

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2018 44:16


Det är 50 år sedan pastorn och medborgarrättsrörelsens frontfigur Martin Luther King sköts till döds i Memphis. Vad hände med medborgarrättsrörelsen och Martin Luther Kings vision? Medborgarrättsrörelsen växte sig starkt under 50 och 60-talen och Martin Luther King hade en dröm som han stred för och som han sammanlagt hamnade 17 gånger i fängelset för - drömmen om allas lika värde, ett icke segregerat samhälle och lika lön för samma jobb. Hans tålmodiga kamp fördes genom icke våldsprincipen. Då han mördades var han enbart 35 år. Han drev fram flera stora reformer men fick också många fiender. Vilka för hans arv vidare och var växer vår tids medborgarrättsrörelser fram? I dagens Människor och tro medverkar Sören Sommelius, kulturskribent som bland annat skrivit boken Från King till Obama - medborgarrättsrörelsens kamp i USA , Karin Wiborn generalsekreterare i Sveriges Kristna Råd och tidigare pastor i en baptistförsamling precis som Martin Luther King och Araia Ghirmai Sebhatu afrikansk svensk antirasist och grundare av organisationen Black Coffee. Sveriges utrikeskorrespondenter Fernando Arias och Palmira Koukkari Mbenga bidrar med perspektiv från Selma i USA och Rio de Janerio i Brasilien. Reporter Elias Krantz tecknar ett porträtt av Martin Luther King. Programledare Tithi Hahn Producent Antonio de la Cruz

Freakshow
60. Messiah i Martin Luther Kings fotspår

Freakshow

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2018 51:48


Kvällens gäst är Carin da Silva. Messiah reser runt i Martin Luther Kings fotspår och äter BBQ i Tennessee, Jakob berättar vilken stjärna som frusit ihjäl i Liverpool och Carin listar vårtecknen som får vaginor att bli torra som sandpapper. Det och mycket mer i kvällens Freakshow. Diskutera avsnittet under hashtaggen #Freakshowpodcast. Följ oss på sociala medier i Facebookgruppen eller @MessiahHallberg @JakobOqvist

The Breakfast Club
Faizon Love Interview and More

The Breakfast Club

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2018 76:45


Monday 2/5 - Today on the show Faizon Love stopped by and some may say he threw some shade towards Dave Chappelle, Monique and Netflix, the"Me Too" Movement and more. Also, Charlamagne gave "Donkey of the Day" to Raven Symone after her comments towards T.I, Jay-Z, Diddy and more. Moreover, a Dodge Ram commercial with use of Martin Luther Kings voice, dropped during the Super bowl and people were outraged, so we opened up the phone lines to see exactly why some were upset. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers

Whiskey Politics
Deneen Borelli: DACA and Racism of the Left

Whiskey Politics

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2018 28:31


Episode 92: As we finish up a week that started with celebrating Martin Luther Kings birthday, we are mired in some of the most divisive and disgusting hyperbole this country has ever seen. If everyone on the right is being called a racist, then the term has no weight anymore. Deneen Borelli, a host at CRTV, a Fox News Contributor and Author of Blacklash: How Obama and the Left are Driving Americans to the Government Plantation. We discuss #DACA, how the Left uses racism to get their way and why it's so damaging to our country. Find Whiskey Politics at Ricochet.com, WhiskeyPolitics.net, Facebook and please give us a 5-Star rating at iTunes along with a comment to other's can find us. Out: Pride (In The Name of Love) - U2

Equalpodden
Avnsitt 10: En Kvart Om... Varför är det så svårt att säga ifrån

Equalpodden

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2018 17:29


Varför är det så svårt att säga ifrån? Martin Luther King har sagt en rad tunga fraser där en lyder: ”Du är inte bara ansvarig för det du säger, utan även för det du inte säger.” Under höstens #Metoo-upprop har uppdagats att det finns en enorm tystnadskultur kring övergrepp mot kvinnor i arbetslivet men även på andra platser i samhället. Men frågan är om tystnadskulturen enbart gäller övergrepp mot kvinnor eller om det finns en generell kultur av tystnad kring många frågor i hela det svenska samhället? Om så är fallet, vad beror det på? Om nån uppträder som ett arsel på jobbet eller skolan, i tunnelbanan, på gatan, varför har så många av oss så svårt att säga ifrån? Är vi konflikträdda? Eller är vi inte det? Det finns teorier i omlopp som problematiserar att vi som människor i vårt samhälle har blivit så vana vid att nån annan ska rädda oss eller andra så att vi inte behöver eller vill göra något själva för våra medmänniskor. I Sverige har olika krafter arbetat ganska hårt på att stärka civilkuraget. Det finns ett civilkuragepris som delas ut till minne av Björn Söderberg som mördades av nazister efter att ha protesterat att en nazist på hans arbetsplats blev ordförande i en fackklubb. Det finns galor som hyllar ”svenska hjältar” som gjort insatser de inte behövde göra, för att skydda eller rädda andra. Det har till och med stiftats en lag som kräver att medborgare ska rädda medmänniskor ur farliga situationer men är det då civilkurage man visar? Svårt att säga ifrån kan bero på konflikträdsla? Det är kanske så att det är lättare att rädda människor än att gå i konflikt med människor som uppträder illa. Och kanske framförallt människor med makt och hög status. Om människor skull välja att leva efter Martin Luther Kings devis skulle det till en början leda till mer konflikter men på lång sikt till ett bättre samhälle för alla. Vi avslutar denna text med ytterligare ett citat från honom: “Den stora tragedin är inte de onda människornas brutalitet utan de goda människornas tystnad”. I detta avsnitt av ”En kvart om…” diskuterar Therece Teir, vägledare på Equals boende, Jocke Grönvall som bor på Equals boende och Staffan Lundberg som sitter i styrelsen för föreningen dessa frågor med Per Sternbeck som ryggradslös samtalsledare.

