Public expression of objection, typically political
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In this episode we look at current threats to democracy and ask if the internet and social media have turned against democracy? Joining us from Norway is Espen Geelmuyden Rød, who is a former researcher at our department. Espen has done research on the social and political causes of autocracy and democracy as well as the political impacts of digital information and communications technology. Sources mentioned: The Struggle for Trust Online | Freedom House Study on US democracy/oligarchy: Testing Theories of American Politics: Elites, Interest Groups, and Average Citizens | Perspectives on Politics | Cambridge Core Sample of Espen's Research: Empowering activists or autocrats? The Internet in authoritarian regimes Espen Geelmuyden Rød and Nils B Weidmann https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/0022343314555782 The Internet and Political Protest in Autocracies Nils B. Weidmann and Espen Geelmuyden Rød https://academic.oup.com/book/34978 The determinants of democracy: a sensitivity analysis Espen Geelmuyden Rød, Carl Henrik Knutsen and Håvard Hegre https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11127-019-00742-z?te=1&nl=the-interpreter&emc=edit_int_20191111
In this episode, we sit down with Dr. Natàlia Bueno, researcher at the Center for Social Studies (Coimbra University), to explore the recent political turmoil in Mozambique. The country has been gripped by violent protests and electoral violence following the contested election results that saw the ruling Frelimo party retain power. Natàlia Bueno provides an in-depth analysis of the disputed election results, highlighting the allegations of vote rigging and the subsequent unrest that has led to widespread violence and instability. We delve into the tragic assassinations of two prominent opposition leaders, Elvino Dias and Paulo Guambe, and discuss the implications of these targeted killings on the political landscape. Furthermore, we examine the reactions from the international community, including calls for intervention and the impact of these events on Mozambique's relations with neighboring countries and global organizations. Natàlia offers her expert insights into the potential long-term consequences of this political upheaval and what it means for the future of democracy in Mozambique.
For this BONUS Patron-curated episode, we invited patrons of the podcast to send in their favorite political and/or protest songs. They came up with a surprisingly eclectic playlist of songs that will make you angry, fired-up and ready to (metaphorically) rumble! Fight The Power, indeed!! Songs discussed in this episode: War - Bob Marley (Live 1977 at The Rainbow, London); Happy New Year (Prince Can't Die Again) - Mac McCaughan; Haillie Sellasse, Up Your Ass - Propagandhi; Ignoreland - R.E.M.; Nobody Knows - School Of Language; Porcupine or Pineapple? - Brakes; Lowest of the Low - The Barricade; Charles Windsor - McCarthy; I Pity The Country - Willie Dunn; Living For The City - Stevie Wonder; An Old Colonial's Hard Luck Story - X-tal; The Ghost of Tom Joad - Bruce Springsteen (with Tom Morello); Fight The Power - Public Enemy; Power, Power (Live, 1992) - The Dead C; Urban Guerilla - Hawkwind; Please Don't - David Byrne & Fatboy Slim (featuring Santigold); The Body Electric - Hurray For The Riff Raff; Major John - The Wake; Where's All The Money Gone? - Asian Dub Foundation; The Three Great Alabama Icons - Drive-By Truckers; Holiday In Cambodia - Dead Kennedys; Divide and Conquer - Husker Du
Tis the season for protests, so we want to know your political-free protest! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Caterpiller HQ vandalized. $150K damage. Politically motivated. Your tax dollars, $50M worth built the place. News took 36 hours to break. Tucson budget: proposed $2.4B even though this year is forecast to be $2.0B. Ron Arenas, Picture Rocks Cooling, Heating, and Plumbing, and The Guys Next Door radio show that airs Sunday's at 4:00 right here on 1030 the Voice Visit Picture Rocks Cooling at picturerockscooling.com
Two weeks ago an American man set himself alight outside the Israeli Embassy in Washington DC, in protest of Israel's actions in Gaza. Self-immolation has a long and disturbing history.Sean was joined by Amber French, Senior Editorial Advisor with the International Center on Nonviolent Conflict...
Two weeks ago an American man set himself alight outside the Israeli Embassy in Washington DC, in protest of Israel's actions in Gaza. Self-immolation has a long and disturbing history.Sean was joined by Amber French, Senior Editorial Advisor with the International Center on Nonviolent Conflict...
