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Reviews of the new releases in crime fiction May, 2025.Featuring:A Beautiful Way to Die Eleni Kyriacou The Doorman Chris Pavone Going Home in the Dark Dean KoontzTwo Adam Lapid Mysteries Jonathan Dunsky Kill Pill David Barbaree A Death in the Afternoon Julie AndersonThe Lady in the Park David Reynolds Death by Intent Jacqueline Harrett The Golden Age of Murder Martin EdwardsMotives Unknown An Anthology of Writing From the North Ed. Nathan Connolly & Harriet HirshmanRum Punch Elmore Leonard Noted new release - not reviewed - Whistle Linwood BarclayPaul Burke writes for Monocle Magazine, Crime Time, Crime Fiction Lover and the European Literature Network, Punk Noir Magazine (fiction contribution). He is also a CWA Historical Dagger Judge 2025. His first book An Encyclopedia of Spy Fiction will be out early 2026.Produced by Junkyard DogCrime TimeCrime Time FM is the official podcast ofGwyl Crime Cymru Festival 2023 & 2025CrimeFest 2023CWA Daggers 2023 & 2024 & National Crime Reading Month& Newcastle Noir 2023 and 20242024 Slaughterfest,
We're going Full Tilt as we head into Father's Day on The Fantastival Podcast with #168 as we are joined by singer / songwriter, ex Belfast hmv'er, the most awesome, Dave Magee… Dave is great fun and on superb form as we chat starting from his earliest musical memories, to his first band Fuel, his career and the fun times at hmv Belfast, joining LaFaro and his time in the band alongside his twin brother Herb (check them out, they are awesome), his next band Little Matador and their album, his friendship and playing with Snow Patrol's Nathan Connolly in various bands from an early age right through to Nathan's 2023 solo album ‘The Strange Order Of Things' (also well worth a listen), writing a wrestling theme tune for his friend and our joint love of wrestling, his work with and pride on Arvo Party (Herb's project), becoming a Lecturer and how that started plus Mr Magee gets to collate his Fantasy Festival lineup choosing only 5 acts in an episode where Dave will bring a big smile to your face. After you've finished the episode, give a listen to Dave's Spotify Playlist featuring acts chosen for his Fantasy Festival lineup and acts spoken about in his episode: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/31xiOilzPR0Urhqq2iVUgn?si=A4H5duiESx6tp_oUlar4Pw&pi=e-7HzH671CQvy0 And then check out ‘Feat. Dave LaFaro' Spotify Playlist: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/6AK0s5z23MSnYFwZvWSZYI?si=fXkLjmjMQ3aoZVvri-7WRQ&pi=e-RiY8q9n_TWib Dave LaFaro LinkTree Page: https://linktr.ee/davelafaro?fbclid=PAZXh0bgNhZW0CMTEAAaapwjQIYrsHq28MiJIZk0JIjx_qxndnljB-6yN4GUWG1PNookKMXGZZYVo_aem_ZmFrZWR1bW15MTZieXRlcw Dave LaFaro Twitter: https://x.com/davelafaro?s=21&t=eqrCq7Vm65YWWbA4Nfrj7A Dave LaFaro Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/davemageee?igsh=ZGtoZ3F2aGM5eHpv If you've enjoyed the Fantastival Podcast please give us a follow on Twitter @FantastivalP, subscribe on whatever platform you are listening to and give us a star rating on iTunes or rate the show and comment on the episode on Spotify and remember to check for our new episodes which are released every Sunday at 9am. Spread the word... and the word is Fantastival! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/the-fantastival-podcast/message
In episode #127 of The XS Noize Podcast, Mark Millar meets Snow Patrol guitarist Nathan Connolly to discuss his debut solo album, The Strange Order Of Things. Nathan Connolly has been the guitarist with the acclaimed Northern Irish rock band Snow Patrol since 2002. Nathan began working on his debut solo album with producer Rocky O'Reilly in Belfast in 2017. A lockdown-imposed hiatus from Snow Patrol touring allowed him to finish the project in early 2021. The Strange Order Of Things features vocals from Simon Neil of Biffy Clyro and Irish artist Ailbhe Reddy. In this interview, Nathan talks about writing and recording the album, upcoming solo live shows – what's next for Snow Patrol and lots more. Check out the article on XS Noize - https://bityl.co/IPIx Please also subscribe and follow XS Noize on the social media links below: Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/xsnoizemusic Twitter - https://twitter.com/xsnoizemusic Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/xsnoizemusic/
Tom Meighan, Nathan Connolly en singles du jour et on termine la découverte album de The Answer. Bonne… L'article Emission Sensation rock du jeudi 23 mars 2023 est apparu en premier sur Sensation Rock - Webzine français.