Lori & Julia
1/12 Hour 1-- Lori and Julia

Lori & Julia

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2018


The Vikings are the big story today. Dilly Dilly were going to Philly. Justin Timberlake at Paisley Park.Martin Luther Kings amazing I Have a Dream Speech. The Queens interview and a Johnny Cash biopic.

Lori & Julia
1/15 Hour 1-- Lori and Julia

Lori & Julia

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2018


The Vikings are the big story today. Dilly Dilly were going to Philly. Justin Timberlake at Paisley Park.Martin Luther Kings amazing I Have a Dream Speech. The Queens interview and a Johnny Cash biopic.

The Jay King Network
KINGS IN THE MORNING/NEWS/MARTIN LUTHER KINGS ECONOMIC DREAM/OUR HISTORY IS LOST

The Jay King Network

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2017 119:00


     You know these guys – you either love them, or hate them, or you're in the middle, you haven't figured it out yet, but you keep coming because one of their main ingredients is L A U G H I N G.  KINGS IN THE MORNING confronts racism, prejudice, KITM talk crazy and zany, and they've got a platform of information that will truly enlighten you.  The only MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY show that comes on daily.  8am every morning, 5 days a week.  515-605-9376. Get on the line, and get connected! 

AD on the Radio
Throw the Booker at them!

AD on the Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2017 50:30


today on the show. Democratic Senator Cory Booker bails on main street to cozy up to wall street in a move that could cost lives... Rob Schneider breaks down MLK Day for one of Martin Luther Kings close associates... and Funkhouser identifies when relationships go bad...

AD on the Radio
Throw the Booker at them!

AD on the Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2017 50:30


today on the show. Democratic Senator Cory Booker bails on main street to cozy up to wall street in a move that could cost lives... Rob Schneider breaks down MLK Day for one of Martin Luther Kings close associates... and Funkhouser identifies when relationships go bad...

Tollans musikaliska
Afroamerikaner och klassisk musik 1

Tollans musikaliska

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2016 38:43


Möt prisbelönta chefsdirigenten JeriLynne Johnson i Black Pearl Chamber Orchestra, den mest multietniska professionella orkestern i USA. Hör delar av klassiska "I Have a Dream" med Martin Luther King! Klassisk musik är lika vibrerande, rafflande, sexigt som hiphop, rap, rock eller dancehall, säger JeriLynne Johnson. I USA har rasismen långa, sega rötter och svarta kvinnor inom klassisk musik har det dubbelt svårt. När JeriLynne Johnson sökte ett visst dirigentjobb fick hon avslag med orden: "Du ser inte riktigt ut som en amerikansk publik förväntar sig att en dirigent skall se ut". Vi bjuds även på en klingande odyssé över tongivande, historiska afroamerikaner inom den klassiska musiken.Hör även delar av Martin Luther Kings klassiska tal "I have a dream..."Musiklista:SYMFONI NR 1William Grant Still,John Jeter / Fort Smith SymphonyNAXOS 14590, 8.559174LAMENTATIONSColeridge Taylor Perkinson,Tahirah WhittingtonCEDILLE RECORDS 21642, CDR 90000087 STRÅKKVARTETT OP 14:6 G-MOLLJoseph Boulogne De Saint-Georges,Joachim-Kvartetten (Amiens)KOCH SCHWANN 15211, 3-6411-2 H1MIDNIGHT TOLLSJulius Williams,Julius Williams / Dvorak-SymfoniorkesternALBANY 14638, TROY 844SYMFONI NR 3Sven-Eric (3) Johanson,Dean Dixon / Göteborgs Symfoniorkester / Kai Laursen / Gerard Schaub /Bengt Malmsten / Sten Pettersson / Albin Helmbäck/ Åke Williamson/ Stig-Börje Blomquist / Gösta Eklund / Alvar NorbergBIS 03240, LP-302KONSERT FOR TROMBON & ORKESTERGeorge Theophilus Walker,Christian Lindberg / JamesDepreist / Malmö SymfoniorkesterBIS 03240, BIS CD 628Songs Of The MagiAdolphus Hailstork,Back Pearl Chamber Orchestra Jeri JohnsonSymphony No 2 In D Major, Op. 36 Iv Allegro MoltoBeethoven,Black Pearl Chamber Orchestra Jeri JohnsonFour Seasons Of Buenos Aires SummerPiazzolla,Black Pearl Chamber Orchestra Jeri JohnsonFour Seasons Of Buenos Aires SummerPiazzolla,Black Pearl Chamber Orchestra Jeri Johnson SYMFONI E-MOLLKaren Walwyn / Leslie B Dunner / New Black Music Repertory EnsembleFlorence Price,ALBANY 14638, TROY 1295MY SOUL'S BEEN ANCHORED IN THE LORDTrad Från USA, Florence PriceTrad Från USAMarian Anderson / Kosti VehanenNAXOS 14590, 8.120566Haydn Symphony #44 E Minor, Trauer-Symphonie Iv PrestoJoseph Haydn,Black Pearl Chamber Orchestra Jerilynne Johnson

Loud and Clearrr
#LoudandClearrr #MartinLutherKingdom

Loud and Clearrr

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2016 9:08


The Brian James Fuller discusses Martin Luther Kings impact on history, as well as the meaning of freedom today. #LOUDANDCLEARRR would like to give a special thanks to the people who paved the way for us to be here. Thank you from the bottom of our heart.