It's a sad news week. Aaron Bushnell, an active-duty member of the US Air Force, self-immolated in front of the Israeli Embassy in D.C. this week in a misguided protest against the war in Gaza. Meanwhile, a young nursing student, Laken Riley, was murdered by an illegal immigrant in Georgia with multiple prior arrests. Plus: an unusual ruling out of Alabama has raised difficult and uncomfortable questions about the moral status of IVF. The editors analyze the depressing facts and factors that undergird the headlines, before reminding you to read the damn site. Further reading: Extremism on Duty Finetuning the Matrix The 2024 Election Will Be Neither Free Nor Fair The History of Self-Immolation as Political Protest
In this episode of "The Workers Cauldron," we delve into the intersection of feminist paganism and direct action through the lens of Starhawk and her cohorts' activism against nuclear power in the 1980s.We navigate the rich history and dynamic landscape of the feminist pagan movement, exploring how spiritual practices intertwined with feminist ideals fuelled a potent form of activism. Drawing on the writings of Starhawk, a prominent figure in both feminist and pagan circles, the episode unpacks the significance of reclaiming feminine power in the face of environmental destruction and patriarchal oppression. Bonus features: Anarcha-Feminism, EcoFeminism, Spiritual Feminism, Socialist Feminism, all the feminisms.Sources:Barbara Epstein, Political Protest and Cultural Revolution: Nonviolent Direct Action in the 1970s and 1980sStarhawk, Dreaming the Dark: Magic, Sex, and Politics The Spiral Dance: a Rebirth of the Ancient Religion of the Great Goddess Cynthia Eller: Living in the Lap of the Goddess: The Feminist Spirituality Movement in AmericaMargot Adler, Drawing Down the Moon: Witches, Druids, Goddess-Worshippers, and Other Pagans in America TodayMerlin Stone: When God Was a WomanCarol Christ and Judith Plaskow (ed): Womanspirit Rising: A Feminist Reader in ReligionSusan Griffin, Woman and Nature: The Roaring Inside HerPeggy Kornegger: Anarchism: The Feminist ConnectionFrançoise d'Eaubonne, Le Féminisme ou la MortYnestra King: The Ecology of Feminism and the Feminism of EcologySupport the show
WESTERN WISDOM "It Takes Lots of Sand" audio podcast by award-winning western author Stephen Bly. Sponsored by BlyBooks.com Legacy Series. "Enough Sand For A Beach Front" blog post article found here: https://www.blybooks.com/2023/11/lots-of-sand/ Sign Up on BlyBooks.com on blog page to receive RSS feed by email for podcast blog notices. Related blog article with podcast embed will arrive every Tuesday and Thursday. Look to the right of the LINK PAGE for “Subscribe to the Blog via Email” and “Enter your email address”. Would greatly appreciate if you a) SUBSCRIBE, b) RATE, c) REVIEW the podcast. FULL PODCAST INFO: https://bit.ly/3xCxckS Music by WinkingFoxMusic from Pixabay
WESTERN WISDOM "It Takes Lots of Sand" audio podcast by award-winning western author Stephen Bly. Sponsored by BlyBooks.com Legacy Series. "Enough Sand For A Beach Front" blog post article found here: https://www.blybooks.com/2023/11/lots-of-sand/ Sign Up on BlyBooks.com on blog page to receive RSS feed by email for podcast blog notices. Related blog article with podcast embed will arrive every Tuesday and Thursday. Look to the right of the LINK PAGE for “Subscribe to the Blog via Email” and “Enter your email address”. Would greatly appreciate if you a) SUBSCRIBE, b) RATE, c) REVIEW the podcast. FULL PODCAST INFO: https://bit.ly/3xCxckS Music by WinkingFoxMusic from Pixabay
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It's all about conspiracies today! Starting with a brief discussion about the Rotten Tomatoes reviews for hire scandal, your hosts then move into even more treacherous territory: domestic terror. Using the film How To Blow Up A Pipeline as the starting point, Joe and Jared wrestle with the definitions of domestic terror, who can be labeled as a terrorist, and what kinds of threats or personal harms justify disruptive or destructive actions?And in case it's not clear, neither Joe or Jared support or condone hate groups or violence, but it you've listened to any of our previous episodes, you already know that. Music Credit: Brendan Clavin
Weekly outlook by Miles R. Maftean, Wojciech Przybylski, and Agnieszka Homanska: We unpack how an estimated 500,000 demonstrators have stormed Warsaw and other Polish cities in a unified outcry against the PiS party's escalating authoritarian tendencies. These gatherings, unprecedented since communism's downfall over three decades ago, signal a pivotal moment in Poland's political history. As the tussle between the PiS and PO parties intensifies, we're witnessing a distinct political polarisation. This dynamic threatens to limit the country's political landscape, forcing both right-leaning and left-leaning factions to choose sides in a heated, two-camp arena. Special guest – Peter Balík (Minister for Investments, Regional Development and Informatization for Slovakia): Live at Globsec, our conversation with Minister Balík provides valuable insights into Slovakia's strategic utilisation of EU funds. In the upcoming months, the interim government will grapple with significant challenges, including the energy crisis and the ripple effects of Ukraine's refugee crisis.
Graham Finlay, Lecturer in the School of Politics and International Relations at UCD.
Focusing on the years between American military occupation and the dictatorship of Francois "Papa Doc" Duvalier in Haiti, the Workers Cauldron Podcast examines the ways in which Haitian literary groups represented the African diaspora religion of Vodou. After being moved by indiginisme, an ethnological movement to ground Haitian identity in its African past, future dictator Francois Duvalier helped to organize a group of black nationalist or noiriste writers called Les Griots who rebelled against the enlightenment principles of republican democracy.Sources:David Nicholls: Politics and Religion in Haiti From Dessalines to Duvalier: Race, Colour and National Independence in Haiti Ideology and Political Protest in Haiti, 1930-46John Cussans: Undead Uprising: Haiti, Horror and The Zombie ComplexMichel-Rolph Trouillot: Haiti, State Against Nation: Origins and Legacy of DuvalierismMichel S. Laguerre: Voodoo and Politics in HaitiMathew J. Smith: Red and Black in Haiti: Radicalism, Conflict, and Political Change, 1934-1957Support the show
Throughout history, artists have made it their civic duty to contribute to social change, including Billie Holiday with andquot;Strange Fruit,andquot; which brought attention to the unfair and unconstitutional lynchings of African American men and women. Listen to learn more from Dr. Vicki Ross-Norris! Center for Civic Education
FIA vs Political Protest | Hamilton and Russell Collision course? | Kelly Piquet | The Shakedown #23----------------------------------------------------------------------My Socials:
In this episode of the Courage My Friends podcast we welcome Laura Walton, president of CUPE's Ontario Schools Boards Council of Unions. Just days after CUPE education workers voted to ratify a new four-year contract that includes a hard fought for $1 flat-rate hourly wage increase and two days repayment for a fraught political protest, we reflect on the momentous and contentious labor action taken on by Ontario's education workers. Reflecting on how essential these education workers are to our schools, Walton says: "From the minute that a child or a member of the public steps into a school; you are stepping into a space that is impacted by the work performed by CUPE members … the cleanliness of the school, the safety of the school. Being buzzed in the door in our elementary schools. The supports that students need in order to be successful and to thrive are all performed by education workers." Walton describes Bill 28 and its use of the notwithstanding clause: “Bill 28 was actually a two-headed beast ... Not only did it impose a contract which would've provided poverty wages, attacked our sick-leave- …. It also put in place the notwithstanding clause. But also taking the notwithstanding clause one step further: we wouldn't be able to take them to court, but they also put in pieces where we wouldn't be able to take them to the human rights tribunal. We wouldn't be able to arbitrate it. Really removing any sort of legal avenue that a worker may have and really interfering with the charter rights of workers." Of the unprecedented coming together of public and private sector, Walton says: "I have been a worker for my entire adult life. Started working at 13. And I've been a union activist for 20 years and you know, I remember reading about union activism. I remember reading about labor history ... And I always kind of pictured ‘what did that feel like?' ... How did you know you were in that moment, when you were in that moment. ..Those became very real. And one of the comments that I made that day is, 'Workers are like a family. We may not always agree, but when you attack one of us, you attack all of us.' And I really hope that it becomes a catalyst for solidarity moving forward.” About today's guest Laura Walton is an educational assistant from Belleville, Ontario. First elected to the role in 2019, she is the president of CUPE's 55,000-worker strong Ontario School Boards Council of Unions (OSBCU). Transcript of this episode can be accessed at georgebrown.ca/TommyDouglasInstitute or here. Image: Laura Walton / Used with Permission Music: Ang Kahora. Lynne, Bjorn. Rights Purchased Intro Voices: Ashley Booth (Podcast Announcer); Bob Luker (voice of Tommy Douglas); Kenneth Okoro, Liz Campos Rico, Tsz Wing Chau (Street Voices) Courage My Friends Podcast Organizing Committee: Chandra Budhu, Ashley Booth, Resh Budhu. Produced by: Resh Budhu, Tommy Douglas Institute and Breanne Doyle, rabble.ca Host: Resh Budhu
In this episode we report on the defiance of Ontario education workers to draconian back-to-work legislation passed by the Ontario government and interview workers on the picket lines who speak about why they are fighting. The GoFundMe campaign for grocery funds for CUPE OSBCU education workers referred to in the podcast can be found here
If you are one to lose yourself on Instagram or TikTok watching food accounts, most likely you have run across Becca Rae-Tucker, AKA @thesweetfeminist. Becca started using cake as a canvas for expressing her political opinion, specifically about abortion and female productive rights and the concept has really taken off. With several hundred thousand followers she has been able to build a community that is not just into her cakes, but also advocating for safe and legal access to abortion care. Becca's first cookbook Baking By Feel: Recipes to Sort Out Your Emotions (Whatever They Are) releases October 25, and in this episode, she talks to Jess and Jess about the experience of baking as a way to process your emotions. Not only is this cookbook filled with delicious desert recipes, they are created to correspond with whatever you are feeling on any particular day. Bored? Mad? Lonely? Becca has created a recipe to meet a multitude of emotions, and as she explains in this episode, it has nothing to do with the end result, but all about the process, discovery and recovery of one's self.Meet Becca:Becca Rea-Tucker's first foray into baking came in the form of licking the cookie dough off the beaters while watching her grandma make chocolate chip cookies. She is a baker, recipe writer, feelings lover, and strong-willed voice behind the oft-shared Instagram account @thesweetfeminist. She lives in Austin, TX with her husband. Support the show
You've seen it on Instagram. It made you smile, it made you cry: the moment the other girls show up to help Aimee Gibbs from SEX EDUCATION (2019-present) get on the bus where she was assaulted. But the reason Maria, along with guests Kelly Gilbert and Nicki Morris, analyze this stunning plotline, is because Aimee's healing journey doesn't stop there, and instead continues into season 3. From the moment when Aimee's assaulted while on the bus to school until her most recent therapy session with Dr. Jean Milburn, Maria and her guests follow Aimee on her gorgeously depicted, nonlinear healing journey (so far). We also touch on the title IX activism we all took part in as college students, and the larger movement against campus sexual assault. CW: sexual assault For this episode, we recommend you first watch or have familiarity with SEX EDUCATION, but especially seasons 2-3, streaming on Netflix. FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL | instagram, tumblr, tiktok: @leftistteendrama | twitter: @leftyteendrama | website: leftistteendrama.com _ ABOUT US: MARIA DIPASQUALE (she/her; host/editor) is a Brooklyn-based union communicator and writer who watches too much TV. Follow Maria on Twitter @Maria_DiP26, IG @mdzip, and tiktok @marialovesunions. In addition to Leftist Teen Drama, Maria hosts Bodysuits For Bughead: A Riverdale Podcast | tumblr: @bodysuitsforbughead twitter: @B4B_Podcast instagram: @bodysuits4bughead KELLY GILBERT (she/her; recurring guest) is a medical worker and union/teen drama stan living in Brooklyn. Follow her @baeblade5 on insta and @yungworker69 for sporadic, unhinged tweets! NICKI MORRIS (she/her; recurring guest) is a labor communications strategist at a unionized shop! She loves cats, corn, and comrades. Her favorite teen show is Degrassi because she knows we can "make it through" with solidarity! Enjoys watching all good crime shows: The Wire, Claws, Good Girls, Killing Eve, Arrested Development. Follow her on Twitter @NickiMorris321. CHARLES O'LEARY (they/them; art) is, of course, a Brooklyn-based designer, artist, and dilettante. A survivor of the 2012-2016 Tumblr wars, media criticism is all they know. You can find their work at charles-oleary.com, and their silly little life on Instagram at @c.s.0.l. JEFF MCHALE (he/him; producer) is an extremely online guy who plays games, streams sometimes, and loves talking old TV. Maria and Jeff's good union cats CLARENCE and VINNY may make an appearance and/or be mentioned. intro song: Stomping the Room by Delicate Beats All opinions shared on this show are that of individuals and do not represent the views of any organization we may be affiliated with. _ SOURCES DISCUSSED IN THE EPISODE: Chanel Miller, Know My Name: A Memoir September 21, 2014, The New York Times, In a Mattress, a Lever for Art and Political Protest by Roberta Smith