Today, a conversation about race and real estate. Tom's first guests are here today to talk about an experience they had that demonstrates the continuing problems that Black homeowners and homebuyers encounter in the housing market. Dr. Nathan Connolly and Dr. Shani Mott teach at Johns Hopkins University. Nathan Connolly is an Associate Professor of History who studies, among other things, redlining and race. He's the Director of the Program in Racism, Immigration, and Citizenship at Hopkins, and the author of book called A World More Concrete: Real Estate and the Remaking of Jim Crow South Florida. Shani Mott is a lecturer in the Africana Studies Department. She studies the use of racial language in fiction and non-fiction in American popular culture. They live with their three children in Homeland, an affluent neighborhood in northeast Baltimore. They are African American. And what happened when they attempted to re-finance the mortgage on their home is the subject of a lawsuit that alleges discrimination in the appraisal process. They join Tom in Studio A. Later in the hour we are joined as well by Dr. Andre Perry. He's a Senior Fellow at Brookings Metro and a scholar-in-residence at American University. He's the author of Know Your Price: Valuing Black Lives and Property in America's Black Cities. Andre Perry joins us on Zoom from National Harbor.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Starbucks put on notice as Laila Dalton & Bill Whitmire, organizers, enlightened us on unions: It was refreshing speaking to Laila Dalton & Bill Whitmire, who devote their time to organizing workers at Starbucks and enlightening Americans on the need for unions. Great conversation with the working class hero. The creator of The Rick Smith Show is on point: Rick Smith, the creator of Rick Smith Show, speaks on the working class as very few can. His show is a gem. Listen to his take on working-class America. Stephanie Taylor, the co-founder of Bold Progressive, discusses winning the message to win for Democrats: Bold Progressives' co-founder Stephanie Taylor was on point as she discussed how one must message for Democrats to win. Bold Progressives' co-founder Stephanie Taylor was on point as she discussed how one must message for Democrats to win. Lizz Winstead, The Daily Show co-creator, discusses her organization to fight the SCOTUS decision: Lizz Winstead called it several months ago. She knew that the United States Supreme Court would overturn Roe v. Wade, and ultimately, they did. The appraiser who lowballed the black professor's home by 300K should be charged with felony theft: The New York Times article where the black professors Nathan Connolly & Shani Mott's home were lowballed by near 300K by 20/20 Valuations should be felony theft. AT LAST! Mainstream Media finally acknowledges Democrats could hold House & Senate in 2022: It took a Democratic win in a bellwether district to convince the mainstream media that Democrats may hold on to both the House and Senate. CNN acknowledged Biden's long success list. Is MSM finally bucking the Right Wing narrative?: The Mainstream Media (MSM) have been toeing the Right Wing narrative on Prez Biden for some time. It is refreshing to see some truthful reporting. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/politicsdoneright/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/politicsdoneright/support
The 20/20 Valuations appraiser who lowballed the black professors Nathan Connolly & Shani Mott's home by nearly 300K detailed in a New York Times article is a thief. It is an underhanded way to steal wealth in a near antiseptic and subliminal manner. The New York Times reported the following from the article “Home Appraised With a Black Owner: $472,000. With a White Owner: $750,000.” Last summer, Nathan Connolly and his wife, Shani Mott, welcomed an appraiser into their house in Baltimore, hoping to take advantage of historically low-interest rates and refinance their mortgage. They believed that their house — improved with a new $5,000 tankless water heater and $35,000 in other renovations — was worth much more than the $450,000 that they paid for it in 2017.Home prices have been on the rise nationwide since the pandemic; in Baltimore, they have gone up 42 percent in the past five years, according to Zillow.com. But 20/20 Valuations, a Maryland appraisal company, put the home's value at $472,000, and in turn, loanDepot, a mortgage lender, denied the couple a refinance loan. Dr. Connolly said he knew why: He, his wife, and three children, aged 15, 12 and 9, are Black. A professor of history at Johns Hopkins University, Dr. Connolly is an expert on redlining and the legacy of white supremacy in American cities, and much of his research focuses on the role of race in the housing market.Months after that first appraisal, the couple applied for another refinance loan, removed family photos and had a white male colleague — another Johns Hopkins professor — stand in for them. The second appraiser valued the house at $750,000. This theft is familiar to people of color (POC) and women. They are charged more for cars and pay more for loans, among many other indignities rarely acknowledged and reported. Systemic racism looks like this right now. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/politicsdoneright/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/politicsdoneright/support
Johns Hopkins University professor Nathan Connolly teaches a class about the “promise of suburbia” after the civil rights movement. He explores the role of zoning, eminent domain, and property rights in the making of racial housing categories. He also explains how these tools were often used by local governments to impede desegregation of neighborhoods. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
'Set the Fire to the 3rd Bar' by Tom Simpson, Nathan Connolly, Jonny Quinn, Gary Lightbody, & Paul Wilson
Let's talk about The Black Vote. Do you think your vote doesn't matter? Its just one vote. What difference does it make? Right? We interview Dr. Nathan Connolly, Associate Professor of History at Johns Hopkins University, and dive into why we think this way and what the Black vote truly means to us.