John James Lynch
I Have a Dream

John James Lynch

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2016 5:16


Music inspired by and using extracts from of Martin Luther Kings speech 'I Have A Dream'

Jazz Top 50
Jazz Top 50: Hymn to freedom

Jazz Top 50

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2015 17:42


Hør historien om Oscar Petersons hyldest til Martin Luther Kings kamp for frihed og racemæssig lighed, og hør Oscar Peterson fortælle om de ting, han selv har måttet slås med som sort i en hvid verden. Vært: Stine Danving. www.dr.dk/p8jazz

Method To The Madness
AshEL Eldridge

Method To The Madness

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2015 30:45


AshEL Eldridge, founder of Urban Farmacy and Oakland–based food justice activist and community organizer, discusses the connections between climate, food, and health.TRANSCRIPTSpeaker 1:Method to the madness is next. You're listening to method to the madness of biweekly public affairs show on k a l x Berkeley Celebrating Bay area innovators. I'm Lisa Keefer and today I'm interviewing ash l Eldridge, the founder and co-director of Urban Pharmacy, the wellness entrepreneurship and education organization that provides personalized food production programs for schools, businesses and communities. [00:00:30] As Shell is an Oakland based food justice activist and community organizer connecting the dots between climate, food and health. Welcome to the program Ash Shell. First of all on to you about urban pharmacy. Tell me what urban pharmacy is and what's going on with that. Speaker 2:Yeah, well urban pharmacy is a wellness entrepreneurship and education organization. Essentially we operate in schools and in the community to produce food grind systems for the community or for [00:01:00] the school, for the school. We do the curriculum with them, um, around mindfulness, stem education, the job repairing this career preparedness stuff. But in the community we are looking vertically at creating some opportunities for people to do value added products. What grows in their community in general, where are you located? Where, I mean we're project Earth Island Institute. So we here in Berkeley and in that sense, but we have projects from in Oakland. Y'all start projects in Sacramento. And when did you start this? Ask Years? So I had an organization called SOS juice started in 2012 system ID system juices. We did [00:01:30] discount juice cleanses. So we'll probably have juices, smoothies, elixirs tonics at farmer's markets where low income youth in Oakland. And um, that sort of branched out into a deeper awareness around how the community healing and killing product and entrepreneurship and the community. And I created urban pharmacy, um, back in 2014. Speaker 1:Well let's go back to SOS juice because I was reading that you are working with some high schools in Oakland, I believe around climate change issues and health issues. It wasn't enough and it led you to think about doing [00:02:00] something else. Speaker 2:Yeah, well I was working at Alliance for climate education, a great organization, National Organization. I'm inspiring activating young people around climate change, doing presentations around the country. And um, I was doing, you know, was northern California, um, media and leadership manager for that. And then what I realized I was going in, I was doing a presentation, I was getting inspiring young people. We were setting up groups in the schools, young, you know, young folks who are getting leadership skills on how to create and organizing our school around, you know, recycling or whatever they wanted to focus [00:02:30] on. And I started focusing on food climate and health in general. Um, just based on the personal stuff that I was doing, SOS juice simultaneously, they work in the ace and then so essentially I saw that the, the deeper impact that needed in communities specifically like a, like black and brown communities, low income communities was the energy of the SOS juice, which involved more like a, like a spiritual aspect as well. And also a need to look at deeper traumas and seeing how those internal workings were creating an external world [00:03:00] and was looking at that as a form of activism and also wanted to set up some sense of self empowerment in looking at what type of solutions we can create. And in that sense as well, Speaker 1:didn't the Trayvon Martin thing kind of trigger that too? At that time. Speaker 2:Yeah. I mean it was, I mean it was a lot of things going on. That was, um, in a, I remember Fruitvale station came out, which was talking about Oscar grant and that film came out I think the same time. And Aaron in Oakland, like the week after it at day or something, actually, the verdict came down around a Trayvon Martin Zimmerman case. So in the movie theater, literally people [00:03:30] were bawling and crying. And it was like the most intense movie out I seen, which is, you know, we want to do a lot of multimedia stuff too because the media really, really hits, hits home. But from that moment I was like, wow, it'd be opportunity to be here. It's actually utilized this, you know, my training is in transpersonal psychology. So I was training at a second in shamanism and healing arts in general. So my view was like, wow, this created a cathartic moment opportunity for, for deeper healing, which is, um, what I saw when I was in the schools. Speaker 2:You know, a, [00:04:00] we give people information but um, it's sorta topical. You know, when you look at some of the deeper, you know, working. So you know, from that moment I was like, you know what, we gotta do a event focused on, you know, Trayvon Shama and reconciliation. So I did SOS juice, Savannah United roots. We, here's what we're doing. Our events are events that in Oakland 2071, telegraph your native roots and um, had a community come together and you had a process and in dialogue and people who are on Diet dyads had ceremony around and passed out juices [00:04:30] that we prayed over that actually had some drops in it from a group that I work with called flora alive. They have a trauma releasing flowers like high-frequency flowers. Speaker 1:Like what kind of flowers and medicinal, Speaker 2:I forget exactly this. It's like a formula of a bunch of different flowers, like amazing flowers. [inaudible] this guy, he finds flowers in sacred places like the Andes, all these different places he collects them. And the way he makes it is really different. It takes more like the energetic essence versus he doesn't cut them. So sometimes you find it that cut or or things like that. So you make sure they have [00:05:00] the whole energy field of the plant. And what it does and what I've seen personally in myself and also in the community is that it removes like actually some emotional blockages, just the the flower. So really we were looking at, so sadly the whole thing is like looking at plants as ally, looking at an allies for humanity as we go through this transition and shift of