FAITH Season 3, Episode 006 "Paying Your Dues" audio podcast by award-winning western author Stephen Bly. Recorded Circa 1985, Fillmore Bible Church, Fillmore, CA. How to be a good citizen and work for change too. Sponsored by BlyBooks.com Legacy Series. Blog post article found here: https://www.blybooks.com/2022/02/pay-your-dues/Sign Up on BlyBooks.com on blog page to receive RSS feed by email for podcast blog notices. Related blog article with podcast embed will arrive every Tuesday and Thursday. Look to the right of the LINK PAGE for “Subscribe to the Blog via Email” and “Enter your email address”. Would greatly appreciate if you a) SUBSCRIBE, b) RATE, c) REVIEW the podcast. PODCAST WEBSITE URL: https://www.buzzsprout.com/1777501FULL PODCAST INFO: https://bit.ly/3xCxckS Music by WinkingFoxMusic from Pixabay
FAITH Season 3, Episode 006 "Paying Your Dues" audio podcast by award-winning western author Stephen Bly. Recorded Circa 1985, Fillmore Bible Church, Fillmore, CA. How to be a good citizen and work for change too. Sponsored by BlyBooks.com Legacy Series. Blog post article found here: https://www.blybooks.com/2022/02/pay-your-dues/Sign Up on BlyBooks.com on blog page to receive RSS feed by email for podcast blog notices. Related blog article with podcast embed will arrive every Tuesday and Thursday. Look to the right of the LINK PAGE for “Subscribe to the Blog via Email” and “Enter your email address”. Would greatly appreciate if you a) SUBSCRIBE, b) RATE, c) REVIEW the podcast. PODCAST WEBSITE URL: https://www.buzzsprout.com/1777501FULL PODCAST INFO: https://bit.ly/3xCxckS Music by WinkingFoxMusic from Pixabay
On this episode of 'Freedom Fighters,' Governor Scott Walker talks about the difference between political protest and harassment, referencing the recent incidents targeting Senator Sinema this past week. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/scottwalker/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/scottwalker/support
Queer sexualities have been decriminalised and Pride parades are ceremoniously covered by the news media. But can everyone really march with pride? In this episode of Pride & Prejudice, we trace the evolution of Pride from Stonewall Riots in the United States, to NRC-CAA protests in India. Our reporter Suryatapa Mukherjee speaks to Pride organisers from Visakhapatnam, Guwahati, Hyderabad and Kolkata. Shivakumar is the co-founder of Nestam and has been trying to organise Pride in Visakhapatnam for years. Nuzhat Nasreen Islam is the co-founder of Xomonnoy and she organises Pride in Guwahati. Rudra Kishore Mandal was part of the organising meeting for the first ever Pride walk in India which happened in Kolkata in 1999, and they still organise Pride in Kolkata. Dr. Karthik Bittu has helped organise Pride in various cities like Hyderabad, Bangalore and Delhi. They speak about their experiences with the police, differences in politics within the community and what Pride really is about. Additional reading: Mumbai Pride: Over 50 People Charged With Sedition for Slogans Supporting Sharjeel ImamAssam NRC: What next for 1.9 million ‘stateless’ Indians?Citizenship Rights are LGBTQ rights: Thousands gather for Mumbai PrideSylvia Rivera’s “Y’all Better Quiet Down" Speech 1973See sunoindia.in/privacy-policy for privacy information.
Queer sexualities have been decriminalised and Pride parades are ceremoniously covered by the news media. But can everyone really march with pride? In this episode of Pride & Prejudice, we trace the evolution of Pride from Stonewall Riots in the United States, to NRC-CAA protests in India. Our reporter Suryatapa Mukherjee speaks to Pride organisers from Visakhapatnam, Guwahati, Hyderabad and Kolkata. Shivakumar is the co-founder of Nestam and has been trying to organise Pride in Visakhapatnam for years. Nuzhat Nasreen Islam is the co-founder of Xomonnoy and she organises Pride in Guwahati. Rudra Kishore Mandal was part of the organising meeting for the first ever Pride walk in India which happened in Kolkata in 1999, and they still organise Pride in Kolkata. Dr. Karthik Bittu has helped organise Pride in various cities like Hyderabad, Bangalore and Delhi. They speak about their experiences with the police, differences in politics within the community and what Pride really is about. Additional reading: Mumbai Pride: Over 50 People Charged With Sedition for Slogans Supporting Sharjeel Imam Assam NRC: What next for 1.9 million ‘stateless' Indians? Citizenship Rights are LGBTQ rights: Thousands gather for Mumbai Pride Sylvia Rivera's “Y'all Better Quiet Down" Speech 1973 See sunoindia.in/privacy-policy for privacy information.
RealClearPolitics co-founder and president Tom Bevan joins RCP Washington Bureau Chief Carl Cannon to discuss Olympian Gwen Berry's recent protest during the recent U.S. track and field Olympic trials. Join us each week on Tuesday and Thursday, as RealClear's journalists discuss the issues of the day. Then be sure to check out our audio only podcast on Fridays for our weekly political roundup. Stay informed with context and perspective on the RealClearPolitics Takeaway. Subscribe on iTunes to catch every episode. https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/realclearpolitics-takeaway/id1509826894 https://www.realclearpolitics.com/podcasts/
Greenlight neighbor Rumaan Alam (Leave the World Behind) talks with returning favorite Hala Alyan about her new novel The Arsonist's City, a rich family story which is also a love letter to Beirut. The two writers discuss the challenges of writing in the pandemic and their own writing routines as well as the differences between writing prose and poetry, while exploring how the book portrays Arab women, cities, and sexuality in fresh ways. (Recorded March 9, 2021)
We discuss three issues in this podcast: (1) Imperial critical readings of the New Testament (i.e. how the NT critiques the Roman empire in its language), (2) the benefit of studying first-century philosophy for understanding the New Testament, and (3) why Romans 7:9-25 is not talking about a Christian or Christians. My guest is Dr. Joey Dodson. Joey joined Denver Seminary in July 2019 as an associate professor of New Testament. Dr. Dodson received his PhD in New Testament from the University of Aberdeen. He has written articles for journals such as Novum Testamentum, Catholic Biblical Quarterly, and the Journal for Jewish Studies. His most recent books include A Little Book for New Bible Scholars with E. Randolph Richards (2017) and a co-edited volume with David E. Briones, Paul and Seneca in Dialogue(2017). Dr. Dodson’s current research includes a Romans commentary in the Brill Exegetical Commentary Series and a Colossians-Philemon commentary in The Christian Standard Commentary Series. Dr. Dodson comes to Denver Seminary after having served at Ouachita Baptist University since 2008.Support PrestonSupport Preston by going to patreon.comVenmo: @Preston-Sprinkle-1Connect with PrestonTwitter | @PrestonSprinkleInstagram | @preston.sprinkleYoutube | Preston SprinkleCheck out his website prestonsprinkle.comIf you enjoy the podcast, be sure to leave a review.
