On our 'Best of Hell: 2008' we featured the following interviews:
From June 14, David Cay Johnston is an independent
investigative journalist, formerly with The New York Times,
now focusing on the subject of taxation. David's most recent
book is last year's "Free
Lunch: How the Wealthiest Americans Enrich Themselves
at Government Expense and Stick You With The Bill."
From October 4, author Dave Zirin writes the column
'The Edge of Sports' at http://www.edgeofsports.com
and is a regular contributor to SI.com, The Nation, SLAM
and the Los Angeles Times. Dave's new book is "A People's
History of Sports in the United States" (The New Press).
From November 29, BlackCommentator.com editorial board
member Larry Pinkney who writes the column "Keeping
It Real." Larry is a veteran of the Black Panther Party,
the former Minister of Interior of the Republic of New Africa,
a former political prisoner and the only American to have
successfully self-authored his civil/political rights case
to the United Nations under the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights.
From October 11th, Thomas
Frank whose latest book is "The Wrecking Crew:
How Conservatives Rule" (Metropolitan Books). Tom is
a regular columnist for the Wall Street Journal.
We played a 'Moment of Truth' delivered by Jeff Dorchen
back on July 19th entitled, "Thomas Friedman Versus The
Methodist Fish Fry." We also replayed Todd Williams,
'Our Man in Budapest' and the former host of Hungarian TV's
Feszti
Korkep, giving us a report from May 31st.
Lew Daly is a senior fellow of Demos and the author
of God and the Welfare State. Lew is co-author of the new
book, "Unjust Desserts: How the Rich are Taking our
Common Inheritance and Why We Should Take it Back"
(New
Press).
Steven
Kinzer, author of "Overthrow: America's Century
of Regime Change from Hawaii to Iraq" (Times
Books). Stephen was the Latin America correspondent
for the Boston Globe, the New York Times bureau chief in
Turkey, Germany and Nicaragua, and has written several books
on foreign affairs. Stephen's recent writing includes, "The
Reality of War in Afghanistan."
Jerome Slater is the University Research Scholar
at SUNY-Buffalo. Jerome writes regularly on the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict and other foreign policy issues for professional
journals, and is the author of many articles in Tikkun.
His most recent story is, "The
Irresponsibility of Thomas Friedman."
Our irregular correspondents were:
live in the studio, Dr. Krys Bigosinski, MD returned
as an irregular correspondent ...
and from Los Angeles Jeff
Dorchen delivered a 'Moment of Truth.'
Gerard Prunier were on to discuss his opendemocracy.net
article, "The eastern DR Congo: dynamics of conflict."
Gerard is research professor at the University of Paris.
He is the author of 1998s The Rwanda Crisis: History
of a Genocide, 2007s revised edition of "Darfur:
The Ambiguous Genocide", and 2006s "From
Genocide to Continental War: The Congolese' Conflict and
the Crisis of Contemporary Africa."
author, education theorist, 1960s antiwar activist and
former member of the Weather Underground, Bill Ayers.
Bill is a Distinguished Professor of Education and Senior
University Scholar in the College of Education at the University
of Illinois at Chicago, holding the titles of Distinguished
Professor of Education and Senior University Scholar. He
is the author of, among other titles, "Fugitive Days:
A Memoir," (Beacon)
which came out in 2001 and has just been re-released. He
is also co-author, with Bernardine Dohrn, of the upcoming
"Race Course Against White Supremacy" (Third
World Press) which is to be released in January. Shortly
after Election Day, Bill wrote the article, "What
a Long, Strange Trip It's Been: Looking back on a surreal
campaign season."
Scott Horton is an attorney who specializes in
human rights and the law of international conflict and is
a lecturer-in-law at Columbia Law School. A life-long human
rights advocate, Scott served as counsel to Andrei Sakharov
and Elena Bonner, among other activists in the former Soviet
Union. He is a co-founder of the American University in
Central Asia, where he currently serves as a trustee, and
has been involved in some of the most significant foreign
investment projects in the Central Eurasian region. Scott
recently led a number of studies of abuse issues associated
with the conduct of the war on terror for the New York City
Bar Association, where he has chaired several committees,
including, most recently, the Committee on International
Law. He is also a member of the board of the National Institute
of Military Justice, the EurasiaGroup and the American Branch
of the International Law Association and a member of the
Council on Foreign Relations. Scott writes the daily blog
'No Comment' at Harper's.
Scott's December cover story in the newsstand edition of
Harper's is called, "Justice After Bush: Prosecuting
an Outlaw Administration." He also writes a regular
column for the American Lawyer.
journalist Robert Dreyfuss is a contributing editor
at the Nation,
whose web site hosts his The
Dreyfuss Report. Bob is the author of "Devil's
Game: How the United States Helped Unleash Fundamentalist
Islam" (Metropolitan
Books). His most recent writing includes, "Still
Preparing to Attack Iran: The Neoconservatives in the
Obama Era."
economist Steve Fraser is a visiting professor
of Economic History at New York University. Steve is a consultant
and Editor-at-Large for the New Labor Forum at the Joseph
S. Murphy Institute of Labor and Community Studies at the
City University of New York. He is the author of "Wall
Street: America's Dream Palace" (Yale
University Press). He is also co-founder of the American
Empire Project. His most recent writing includes, "Beyond
the Bailout State: Roosevelt's Brain Trust vs Obama's
Brainiacs."