awakening. And you know, so urban pharmacy came out of that as well. It was like, okay, well economics, we definitely economics and economic empowerment but we also need, this is sorta like this wellness aspect, [00:05:30] this health aspect and come prescriptions, right? Yeah. So we, we look at it like everything is holistic. It's holistic healing. So I mean financial healing, yeah, the community is really important. But also just ability to look at some of the things that that block ourselves from, you know, fully being fully self expressed and fully actualized in the world. So that's to me that that was something just as important because, Speaker 1:well it makes sense because the injustices caused stress on body and then if you're eating crappy food [00:06:00] on top of that, then you're, you're never going to get rid of, be able to get rid of the toxins that are, the stress is causing. Correct. I mean, you are what you eat. Speaker 2:Yeah, exactly. I work with that this organization called soul shop and they do anti bullying and stuff in, in schools. Really powerful what they're doing because they're seeing that, you know, everyone has a lot of stuff in their balloon and how do we lease that balloon? Right. So in that sense, the same thing's happening in Baltimore on the same thing's happening in every one. Speaker 1:I feel like there's a ground swell. Speaker 2:Yeah. Yeah. People need to up that. I mean, on both [00:06:30] ends, like there's, so you'd be sent of domestic abuse offenses in the country are by police officers. So there's some trauma they're dealing with, right? They have this over aggression as well. So on all ends of and ending when people are like, you know, crying out for it. You mean in protest? Since it's the same thing, it's like, wow, they don't want to be heard. People want to be hurting. Like, wow, how is this not being accounted for? How are people not recognizing this pain? Speaker 1:If you're just tuning in, you're listening to method to the madness of biweekly [00:07:00] public fair show on k a l x Berkeley Celebrating Bay area innovators. Today I'm interviewing as Shell Eldridge, a founder and co-director of urban pharmacy. He's an Oakland based food justice activists and community organizer connecting the dots between climate, food and health. Speaker 2:You ever been pharmacy? Is this a smallest that they're looking at? Okay, well let's look at the assets and the community first and foremost. In terms of like the, the plant, like we look at, you know, the allies of the plants [00:07:30] and then the food and then the medicines and herbs and things like that let and also the people where I'm in. Castlemont high school, Sustainable Urban Design Academy, Suta and Castlemont. So we actually transformed a gun range into a hydroponics garden, goes the guns to gardens campaign you have over there, Tim. Um, Eric's over there with urban pharmacy. He's over there is rocking out. So they actually getting design build skills, stem skills. Folks are saying like, Hey, you know, I didn't, I don't do math. And they're doing, you [00:08:00] know, advanced calculus, you know, to create and design the hydroponics. What do you grow? Right. Well, right now is this, cause we just started, we started with them. Speaker 2:We just go on like simple things that you'd probably fast like a Rugala. That's something you just, some people can get a sense like, oh, this can grow and this can happen, but we plan on expanding it into different medicinals, native plants, um, something for, uh, specialty crops, culinary herbs, things like that. If, what for the hydroponics. Um, but also we're in the k through five school right now in West Oakland that has an afterschool garden program. So [00:08:30] we, we're doing that to working with the little ones around mindfulness and things like that. So we just, we just, it was sort of just, you know, prototyping, getting our feet wet in there and then developing some curriculum and the next steps for us are making sure that curriculum is tight, making sure it all tied in terms of getting people's certifications that they need, food handles, car, whatever he needs to actually do that. Speaker 2:We want to get that part settled. And then the next thing is this, these shipping containers, we were excited about transforming shipping. Actually it's a storage containers and culinary kitchens. Oh excellent. [00:09:00] So such that they come Mobi Monica cooperative exercise and the community were folks who if you're growing, whatever you're growing in your backyard, we can sort of harvest that and glean from the community, especially after some of these laws are changing and shifting foraging, foraging. Right. And I'm working within a system and in that sense, and also some of the laws are changing around what can be forged and what type of property. You can sort of get stuff to go for comers, but we're grabbing that stuff and then saying, hey, west process, all that stuff in his food hack space where we can make our tinctures [00:09:30] are our juices, are our, you know, our jams, our butters, all that, whatever that is in this particular space. And that's the community can take ownership of that. Speaker 3:So they're learning about soil too, right? Like you know, if the soil is not clean, the produce isn't going to be clean and yeah, that's, yeah, Speaker 2:Ralph was, so that whole permaculture, the education is a holistic education in itself because it has to do with the self, like in, in our soils, essentially we do this, it's three parts. One is the nonprofit part [00:10:00] or find an institute. So we're in the schools and we doing education and Amy doing the build and be doing the curriculum I mindfulness in, in nutrition education. Then the second part essentially was just, is this more like the LLC, that business part, which then she does consulting, bringing into all the folks I know who do installation of Aquaponics, hydroponic soil base to sort of find some stuff you do in the schools. Wherever we can we can put them at. And essentially we utilizing actual space, you know, green space, creating greenhouses at locations and having conversations with lot of different companies. Even Speaker 3:are you working [00:10:30] with cities too? Because there's a lot of empty lots that could be great growth spaces. Right. Speaker 2:One thing I just created in sac is that there's a huge opportunity in Sacramento. There's a a guy, I'm really great guy, the uh, Yisrael farms up there and he has maybe like half acre sort of compound, if you will, on his property. And it's his family. His family lived there and he, he was just like, Yo, if I can't get mom able to grow food, they make, you know, value added products as well. You know, so [00:11:00] our, our focus, you know, so the nonprofit aspect, the, the LLC aspect and also the cooperative aspect for the communities. It's really looking at this, this value added product space. I've done that with SOS juice and in a Eric Hagar with um, farm x a hydroponic, our