While many Christians read the book of Revelation as mostly about future events, it’s best understood as a piece of political protest. John is writing to confront Chrisitan Nationalism--in a first-century sort of way. There’s no better person to help us read Revelation in this way than Dr. Dan Morrison. Dan is assistant professor of New Testament at George Fox University and he wrote his doctoral dissertation on Revelation. It’s called: “Apocalypse as Protest: Reading Revelation from Places of Poverty, Privilege, Power, and Persecution”Dan Morrison joined George Fox in 2020 as an assistant professor of New Testament, working remotely on a half-time basis. He worked the previous three years as an assistant professor of New Testament and expository preaching at the Assemblies of God Theological Seminary at Evangel University in Springfield, Missouri. During that same span, he served as a U.S. Navy reserve chaplain at Navy Operation Support Center (Springfield, MO). He was also director of the Cordas C. Burnett Center for Biblical Preaching at Evangel (2016-18) and, before that, served as a college and young adult pastor at Evangel Temple Christian Center in Springfield (2014-17). His experience previously included working as a communications manager at McMaster Divinity College in Hamilton, Ontario (2012-14), and as an editor/media specialist (2010-11) and editorial assistant (2007-10) for The Alliance for Assemblies of God Higher Education organization.He lives in Springfield, Missouri, and attends All Saints Anglican Church in Springfield.Support PrestonSupport Preston by going to patreon.comVenmo: @Preston-Sprinkle-1Connect with PrestonTwitter | @PrestonSprinkleInstagram | @preston.sprinkleYoutube | Preston SprinkleCheck out his website prestonsprinkle.comIf you enjoy the podcast, be sure to leave a review.
As we reach the end of the national disaster that was the Trump Administration we are proud to bring back Poet/ Musician Rick Cummings. His unique talent to put in perspective the times we have lived through from George Bush to Donald Trump is a creative triumph. His knack of spoken word poetry elevates our examination of these tumultuous administrations to fully remind us what we have endured. His craft navigates us through this historic era guiding us into the memory of events that stand out from four unfortunate and ugly years of Donald Trump. Each reading brings to life the outrage, the satire, the inhumanity of a failed president and his enablers. link to Rick's first interview on America Speaks https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/americaspeakspodcast/1A_RICK_CUMMINGS_07.03.2019_01.mp3 https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/americaspeakspodcast/_RICK_CUMMINGS_2_8.11.2019_01.mp3
As we reach the end of the national disaster that was the Trump Administration we are proud to bring back Poet/ Musician Rick Cummings. His unique talent to put in perspective the times we have lived through from George Bush to Donald Trump is a creative triumph. His knack of spoken word poetry elevates our examination of these tumultuous administrations to fully remind us what we have endured. His craft navigates us through this historic era guiding us into the memory of events that stand out from four unfortunate and ugly years of Donald Trump. Each reading brings to life the outrage, the satire, the inhumanity of a failed president and his enablers. link to Rick's first interview on America Speaks https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/americaspeakspodcast/1A_RICK_CUMMINGS_07.03.2019_01.mp3 https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/americaspeakspodcast/_RICK_CUMMINGS_2_8.11.2019_01.mp3
In a year of historic protests, on the eve of a critical election, we’ve been thinking a lot about the place of music in movements for social and political change. In this episode, Pitchfork Editor Puja Patel speaks with Jason King, professor at NYU and founding faculty member of the Clive Davis Institute of Recorded Music, and Allison Hussey, Pitchfork Associate Staff Writer, about the changing role of protest music across American history, from 19th-century Black spirituals to Public Enemy, Lady Gaga, and Janelle Monáe. They also touch on the secret history of a Bob Dylan classic, and the new ways pop stars have engaged with activism in the social media era. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Christopher Sims discusses his journey from rapper to activistChristopher "Universoulove" Sims talks with CAP about his journey from being inspired by the first and second generation of rappers, his approach to performance poetry vs slam poetry to the last 5 years of political performance poetry. Topics DiscussedChristopher's initial inspirationTime with Poetic Justice League of AmericaInfluence of Saul Williams on his work and performancePerformance Poetry vs Slam Poetry5 Years of writing political piecesNext projects, books, possible Poet Laureate appointmentNeed some inspiration?Make sure you check out our Poetry Page to be inspired by #NaPoWriMo throughout the year. National Poetry Writing Month occurs in April Each year. Check it out and connect with others who share a love of poetry. Overview of Today's EpisodeDiscussion with Christopher Sims on how he became an activist through poetry. Find out how you can also use your discipline to create political/protest art. Create Art Podcast Misson Welcome friend to Create Art Podcast. Our goal is to help you create more than you consume. We have interviews, conversations, commentary, and projects to energize your creative side. You can create art, let my over 20 years of art experience in various fields help you break loose from the internal critic that plagues us all. Thank you for listening to Create Art Podcast. Feel free to reach out to me directly my email is timothy@createartpodcast.com you can also join our FB Group, Instagram, or Twitter accounts. Create More Thank You Consume. Let us know about your projects and be a guest on the show.