D'Vera Cohn of Pew Research Center on census updates. Nathan Connolly of Johns Hopkins Univ on his Storytime Youtube series. Darrick Hamilton of The Ohio State Univ on baby bonds. Andy Green of Univ of Manchester on fish eggs spread by ducks. Tom Robson of Millikin Univ on Hamilton and live theater. Elizabeth Mumford of Univ of Chicago on toxic teen relationships.
Words & music by Gary Lightbody, Jonny Quinn, Nathan Connolly, Tom Simpson, Paul Wilson Dave Drew - lead vocals, acoustic guitar; Steve Cafarelli - backing vocals, drums; Frank Mascaro - bass; Scott Kuchler - electric guitar Photo by Joe Cuminale
As BackStory moves towards the end of its production, we’ve asked our hosts to select memorable moments from the show that we’re publishing as episodes once per month. Since joining BackStory in 2017, Nathan Connolly has interviewed a ton of different people about everything from Bruce Lee to Bison. But a handful of conversations are particularly memorable to Nathan because they unpacked issues that he cares deeply about.
This week is a really fun look at all the good, bad, and ugly of Spartan Race 2019 and with excitement at the start of the 2020 race season just days away. We’re doing it panel style with three of the biggest personalities in the sport – Nathan Connolly, Renalto Hardin II, and Scott Knowles. These guys share what brought them to OCR, what they love about Spartan, and what they’re looking forward to in 2020 and beyond. #getafterit #ocr_rh #iamaspartanpodcast #adaptiveocr
Nathan Connolly was born with Spina Bifida and doctors predicted he would never even walk. By the age of 10 he had summited Half Dome and other peaks. Now Nathan is competing to be the first adaptive athlete to make the Spartan Pro Team and is on a mission to inspire the participation of many more adaptive athletes in Spartan racing.
Air Date: 6/14/2019 Today we take a look at the renewed call for reparations for slavery, Jim Crow and beyond that is infusing the 2020 Democratic primary campaign as well as the history of the campaign for reparations Be part of the show! Leave a message at 202-999-3991 Episode Sponsors: MOVAGlobes.com/Best(Coupon Code: BEST) | Amazon USA| Amazon CA| Amazon UK| Clean Choice Energy Get AD FREE Shows & Bonus Content: Support our show on Patreon! SHOW NOTES Ch. 1: 40 Acres and A Mule, Today with Brian Balogh and William Darity - BackStory - Air Date 5-24-19 The racial wealth gap is real, and it's large. Reconstruction after the Civil War took some good steps, but all that work was undone. Don't believe the myth that the black community doesn't have wealth because of their own problems. Ch. 2: History of Slaveowners Receiving Reparations with DeRay, Sam, Brittany and Clint - Pod Save the People - Air Date 4-23-19 After the Emancipation Proclamation, Slave Owners received reparations - creating a narrative that legitimized slavery and enforced poor race relations, essentially canceling the debt our nation owed black lives. Ch. 3: A Plan To Reverse Economic Apartheid in the US with Dedrick Asante-Muhammad and Chuck Collins - Tiny Spark with Amy Costello - Air Date 5-29-19 Open a congressional committee on reparations, and recognize we need massive progressive policy AND reparations. Stop blaming black lives for their place in the world. Ch. 4: Callie House and the Movement for Reparations with Nathan Connolly and Mary Frances Berry - BackStory - Air Date 5-24-19 Callie House launched the first widespread reparations movement, despite concentrated attacks from the Federal Government to stop her. Ch. 5: Renewed Reparations Conversations with Neil, Natalia and Niki - Past Present - Air Date 4-9-19 Support for reparations is growing. Ta-Nehisi Coates sparked the fire. Wealth has been denied to black lives for centuries, and we need widespread policies and radical change to enact proper reparations work. Ch. 6: The Establishment is trying to outflank Bernie on Reparations - The Benjamin Dixon Show - Air