business he has out in Richmond is done at as well. So we're looking at, it's the whole ecosystem of urban agriculture and seeing how we can come in and adding value to the whole thing. And I think it looks like, you know, these value added [00:11:30] products in actually bringing in all the, the resource that foraging, all that stuff is out there, needs to be accounted for and actually redistribute it or sold even instead of wasting instead of wasting. So that's the, that's what we're looking at on pharmacy. So we're looking at, you know, making medicines and making food for the community, but also looking at, Speaker 3:I mean is there a place people can go that would Speaker 2:be amazing. I mean I think that's like some steps down. I mean one thing I will stopped when I stopped doing SLS, I'm just doing the deliveries for SOS. Did you stop it at farmer's market and I just doing deliveries, I was like, [00:12:00] well we just need a brick and mortar space. Right. And I was thinking, wow, we need this, this urban pharmacy cafe, you know, type of thing. Speaker 3:But that is something on your radar? Yes, Speaker 2:definitely on the radar. Definitely on the radar. Yeah. Speaker 3:Yeah. I read that you, you would camp out yourself in front of fast food places and sell your SOS juice. Is that a correct story there when you were starting out with, they sort of like a guerrilla like, hey, you don't need to eat that stuff. You need to eat this stuff. Speaker 2:Right. Well it w w this saw like we just camped out like you got occupied in McDonald's. It [00:12:30] was more like, um, you know, we would just out in the neighborhood, I mean, and then when you're out in the neighborhood and in West Oakland or you know, different places, right across the street, there's a KFC or right across the street there's a liquor store or whatever it is, shelling, um, you know, flaming hot Cheetos or whatever that is. So we sort of just had the music pumping and we were just giving people food. You're giving people, did you serve any juice to people? That's the, that was the most fun actually being you done. I mean, he started just giving direct one thing. We chose the Jews [00:13:00] because it's just the, it's immediate. You have, did you actually experience it right then and there you experienced the difference as well. So, yeah. So that's what we did in any medium. People had different reactions to it, but it was, it's all like sort of disruptive but very fun and very enrolling for people. Speaker 3:So going even back a little bit farther, you've worked with Van Jones, you are green for all fellow. What does that mean when you're agreeing for all fellow? Speaker 2:Yeah, well th like back in 2008, um, I was a part of the, the public launch of green for a, with Allie star. She was [00:13:30] the campaign, the event chair and um, a bunch of great group of people. We're, it was a transition from Ella Baker Center to create this new organization because van was sort of transitioning to this like green space and looking at green jobs and putting that meme into the national nomenclature. So I was really super inspired and we know, we said we created this national event in Memphis on April 4th Martin Luther Kings, a commendment of assassination date. That time it was a 40th that that was a public and ourselves event spotlight organizer for that. [00:14:00] And then eventually it was organized for that. The innovation came back and me an event spotlight organizer for before the 2008 presidential elections. So did I want just stuff around the country, just look into different communities and really just looking at what was actually happening on the ground and bringing the stakeholders together to have an event, bringing those folks together and to see what can happen after that. Speaker 2:So just organizing basically around green jobs and for the communities and look different, different places. From there I sort of stepped away, but then it was this whole [inaudible] green frog fellowship [00:14:30] organization, not organization, but group that was being formulated from people all around the country. Amazing people who were starting green initiatives in our communities but needing more support or felt siloed or felt like, wow, they don't even want to talking about this. Making these connections between economics, climate change, environmental justice, you know, trying to figure out to put those pieces together. And in, so from that point the green foul fellowship came to birth and we had meetings with Ben actually when we did [00:15:00] the artists story telling things like this. And he talked about, you know, it's just not a narrative. And then really like how do you actually go out and row your community? And actually actually enroll the stakeholders to actually create this shift that we need to have happening. So we've got a lot of training on how to organize it, how to create solutions, Speaker 1:how can you get people even interested in climate change if they don't have jobs. Speaker 2:Yeah. I mean one thing when SOS we were excited about was, you know how we did SOS shadows out of juice bars or whatever popping up. But we did it solo. We did solar power. [00:15:30] In order to to talk about that conversation, you talk about solar power and talk about what we were doing as Wes you, you had to have awareness of our climate change. We talked about, we had localized food, organic food. That's a very big conversation in terms of climate. We actually are a VI veganic organization, SOS that directly relates to climate change. You know, so a lot of stuff we were just doing, we just cute it in and just framed it in such a way that while this is sort of a trend sort of thing, but [00:16:00] also this economic viability in this, but also it adjusts these issue and there's some money like you can make at the end of the day around it. So it was just being creative. Speaker 1:What are some of your challenges in, in the communities you go into? Speaker 2:For example, can, the first time I s we, we, a lot of this started, I remember I was working with people's grocery like years ago. It was going door to door and I'm selling the grub boxes and I was doing the $24 boxes if we you that outside of West Oakland. But in West Oak you can get a 12 bucks organic produce. And I remember once at a door and I was like, wow, this [00:16:30] guy was like, yeah, I see you trying to do some good, but you know, I ain't really gonna eat that. You know, I, you know, I, I got to go down to corner. I get my chicken wings and my whatever, whatever. Right. He was being real. He was like, yeah, I'm not not gonna eat it. Don't even waste your time. Right. What sold me was like, wow, that needs to be a little more education. Speaker 2:That's how I got into more education and I was like wow, they sent me education around the case for it. But all of a sudden needs to be more like sort of detoxification and more like healing [00:17:00] like mentally and just sort of more like self awareness work