On this episode our tour crosses paths with The Moods, a 10 strong music collective from Manchester, England. We talk political protest playlists and touring Listen to their new single The Rise and Fall of America from the forthcoming album Somebody's Hero , Nobody's Soldier. https://www.iamamood.com/releases Instagram: themoodsmanc Twitter: @themoodsmanc From the Soundtrack to British dark comedy - Strangeways Here We Come (2019)
The average protester might seem like a young adult, but parents are also bringing out their children with them to demonstrate. Host Sarah Fenske explores that decision with parents about how they navigate the ongoing shift in culture when it comes to conversations about race, and making the decision to bring kids to protests. Joining the discussion are We Stories board members Jenna Voss and Pamela Washington.
L&S Dean Eric Wilcots on Teaching and Learning during Covid-19, and Political Protest by 1050 Bascom
This week, we welcome Diana Weymar from the Tiny Pricks Project, the largest textile Trump protest ever. She discusses the first piece she created for the project, how it has built a sense of community, and how it became the most peaceful way to deal with the stress that the idiot in chief has brought upon our country. We also talked about the importance of having material record of 45's presidency, because WORDS (f-ing) MATTER. With over 2,000 pieces in total, this project is truly uniting people all around the world! You do not have to be a professional to be part of the project, just find a quote from Cheeto face that "inspires" you, stitch it on whatever material you have available, and send it in. Thank you Diana, for giving us a healthy way to deal with this never ending stress, while being creative, and staying connected. We usually just turn to whiskey. Stay safe and sane out there, folks. Find Tiny Pricks Project on Instagram here.--Rate and review us wherever you listen to podcasts!Let us know how we're doing: therealbtpod@gmail.comVisit our website! www.bitchtalkpodcast.comFollow us on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter.Listen in every Monday from 6:00 - 6:30 AM on BFF.FMPOWERED BY GO-TO Productions
The Catastrophic Podcast Project is a dual Podcast and Political Protest. It tells stories form the Aussie bushfires and calls for non-partisan political action around climate change. Each episode features an Australian talking about their experience of the Catastrophic bushfires, their fears and what they want done to protect our future. This episode features Writes4Women's very own Pamela Cook talking about her family's experience of the fires in Milton, NSW over Christmas and New Year. Subscribe to Catastrophic via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher and wherever you get your pods. Like the Catastrophic Facebook Page for updates, releases and info. If you have a story you would like to tell from the Aussie bushfires please contact Listen Up podcasting at info@listenuppodcasting.com.au or get in touch via the Facebook page. SHOWNOTES: Writes4Womenwww.writes4women.comFacebook @writes4womenTwitter / Instagram @w4wpodcast Pamela Cookwww.pamelacook.com.auFacebook @pamelacookauthorTwitter @PamelaCookAU Listen Up Podcasting (Kel Butler)www.listenuppodcasting.com.auFacebook @kelbutler / @listenuppodcastingTwitter @KelB
In this Master’s Thesis Series video, Octavio Saenz interviews Christopher Barney (MA1801/1802), Battalion Chief for Portland Oregon Fire & Rescue, about the research behind his thesis “The ‘English Disease’ and Political Protest: How... The post Thesis Series: The ‘English Disease’ and Political Protest appeared first on CHDS/Ed.
Í hlaðvarpi vikunnar spjallar Sigrún við Azrini Wahidin en hún er prófessor í félagsfræði við háskólann í Warwick í Bretlandi. Rannsóknir hennar eru á sviði afbrotafræði og kynjafræði og hefur hún skoðað hvernig aðbúnaður fanga – og þá sérstaklega kvenna – er í breskum fangelsum. Í nýjustu bók sinni, Ex-Combatants, Gender and Peace in Northern Ireland: Women, Political Protest and the Prison Experience skoðar hún sérstaklega reynslu kvenna sem tóku þátt í andspyrnuhreyfingum á Norður Írlandi. Women in prison This week, Sigrun´s guest is Azrini Wahidin who is a professor of sociology at the University of Warwick in the U.K. Her research are in the areas of criminology and gender, and she has particularly looked at the prison experience of women. Her most recent book, Ex-Combatants, Gender and Peace in Northern Ireland: Women, Political Protest and the Prison Experience, focuses on the experience of politically motivated women that were imprisoned as a consequence of their activism.