Date 3-11-19 Bernie has an amazing imagination and pushes the Overton Window to the left on every issue - except reparations and black lives. The establishment is using this to hurt Bernie's campaign, despite also not caring about black people. Ch. 7: Radical Case for Reparations with Glen Ford - This Is Hell - Air Date 4-25-19 Reparations are: Acknowledgement of injustices on the parts of the perpetrators. Restitution for the effects of injustices. Mutual recognition of the part of the victimized communities and perpetrator that the debt is paid. VOICEMAILS Ch. 8: Focus on rape ban exceptions is useless - Heather from Texas Ch. 9: Trump and the long line of bad presidents - Brandon from Chicago FINAL COMMENTS Ch. 10: Final comments on the life vs legal personhood distinction and how impeachment could usher out the era of impunity we’ve been living in for decades. EDUCATE YOURSELF & SHARE Ta-Nehisi Coates Revisits The Case for Reparations(The New Yorker) The Case for Reparations(Ta-Nehisi Coates, The Atlantic, 2014) What Reparations for Slavery Might Look Like in 2019(The New York Times) Long Before Redlining: Racial Disparities in Homeownership Need Intentional Policies(Shelterforce) After Redlining - Part 2(Shelterforce) What We Get Wrong About the Closing the Racial Wealth Gap(Social Equity, Duke University, 2018) 1.5 Million Missing Black Men(NY Times, 2015) How a ‘segregation tax’ is costing black American homeowners $156 billion(Curbed) Curated by BOTL Communications Director Amanda Hoffman MUSIC(Blue Dot Sessions): Opening Theme: Loving Acoustic Instrumental by John Douglas Orr Contrarian - Sketchbook Weathervane - CloudCover Quaver - Codebreaker Begrudge - Darby Swapping Tubes - Studio J Chilvat - Lillehammer Voicemail Music: Low Key Lost Feeling Electro by Alex Stinnent Closing Music: Upbeat Laid Back Indie Rock by Alex Stinnent Produced by Jay! Tomlinson Thanks for listening! Visit us at BestOfTheLeft.com Support the show via Patreon Listen on iTunes | Stitcher| Spotify| Alexa Devices| +more Check out the BotL iOS/AndroidApp in the App Stores! Follow at Twitter.com/BestOfTheLeft Like at Facebook.com/BestOfTheLeft Contact me directly at Jay@BestOfTheLeft.com Review the show on iTunesand Stitcher!
"La mayoría de la gente tiene una imagen positiva de Martin Luther King, sobre todo porque no saben lo que realmente dijo sobre la mayoría de los temas.”, decía el historiador Nathan Connolly.
With the midterms a few weeks behind us, and results still coming in, what could be more interesting? Is the Blue Wave actually going to work out in the end, after the recounts in Florida and Georgia? In this episode of Everybody Assumes, Johns Hopkins Professor Nathan Connolly and I explore the more subtle ideas especially around Race underlie our current politics, how our assumptions about contentious issues came to be, and thinking about how narratives of history are created by those in power. Currently, Prof. Connolly is the Herbert Baxter Adams Associate Professor of History at Johns Hopkins University, and author of the forthcoming books "Four Daughters: An America Story" and "Black Capitalism: The 'Negro Problem' and the American Economy"; he also co-hosts the weekly podcast, Backstory. Prof. Connolly co-authored a syllabus for a hypothetical class explaining the Trump era; I would highly recommend: https://www.publicbooks.org/trump-syllabus-2-0/?utm_content=buffer46380&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer
Carolina Salge of Wake Forest University on struggle to cope with bots. Tanya Golash-Boza of Univ. of California, Merced on abolishing ICE. Sara Jensen of Carthage College untangles the mathematics of knitting. Barbara Crouch on Caffeine Can Kill. Nathan Connolly of Johns Hopkins Univ. takes stock of racism 50 years after the Kerner Commission. Steven Wisensale of Univ. of Connecticut describes America’s baseball diplomacy. Mark Elbroch of Puma Program for Panthera says wild cats are social.