needs to happen. So dealing with the self needs to be a focal point. Same thing that I went to, I was working on Ace, I was working, I was in a school once school in Vallejo, I was leaving school and my phone got stolen in a school. So I'm trying to say it was a really hard day cause I'm trying to talk to him about everything I was talking about. Climate is the hardest audience that had had and the teachers weren't caring and the students were in caring and it was one of those moments, it's like what am I doing? Speaker 2:Why am I doing this? This isn't insane. Like I can't [00:17:30] even have this come in. I had to step three steps back to the view. None. What am I counting? It was just like, so what's going on with you? What's going on at home? Like talk like this. Let's see how we can, in a 45 minutes that I have, we can have another conversation about why we can't even focus right now. I'm like, what's underneath all that? So what I saw, I was, wow, okay, we need to have a deeper conversation. So a lot of this came out of that, you know, came out of, of looking at not feeling fulfilled at ever enabled to deliver [00:18:00] the real education that was needed, that makes the long lasting shifts and changes that we need on this, on this planet. And especially in these communities. So Speaker 3:you're from Chicago originally. How did you make your way out to California? Speaker 2:From Chicago? I went to University of Rochester. I got, you know, some scholarship money and you're gonna need Musu Rochester, upstate New York. And I graduated from there for double major in music management. I created a major actually in music management. They didn't have that at the time. And then, um, psychology and then a minor in creative writing. I was upstate New York and I have a lot of friends from New York who was going [00:18:30] to school there. So I ended up going to New York right after that, just for a short spell. Did some music, make this album a solo stereo. And I was like, wow, I want to go out west. I want to stay you this transpersonal psychology. I was looking at this spiritual psychology stuff. I was like, that's the next step I want to go in. I had a choice, either work with my uncle in Jersey or go to California. Speaker 2:So I picked up everything and I went to California and went to the check out CIS and then I checked out instead of transpersonal psychology. So I just went to ITP. And where is that? In Palo Alto. And then so I ended up getting, I think it's called Sophia University [00:19:00] and I had a name, had a name change, but then I'm getting really into like indigenous wisdom, shamanism, sound healing, vibrational therapy, that whole world dow is, I'm like really deep into that space. And simultaneously I was touring, I was doing work with wisdom at a time hip hop reggae band. I was also doing, Speaker 3:yeah, when did Earth amplified happen? This is your four piece. Is it still going on your four piece band? Speaker 2:Yeah. Yeah, it's still going on. This was when I was going around the country working at green frog and I was a musician and I noticed that what was really [00:19:30] bringing these communities together was the food and the music. Right. And is this essential part of organizing to be able to have that skill. It was a skill. I noticed the how's like wow, can I actually people come together with this and let's figure out how to budget that into our organizing such day are always included. And also I was working at rd and action. Um, Abby started David's Sonia if you know them on an action on revolution. So I was always looking at art in activism, right. And looking at the power, art and music to to create change and get people enrolled and get people listening. From that point I was like, wow, we need to have like an official gree [00:20:00] hip hop album. Speaker 2:There's no album that's like all the tracks are dealing with. The whole album was jelly with this conversation. Like socially conscious is socially conscious and super like, yeah, we're going to talk about climate change. You're going to talk about food deserts, all this stuff. GMOs are that. We're going to talk about that in the music. You know, it was going back and forth to New York. I was in New York a punch. Um, some in Baltimore actually I made accord a lot of that in Baltimore. And so you it show, yeah. So dimension again, you know, earth amplified. The album came out. Then I met my crew and he was like, wow, that should be the name of the whole group. Speaker 3:Yeah. You had a video [00:20:30] that went viral all over the world. Food fight. And we're going to listen to that. What year was that? This is like 2010 yeah. Speaker 4:Let's see. Property [inaudible] [inaudible] [00:21:00] bombs. [inaudible] guys speak to control [inaudible]. Speaker 5:That's what that feeds them. It's the same way. Now what that and that got [inaudible] until you could shop the same way. [inaudible] [00:21:30] from DDTS PCB. That'd be cornering the hood. Getting KFC make these tracks beat like red bull is the pulpit. So Cat pee kick a like causing genes being get the [inaudible] xe GMO ms gene to the SOPs to gangs. The street sign sold with Rambo. Roundup with Amo would have known [00:22:00] you. Dot Dot, dot. BTC audits in [inaudible] the same way as what? That pin that got us [inaudible] but Diana, don't you get dropped the same way [00:22:30] they shoot? You made you look at the labels on the food that you cook. Just say no to the cocoa box. Do we do Google [inaudible] see Mikey got his, he built corn trucks. Does that contain Speaker 2:right? And also I had done this plastic state of mind, which has, and we also went viral with Benzoni Ono was working with him and that it has like 900,000 views or something that's around plastic pollution. Yeah. Speaker 3:And what are you still doing it now? Speaker 2:Yeah, we're still, yeah, check me out. [inaudible] amplify.com you can definitely SOS juice at Gmail and hit me up. We definitely come [00:23:00] out and perform. Speaker 3:You've played with bands like Sinai Bassnectar Blackalicious yeah. And Michael Franti. Yes. Speaker 2:So I think different situations like you know, on tour with wisdom, we opened up for Fran t or if amplified opened up for Blackalicious bass neck to actually do music with him in the studio and perform with him. So we've got a show coming up May 29th and red rocks in Denver actually in Colorado, also performed with Dogan Lights. I started working with them maybe eight months ago. [00:23:30] Yeah. I sort of tried to get out there and do some music a lot because it's, it's just really so full. But Yeah, Zion eyes on the album on earth amplified album killer police and blue tangs on the album. Speaker 3:So this music is all about the, it's kind of backs up what you're doing at urban, isn't it? It's that same idea of educating people. Speaker 2:Yes. Education. But it's also, you gotta be dope, you know, it's dope. So I mean I might, I may break away and just do some love songs, but it just seems