On this episode, Sophia Freeman and Pamela C. are joined by Allison Hewitt-Ward, a New York Platypus member and art critic. They discuss the recent crack-up at the Whitney Museum of American Art, and the relationship between art and political protest. In the second segment, Sophia and Pam interview Goldsmiths University’s graduating Masters art students, Alexander Pierce, Lydia Blakeley, Fred Bungay, Paula Pinho Martins Nacif and Sara Rodrigues, about the relationship between art and freedom and if the censorship of art is ever justified. Feedback, criticism, and questions are always welcome. Drop us an e-mail at shitplatypussays@gmail.com. Links: “Art and the Commodity Form”, a Platypus panel at Goldsmiths, University of London (October 11, 2016). The panel brought together Rex Dunn, independent Marxist and writer; Zhoe Granger, a director of the gallery, project space, and art publisher, Arcadia Missa; and Peter Osborne, editor of the journal Radical Philosophy and professor of Modern European Philosophy at Kingston University. Sophia Freeman of Platypus moderated the panel. https://platypus1917.org/2016/12/21/art-commodity-form-3/ "A Whitney Museum Vice Chairman Owns a Manufacturer Supplying Tear Gas at the Border" (November 27, 2018) https://hyperallergic.com/472964/a-whitney-museum-vice-chairman-owns-a-manufacturer-supplying-tear-gas-at-the-border/ "The Tear Gas Biennial" (July 17, 2019) A statement from Hannah Black, Ciarán Finlayson, and Tobi Haslett https://www.artforum.com/slant/a-statement-from-hannah-black-ciaran-finlayson-and-tobi-haslett-on-warren-kanders-and-the-2019-whitney-biennial-80328 "What Warren Kanders’s Defeat at the Whitney Teaches Us About How Protest Works Now" by Ben Davis (July 26, 2019) https://news.artnet.com/opinion/kanders-resignation-whitney-1580551 Spencer Leonard (Platypus) on Adam Smith, an interview with Douglas Lain for Zero Squared https://youtu.be/cApVoE_A-JM Book Review: Ben Davis, 9.5 Theses on Art and Class (Chicago: Haymarket Books, 2013) by Robin Treadwell in Platypus Review 63 (February 2014) https://platypus1917.org/2014/02/01/the-artist-at-work/ Pictured: Sara Rodrigues, "Degrees of Abstraction" (2019), performance & installation. Clip: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3o2FztlYeMA
In the Planet Mundus Show of the 13th Feb, 2019, the Master students of the Mundus Journalism programme talked about some good news from around the world, looked at Valentine's Day in different countries and travelled to Senegal to meat Thiat from the political movement Y'en a Marre.
The idea behind this show is pretty simple: A university campus is a destination for all kinds of interesting people, so why not invite some of these folks out to brunch, where we’ll have an informal conversation about their work, and then we’ll turn those brunches into a podcast?It’s a tough job, but somebody has to do it.Lisa Mueller is an assistant professor of political science at Macalester College who is spending the 2018–19 academic year as a residential fellow at Notre Dame’s Institute for Advanced Study. Several months after Cambridge University Press published her book Political Protest in Contemporary Africa, she talked to host Ted Fox about what protests in different parts of the world—including the U.S.—have in common, and what makes protests in sub-Saharan Africa different. They also discussed how social scientists go about studying something as dynamic as a protest as well as her current project, which aims to answer whether the degree of cohesiveness among the protesters within a movement has any impact on their ultimate effectiveness.
On January 28, 2017 Donald Trump signed an executive order banning certain people from certain countries from coming into the US. Popularly called a Muslim Travel Ban, the order was met with immediate nationwide protests. This is a selection of interviews from the Atlanta airport protests held on January 29, 2017. As this episodes goes online the administration is preparing to define transgender people out of existence, the attack on immigrants continues, Flint, Michigan still doesn’t have clean water, and Puerto Rico and other hurricane impacted areas are on their own. There's a lot of political work to do, and Feeling Political takes a look at how to do it. This episode is part of the Feeling Political series, a collection that examines the intersection of feelings, politics, and action. Future episodes of Change Over Time in this series will talk about organizing strategies, visions for a new future, and maybe even hope. Stay tuned and check in regularly at changeovertimepodcast.com
Morgan Shidler grew up in Rohnert Park and moved to San Francisco in 2003, right around the time of the Iraq War. For Part 1 of her episode of Storied: San Francisco, Morgan will talk about going to a protest of that war, and how it changed her life. After that, Morgan will tell a ghost story she shared with me that was just too good to leave out. Check back Thursday for Part 2 of Morgan's podcast, when she will talk about how she and a friend started a monthly all-women speaking event. This podcast was recorded at The Social Study in December 2017.
Welcome to the New Years political protest music special. This is one of a series of music specials. Say goodbye to 2017. We bring in 2018 with a music special. Kaiser Chiefs perform I Predict a Riot. After that, Dave presents… The post New Years Political Protest Music Special appeared first on The Dark Corner Podcasting Network.
Pierre Depaz This session will be a talk about the possibilities for developing and using software in order to enable pro-active political actions. Most of the technologies developed recently for political and citizen action seems to actually be developed for citizen re-action. Cryptography and privacy software reacts to invasive government surveillance and corporate tracking. Social media movements react to the biased information of the mass media. Data visualizations react to the obfuscation of actions, from drone strikes to the carbon footprints of server farms. Bots spit out facts on the internet without directing them specifically at anyone. In parallel, it seems that our current tools of political protest (worker strikes, demonstrations, public petitions, etc.) are not as effective as they once were. Recurrent protest movements in western democracies such as the U.S (e.g. the Black Lives Matter movement), in France (the Nuit Debout movement), in Spain (Indignados) or in Greece have not had the expected outcome of their organizers, failing to curb police violence, states of emergency, austerity measures and extra-territorial financial intervention. Once the protests die down and the media attention goes away, it is business as usual. It seems that those means for political action -violent, street-level protest- have become less relevant in face of the shifting structures of power they are meant to counter. It has become clear now that those structures of power have become more and more decentralized, less bound by specific physical nodes and more tied to information relations, mostly through the development of digital communication technology. Networked communications and social media have had the same effect for political organizations, starting up movements and uprisings such as the Arab Spring or the Umbrella Revolution, and yet it does not seem to be enough to change the long-term status quo of the balance of power. The question I will be asking, then, is how can we also use these tools to support active political protest so that we can, once again, make them relevant to fight against the negative actions and behaviours of the current political, economical and technological authorities? This talk will first focus on a historical account of how political actions have evolved during the past century (from early european revolutions to the Civil Rights Movement, the NetFlood Zapatista campaigns, Ocuppy Wall Street and #BlackLivesMatter), and how some of them achieved success for their agendas, and then focus on what is being done today/what can be done in the future. As such, I will present projects that are currently in development or are being developed around the world to actively put pressure on them and return agency to protesters as a group with legitimate political demands instead of simply “protesters”. I will look at the technical, legal and ethical implications of developing such tools and the potential impact that they could have if political activists could use software for action, on top of exclusively re-action and organization.