BYU's Quinn Snell on the Facebook data breach. Why it's harder for women scientists to publish, with Univ of Washington's Ione Fine. Raphael Bousso of Univ of Cal Berkeley reminisces on Stephen Hawking. Sam Payne of The Apple Seed shares a story. Northwestern's Farhad Zadeh describes the center of the galaxy. Johns Hopkins Univ's Nathan Connolly talks legacy of racism in America. Princeton's Mohammad Shahrad gives a second life to old smartphones.
March 8, 2018 - The Black Panther Cont'd - Listen in to the second episode of our series examining the world brought to us by -- and cultural shift created by -- The Black Panther movie.With: Johns Hopkins History Professor Dr. Nathan Connolly; UMBC American Studies Professor Dr. Kimberly Moffitt; and Kalima Young, Lecturer in Electronic Media and Film at Towson University.
February 22, 2018 - The Black Panther - Today we begin a series of conversations on The Black Panther movie in all its beauty and complexity. We are joined by Johns Hopkins History Professor Dr. Nathan Connolly; UMBC American Studies Professor Dr. Kimberly Moffitt ;and Kalima Young, Lecturer in Electronic Media and Film at Towson University. Enjoy our journey to Wakanda.
February 14, 2018 - American Capitalism - As part of our continuing series of conversations with the John Hopkins Seminar on American Capitalism, we talked with Columbia University's Dr.Rebecca Kobrin and Hopkins History Professor Dr. Nathan Connolly, one of the Seminar's conveners, to explore Dr. Kobrin's work on Jewish immigrant bankers, immigration, and world capitalism.
"The more we reinforce the stereotypes of who writes and who reads, the more the notion of exclusivity is reinforced. It takes balls to gatecrash a party." Kit de Waal, published her first novel, My Name is Leon, in 2016 at the age of 55. She has already put her money where her mouth is - using part of the advance she received from Penguin to set up a creative writing scholarship in an attempt to improve working class representation in the arts. Kit knows that - as a writer from a working class background - the success of her debut novel is a rare occurrence. Born to a Caribbean bus driver father and an Irish mother (a cleaner, foster carer and auxiliary nurse), Kit grew up in Birmingham and left school at 15 with no qualifications. She became a secretary with the Crown Prosecution Service and went on to have a career in social services and criminal law. In this feature she explores an issue that is deeply personal to her. She looks back at her own life and trajectory, and takes the listener on a journey around the country to find out what the barriers really are to working class representation in British literature today. "There is a difference between working class stories and working class writers. Real equality is when working class writers can write about anything they like - an alien invasion, a nineteenth century courtesan, a medieval war. All we need is the space, the time to do it - oh yes, and some way to pay the bills!" Kit talks to a range of writers, agents and publishers about what the barriers are for writers from working class backgrounds, including Tim Lott, Andrew McMillan, Gena-mour Barrett, CEO of Penguin Random House UK Tom Weldon, Julia Bell, Julia Kingsford, Ben Gwalchmai, Nathan Connolly and Stephen Morrison-Burke (Birmingham poet laureate and the first recipient of the Kit de Waal scholarship). Produced by Mair Bosworth.
October 6, 2017 - Black Banking in the United States - Listen in to this engaging and illuminating conversation on Black banks and the nature of wealth and political power, inspired by a year-long seminar on American Capitalism currently taking place at Johns Hopkins University. October 6, 2017 - Black Banking in the United States. You will hear from: Dr. Nathan Connolly, Dr. Jared Ball,
After Brexit - the supposed ‘will of the people’ - everyone is talking about the working class. And yet the actual voice of the working class is rarely heard, especially in literature. This month, we have a very special edition of Literary Friction based around a new collection of essays on the working class by the working class called Know Your Place, published by the brilliant gang at Dead Ink Books. We talked to three authors featured in the collection about their essays and the urgent need to publish more diverse voices: award-winning novelist Kit de Waal; the editor and publisher of Know Your Place, Nathan Connolly; and London-based writer and poet Abondance Matanda.
August 22, 2017 - Charlottesville & The Removal of Confederate Monuments - Johns Hopkins scholar and activist Dr. Nathan Connolly wrote a reflection and analysis in the Washington Post about Charlottesville and the removal of Confederate monuments. He joined us for an illuminating and interesting conversation
We begin with a conversation about the horrific events that took place in Charlottesville, Va. over the weekend which resulted in the death of one woman and two VA state troopers. Many were injured, and brazenness about racist and hateful rhetoric is alive and well. White nationalists succeeded in shining a bright spotlight on themselves in Charlottesville. The president of the United States has said little to dim that light, drawing severe criticism from, as he might say, many, many sides. Dr. Nathan Connolly , a professor of history at Johns Hopkins University, joins Tom to reflect on Charlottesville and its aftermath.