there's a lot of topics [inaudible] Speaker 3:I heard you do a beautiful Japanese [00:24:00] champ spoken word piece. I would love for you to do something right now. Yes. Give us an example of your spoken word. Speaker 2:Yeah. So that might sooner got though, just to say that that's from a [inaudible] and that's an indigenous Japanese channel that it's really about like the purification of humanity. Yeah. So this is, again, this is the motto. Nobody got thought. This is out through Suki, my Cottey group. Gooby g sue [inaudible] coming to you. Come on somebody he knew. Ed Moody g come with [inaudible] [00:24:30] buttons. ITTO it don't know him. You and your Komatsu Son [inaudible] how do you do it all? Come on the [inaudible]. How did he geo me music? Eat the money they committed Chicora you mean gave receipt the money Tomo too. Cause then she'll catch any cash more MTSU [inaudible] memory to me. Sickie I e to my 8 million [inaudible] you and [00:25:00] me can mean memory to me. Sicky high. He to my gum N***a to my EEG high. He Montse Gum N***a to my age. [inaudible] Speaker 3:what is the message there? What are you saying? Speaker 2:Essentially it's, it's calling upon an infancy. Small particles at a universe to come together is actually a also forgiveness and it's like, you know, please forgive me for, I tried my trespasses, you know, forgiving myself for, to be humanity, for any impurities that we've incurred. And may we please bring in [00:25:30] the age of light? Can you please bring in and welcome the age of, of, of spiritual enlightenment. Speaker 3:How do your students respond to this? Do they must love it? Speaker 2:It depends on what I do. I don't want to say do depends on who I'm talking to and what I'm doing. Um, this other chat indigenous chance I do too from different cultures and I work on Peruvian. Speaker 3:Do you do any native American? Yeah. Cause they need some work. I mean I was just reading in the paper today is terrible amount of suicide. Teenagers, Speaker 2:yeah. A lot of the native community [00:26:00] and has there's that gone on as you know, it's a lot of um, you know, just to, you know, just uh, what folks have been through. Um, and this country, a lot of that sort of manifest in a generation. It's usually innovations and illnesses and also, you know, the isolation and disconnection from these indigenous practices and healing practices, you know, creates a lot of uh, just illness in general. So, but yeah, there's a lot of people working in these areas and chanting and praying. I didn't actually, [00:26:30] we worked up in Alaska with some, the indigenous, I'm asking you do, um, Alaska environmental action network and really amazing. We taught people how to make beats, you know, there would have been their songs and doing the songs to it. And you know there's other is awakening as a tribe called red that is doing some stuff like that. Amazing where you know, audio pharmacy doing a lot of amazing work with indigenous communities, medicine for the people you know, so there's a lot of folks out there. They're doing it with the music and doing the culture and bringing a culture as medicine. Speaker 3:[00:27:00] You were going to do a spoken word piece as well. Yeah. Speaker 2:Welcome everyone to the event horizon. The one in the mirror when we open up the eyes, when one rapes one souls, one thinks unfolds dotted from one second get blown off the mountain. No air for one moment that left off the island. The tone is silence. The tone is Zion Uno newest fee without a fee. One holographic spear wonder. Wow. War Warrior PA's everywhere. One don't zone out. We scaled out galactic [00:27:30] to let the phone home and crop circle the masses under the Buddha tree with Islamics and baptists you add the IME verse. Remember Moon is the practice six four grade isometric vector metric yet got lives on leg, leg, arm, head. A lot is symmetrically reflected. At a single fast spin at a on a half his ribs. One, one world, one invoice, one one choice, one movement, one one people will play together. [00:28:00] We for remember one [inaudible] one one [inaudible]. Speaker 3:I would think all these students and young people would really respond to that kind of invitation almost to think about other things. Speaker 2:Yeah, I've been in best way is really just to go and do a project, a music video or do actual like song writing process, you know. So we do that too. We work with young people around [inaudible]. Speaker 3:Is that at the a alliance for climate education or, Speaker 2:and then at roots does more like the estimate. Bruce has [00:28:30] hacked the hood. They have UFC youth entrepreneurship organization at music studios there. Speaker 3:And you're working there too. You're doing so much [inaudible] Speaker 2:one of the founders there but I'm not actually working in everyday life type of thing. But I'm saying like I've went in there for workshops there so I do a lot of, I go here and go there. Speaker 3:Well, I think your work is important. And I, I, it's nice to meet an activist from Oakland. And I understand you had a, was that your aunt was a, was a black panther back in the day. Yeah. So it's kind of running in the blood, that kind of activism for community. Speaker 2:Yeah, my [00:29:00] family Emmy with as a, you know, black panthers or just pictures. They are all about, you know, the strong individuals who you, they either pray or they protest. You know, I think what's happening now though is we're moving more into like this prayer space. My, my aunt is doing more stuff in, in preschools now. She's in a Montessori school in Atlanta and she's working, doing juicing with young people and she's in this whole tip of, of actually working with the little ones. And I think that's a really powerful form of activism. Like really taking care of my mothers and really taking care of my babies. [00:29:30] I mean, what happens in these formative years is a real, um, impact on the world that we have tomorrow. So, Speaker 3:yeah. Well, I wanted to just, if you can repeat for the audience how they to get hold of you about Speaker 1:urban pharmacy. What's your website and yeah. Speaker 2:Yeah, so to get a hold of us urban pharmacy for workshops, education, food system installations, go to ww dot the urban pharmacy dot. O R g e n s t h e f a r [00:30:00] m a c y.org pharmacy that got fun for music. Just ww.earth amplify.com and again, all this is on Facebook and other social media as well, but definitely check us out. Speaker 1:All right, I shall thank you for being on the program. You've been listening to method to the madness, a biweekly public affairs show on k a l x Berkeley Celebrating Bay area innovators. If you have questions or comments [00:30:30] about the show, go to the Calex website, find method to the madness and drop us an email. You can also find the link there for past programs. Tune in again in two weeks at the same time. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Our Own Voices Live
Rant Radio: Dr. Kings Actual Dream