The Light Gets In...Through Political Protest A Sermon by Griff Martin and Jared Slack Palm Sunday April 9, 2017
Line Noise is a podcast about electronic music from Philip Sherburne and Ben Cardew. In episode 17, we discuss the health of IDM in 2017, pondering what the term actually means anyway; we talk the joys - or otherwise - of live electronic music; and wonder whether techno can be an effective political tool. Plus we review new music from Perc, Khotin and Candyblasta.
Episode five lands in a week where major protests are shaking the world in support of women's rights and refugees. So comedian and podcaster Tiernan Douieb joins us to look at some of the less effective and affecting protests that the world has ever witnessed - many of them from our new favourite nemesis, the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. There are also bucketloads of red milky vomit, elephants being sucked into Pokéballs - and mink. A whole lot of mink. This podcast is essentially 85% mink. Enjoy. Follow us on Twitter: @worstfoot @benvandervelde @bazmcstay @tiernandouieb
An expat may never be fully intergraded or accepted into all parts of a host nation. There will always be a far side of a host nation that an expat may never be allowed to reach and this is something that may just have to be accepted. The reasons for this may frankly be the way an expat converses with citizens, habits displayed or simply the way a particular expat looks. Local citizens aren't under any obligation to completely accept an expat as one of their own. The only thing an expat can do, as a human being, is to strengthen the personal relationships he or she has built within their host nation. Many national constitutions make it a clear point that in legal disputes between a foreign national and a citizen of their nation, any decision made must place their citizen's rights as having priority over foreign national's at all levels in any litigation. Sovereign nations retain the right to expel any foreign national deemed as disrupting the political affairs of their country. Expats taking part in local civil disobedience within a host nation is a sensitive issue. If expats do take it upon themselves to take part in protests or civil actions in their residing nation, they must be fully aware and understand the consequences of their actions. RELATED LINKS TO THIS EPISODE: Article: As an Expat, is it my Place to Join Another Country's Political Protest? Article: Should Expats and International Students Participate in the Protests? Article: Why as Foreign People Allowed to Participate in Political Movement in Hong Kong? Article: British Expats Take to the Streets in Spain to Protest Against Plans to Bulldoze Their Illegally Built Homes Article: Expats in Penang Protest Against a High Rise Paln on a Tiny Plot of Land THANK YOU FOR LISTENING TO THIS EPISODE! Thank you very much for taking the time to share this podcast. Please help us make this show better by filling in this Expat Life Expat Life Survey. It will help us produce a better show for you and thanks! If you have any feedback, please leave a note in the comments section below or leave a voice message via our SpeakPipe voice message page. We would love to hear from you! If you enjoyed this please share it with your friends, family and co-workers by using the social media buttons you see at the bottom of the post. Please subscribe to the show on iTunes to get automatic episode updates of our podcasts. And, finally, please take a minute to leave us an honest review and rating on iTunes. They really help us out when it comes to the ranking of the show and I make it a point to read every single one of the reviews we get. Please help us spread the word and leave a review in iTunes by clicking here! Thank you for listening to Four Seas One Family. We are all the same and at the same time uniquely different!
In the midst of the election aftermath; Scott, Todd, and Harrison offer a list of political/protest songs on the latest episode of The Lister.
Barbara Epstein is a professor in the History of Consciousness Department at the University of California, Santa Cruz, where she teaches on the history of social movements and theory relevant to social change. Her books include Political Protest and Cultural Revolution: Nonviolent Direct Action in the 1970s and the 1980s (Univ. of California Press) and The Minsk Ghetto, 1941-1943: Jewish Resistance and Soviet Internationalism (Univ. of California Press). Between the 1970s and 1990s, Prof. Epstein was a member of the editorial collective of Socialist Revolution, later renamed Socialist Review. She is currently at work on a study of socialist-humanist thought and politics after World War II.
This panel discussion, held February 9, 2010 and sponsored by The Dartmouth Centers Forum, questioned whether technology has always played a role in political protest or if new information technology and the Internet change the activity and impact of political protest in fundamental and new ways. The panel, moderated by Denise Anthony, Research Director of ISTS and Associate Professor and Chair of Sociology at Dartmouth, featured: Bruce Etling, Director of the Internet & Democracy Project at the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University, Elham Gheytanchi, Professor of Sociology, Santa Monica College and Evgeny Morozov, Yahoo! Fellow at the Institute for the Study of Diplomacy, Georgetown University.
The street protests in Tehran have quickly shifted their emphasis from a fraudulent election to a repressive system at large. In this webinar, we explore the non-political longing in each person on Earth for justice, freedom, and peace.
The street protests in Tehran have quickly shifted their emphasis from a fraudulent election to a repressive system at large. In this webinar, we explore the non-political longing in each person on Earth for justice, freedom, and peace. Visit www.TheAgelessWisdom.com or call 818/569-3017 for more information
The street protests in Tehran have quickly shifted their emphasis from a fraudulent election to a repressive system at large. In this webinar, we explore the non-political longing in each person on Earth for justice, freedom, and peace. Visit www.TheAgelessWisdom.com or call 818/569-3017 for more information
Civic-Minded songs for Music Licensing Track list: 1. Why There's So Much Crime 2. Sham Rock (or) How To Kill Children On Television and Still Get Re-Elected 3. Been Down So Long 4. Generation Resignation 5. Hans Blix On His Birthday 6. From A Litany in Midair 7. Like We're All Forgiven (or) We Came, We Saw, We Conga'd 8. Butcher's Bill Contact info@callthecow.com for licensing or lyrics.
Civic-Minded songs for Music Licensing Track list: 1. Why There's So Much Crime 2. Sham Rock (or) How To Kill Children On Television and Still Get Re-Elected 3. Been Down So Long 4. Generation Resignation 5. Hans Blix On His Birthday 6. From A Litany in Midair 7. Like We're All Forgiven (or) We Came, We Saw, We Conga'd 8. Butcher's Bill Contact info@callthecow.com for licensing or lyrics.