Prof. Michael Dawson welcomes Nathan Connolly, Herbert Baxter Adams Associate Professor of History at Johns Hopkins University, to the New Dawn Podcast. In this episode, they discuss the value and utility of theoretically and pragmatically engaging concepts like neoliberalism, on one hand, and neocolonialism, on the other.
In part one of TEOAT's RAPID FIRE INDIE PUBLISHER EXTRAVAGANZA, Rob speaks to indie publisher Nathan Connolly from Dead Ink about Liverpool, Working class stories (again), Squeezing dough from the Arts Council, Crowdfunding, publishing nine novels in a year, getting picked off the slushpile and life as a book fetishist.
On this week’s Past Present podcast, Nicole Hemmer, Natalia Mehlman Petrzela, and Neil Young discuss the history of refugees, the legacy of Woodrow Wilson, and Instamoms. Here are some links and references mentioned during this week’s show: President Obama tied the Syrian refugee crisis to the story of the Pilgrims in a recent radio address to move Americans to support their entry to the US. The Washington Post’s image of a young refugee, Niki argued, was meant in part to elicit American sympathy, but throughout history Americans have seldom welcomed refugees into the nation. Natalia noted the lowest point of this history may have been when the US rejected the admission of European Jews in the years leading up to World War II. Neil pointed out that moment has been humanized by the account of Anne Frank’s family being denied entry as refugees.Princeton students have demanded the university remove Woodrow Wilson’s name from campus sites because of his racist acts as president. Natalia agreed with historian Nathan Connolly’s request that we “write segregation and race into the story, not to write the racists out of it.” She also recommended the historian Jonathan Zimmerman’s Politico article that encouraged Princeton students to reckon more with Wilson’s complicated example.“Instamoms,” like @Taylensmom, are the newest social media phenomena. But are these digital parents just the latest version of the stage mom? Natalia suggested Viviana Zelizer’s classic, Pricing the Priceless Child, provided a useful way for thinking about the changing social value of children in America. In our regular closing feature, What’s Making History: Natalia recommended Sarah Hepola’s memoir, Blackout: Remembering the Things I Drank to Forget.Neil discussed why Americans spoke with the accent they did in the 1930s and what 100 years of photographs reveal about the history of smiling.Niki shared the new Amazon series The Man in the High Castle as a way of thinking about the meaning of fascism in American politics.
The University of Virginia's Dr. Andrew Kahrl visits The Context of White Supremacy. His research subjects include African American studies, 20th Century United States and the environment. Dr. Nathan Connolly cited Kahrl's research on the Racist economic terrorism that has been - is - targeting black people. The Land Was Ours: African American Beaches from Jim Crow to the Sunbelt South details the perpetual, White devotion to sabotaging, undermining and constricting black commerce, black property, and black cooperation. Kahrl's book explains how the System of White Supremacy necessitates, celebrates #BlackOnBlackCrime. This text corroborates Dr. Connolly's declaration that Racists have become frighteningly efficient at raping black space. We'll also pinpoint how Whites routinely, deliberately contaminate the environment as a means of terrorizing black people. #EnvironmentalRacism INVEST in The COWS - http://tiny.cc/ledjb CALL IN NUMBER: 760.569.7676 CODE 564943# SKYPE: FREECONFERENCECALLHD.7676 CODE 564943# The C.O.W.S. archives: http://tiny.cc/76f6p
Professor N.D.B. Connolly visits The Context of White Supremacy. Mr. Connolly is an assistant professor in the Johns Hopkins University Department of History. He examines the context of racism, capitalism, politics, and the built environment. His scholarship explores people's overlapping understandings of property rights and civil rights in the United States and the wider Americas. We'll investigate his premier publication, A World More Concrete: Real Estate and the Remaking of Jim Crow South Florida. He documents how Florida's "Magic City" was produced by an faithful oath to White Supremacy. He explains how eminent domain was used to confiscated black property, terrorize black families. We'll dissect how White use of space can be a masterful act of economic terrorism. As usual, Whites make black suffering a profitable, enduring enterprise. INVEST in The COWS - http://tiny.cc/ledjb CALL IN NUMBER: 760.569.7676 CODE 564943# SKYPE: FREECONFERENCECALLHD.7676 CODE 564943# The C.O.W.S. archives: http://tiny.cc/76f6p
Exclusive interview with Nathan Connolly, guitarist for Snow Patrol.