Our Own Voices Live

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2014 102:00


Tuesday January 21st show will focus on Dr. Martin Luther Kings legacy and talk about the direction he was headed before his untimely death. Our we following his dream or are we following his nightmare? We will also discuss how Dr. King would be received in America if he was alive today. Oliver Stone recently pulled out of the King Biopic because the King family wouldn't allow him to portray certrain aspects of Dr. Kings life. Click the LInk at 5pm Central, 6pm Eastern and 3pm Pacific. Tune in today to call in dial 347-826-9600 press option 1 to talk. Also tune in to see how you can win free tickets to the Masquerade Party on February 28th.  

Expressen Dokument
Martin Luther Kings berömda tal

Expressen Dokument

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2013 11:22


Fördjupningsreportage. Det har gått 50 år sedan Martin Luther King höll sitt berömda tal med orden "I have a dream". I dagarna hyllas han av tiotusentals amerikaner och president Barack Obama talar till hans ära. For information regarding your data privacy, visit acast.com/privacy

Ekko
28.08.2013 Taler kan forandre verden

Ekko

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2013 28:21


Den 28. august 1963 demonstrerte 250 000 mennesker i Washington DC i USA. Det var den største demonstrasjon i den amerikanske hovedstaden noensinne. Men det som virkelig gir markeringen en plass i historiebøkene, det er Martin Luther Kings tale, I have a dream. Hvordan har denne drømmen møtt virkeligheten i USA? Programleder: Kalle Turkerud.

Lundströms Bokradio
Martin Luther Kings dröm fyller 50 år Lundströms Bokradio om politiska tal

Lundströms Bokradio

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2013 44:03


I have a dream! Ett av världens mest kända tal fyller 50 i år. Lundströms Bokradio läser och analyserar Martin Luther Kings tal, tillsammans med författaren och historikern Henrik Berggren och talskrivaren Kristoffer Talltorp. Hör också författaren Tomas Bannerhed om jobbet som referatskrivare och så tar vi tempen på den ryska samtidslitteraturen. I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character. I sommar är det femtio år sedan medborgarrättskämpen Martin Luther King höll sitt tal I Have a Dream i USA. Vi smygstartar jubileumsåret genom att ägna denna legendariska text en närläsning. Hur är talet uppbyggt? Vad har det för litterära kvaliteter? Vad var det som gjorde att det kom att prägla historien så starkt? Henrik Berggren, författare senast till biografin Underbara dagar framför oss, om Olof Palme, och Kristoffer Talltorp, före detta talskrivare åt Maria Wetterstrand, diskuterar varför Martin Luther Kings tal fick ett sådant genomslag och jämför även med den politiska talekonsten i Sverige; vem skriver politikernas tal, hur ska de snitsas till för att verkligen gripa tag och vem är Sveriges bästa politiska talare genom tiderna? Från en talekonst till en annan; Augustprisbelönade författaren Tomas Bannerhed jobbar åt Stockholms stad med att sammanfatta vad som sägs i kommunfullmäktige och kommunstyrelsen. Reporter Sofia Olsson har träffat honom för att få en guidning genom kanslisvenskan. Dessutom fikar vi med ryska författare; reporter Fredrik Wadström har träffat Olga Slavnikova, redaktör för en färsk debutantantologi, och två av hennes adepter; Irina Bogatyrjova och Boris Pejgin. Fler och fler skriver och vill publicera sig i den enorma ryska nationen – så vart är dess samtidslitteratur på väg? Böcker som nämns i programmet: Henrik Berggren: Underbara dagar framför oss. En biografi över Olof Palme. (2010) Olga Slavnikova red: Cirkelns kvadratur (2013) Olga Slavnikova: 2017 (2013) Tomas Bannerhed: Korparna (2011) Tal som nämns i programmet: Martin Luther King: I have a Dream 28 augusti 1963 Olof Palme: Radioanförande om invandringen i Sveriges radio 25 december 1965 Maria Wetterstrand: anförande partiledardebatt 26 oktober 2009; partiledardebatt 19 januari 2011 Barack Obama: Segertalet som nyvald president 5 november 2008

Mark Larson Podcast
The Mark Larson Show 0117_11 Hour 3

Mark Larson Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2011 47:04


Ronald Reagan JR has a new book out and it could prove to be controversial. Plus the latest on the Laughner trial in Arizona and its possible move to San Diego. Star Parker joins Mark to discuss Martin Luther Kings legacy...Brian Darling from the Heritage Foundation also joins. Listen now!