Our irregular correspondents were:
Danny Muller of Peace
Action Maine returned to give us a 'Wasted Energy Report'
...
producer Laura
Mayer debuted as an irregular correspondent ...
Chris Hedges is a senior fellow at The Nation Institute
and a Lecturer in the Council of the Humanities and the
Anschutz Distinguished Fellow at Princeton University. Chris
spent nearly two decades as a foreign correspondent in Central
America, the Middle East, Africa and the Balkans. He is
the author of the best selling "War Is a Force That
Gives Us Meaning," which was a finalist for The National
Book Critics Circle Award for Nonfiction. He was also part
of the New York Times team that won the 2002 Pulitzer Prize
for the papers coverage of global terrorism and he
received the 2002 Amnesty International Global Award for
Human Rights Journalism. Chris will be on to discuss his
most recent columns at truthdig.org, "Americas
Wars of Self-Destruction."
Frances Fox Piven is on the faculty of the Graduate
Center of the City University of New York. She is the author,
most recently, of Challenging Authority: How Ordinary People
Change America. This week, she wrote the Nation article,
"Obama
Needs a Protest Movement."
journalist and author George Packer was on to discuss
his latest story in the New Yorker, "The
New Liberalism." In that article, George writes,
"Reagan couldnt cancel Roosevelts legacy;
Obama wont be able to obliterate Reagans."
Georges most recent book is "The Assassins' Gate:
America in Iraq" which came out in 2005.
journalist Robert Parry, whose work can be found
at ConsortiumNews.com,
returns to This is Hell! In 1984, Bob won the prestigious
Polk Award for National Reporting by breaking many of the
Iran-Contra stories for Newsweek and The Associated Press.
His recent columns include, "Obama, Ask the Kremlin
about Gates," "Iraq War Foes Get Short Shrift,"
and "What Must Be Done Now!."
journalist, lecturer and media critic Jeff
Cohen is the founding director of the Park
Center for Independent Media and endowed chair/associate
professor of journalism at Ithaca College. Jeff also founded
FAIR,
the national media watch group, launching FAIR's magazine,
Extra!, and their nationally-syndicated radio show, CounterSpin.
Jeff formerly co-wrote - with past This is Hell! guest Norman
Solomon - the nationally-syndicated Media Beat column.
Jeff was Communications Director of the Kucinich for President
campaign in 2003. Jeff also was a daily commentator on MSNBC
in 2002, a weekly panelist on the Fox News Channel's News
Watch from 19972002, and a co-host of CNN's
Crossfire in 1996. He was senior producer of
MSNBC's Phil Donahue show until it was terminated on the
eve of the Iraq war. His most recent book is "Cable
News Confidential: My Misadventures in Corporate Media,"
which you can buy through his web
site. This week, Jeff wrote the article, "What
Indy Media Heroes and History Can Teach Us."
BlackCommentator.com editorial board member Larry Pinkney
writes the column "Keeping It Real." Larry is
a veteran of the Black Panther Party, the former Minister
of Interior of the Republic of New Africa, a former political
prisoner and the only American to have successfully self-authored
his civil/political rights case to the United Nations under
the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
Larry will be on to discuss his two-part BlackCommentator
piece entitled, "An Obama Presidency: More of the Same
- Only Worse." Here's links to part
one and part
two. His most recent column is called, "Prepare
for Repression, Subterfuge and Continuing Wars."
Our irregular correspondents were:
Dan "The Auto Man" Litchfield
returned with a report on America's beleaguered industry
...
and Kevan
Harris, 'The Radical Pessimist,' was radically pessimistic.
This is Hell! presents "The Best of the Worst of the
Economy: America's Inevitable Economic Collapse in Hellish
Review."
From February 16, John Miller, a professor of economics
at Wheaton College who writes for Dollar and Sense. We talked
with John about his latest article, "Stormier
Weather: The economic recovery that's been officially
underway since late 2001 is probably overtoo bad many
Americans never got to experience it." Dollars &
Sense had these kind words about our on-air conversation
with John:
From April 5, Jeff Faux, founder and former president
of the Economic Policy Institute (http://www.epinet.org/)
where he is currently a distinguished fellow. Jeff's most
recent article as of this date was a piece in The Nation
entitled, "Is
This The Big One?" Jeff is also a contributing
editor to American Prospect and a member of the editorial
board of Dissent.
From April 19, Michael Hudson, a former Wall Street
economist whose specialization was in the balance of payments
and real estate at Chase Manhattan Bank, Arthur Anderson,
and later at the Hudson Institute. In 1990, he helped establish
the world's first sovereign debt fund for Scudder Stevens
& Clark. Michael was Congressman Dennis Kucinich's chief
economic advisor in the recent Democratic primary presidential
campaign. He has also advised the US, Canadian, Mexican
and Latvian governments, as well as the United Nations Institute
for Training and Research. A Distinguished Research Professor
at University of Missouri-Kansas City, he is the author
of, most recently, "Super Imperialism: The Economic
Strategy of American Empire" (Pluto Press). The week
of this interview, Michael wrote the article, "Hillary
Joins the Vast, Rightwing Financial Conspiracy."
From July 5, Dean Baker is the co-director of the
Center for
Economic and Policy Research. Dean is the author of
"The
Conservative Nanny State: How the Wealthy Use the Government
to Stay Rich and Get Richer." He also has a blog, "Beat
the Press," where he discusses the media's coverage
of economic issues. You can find it at the American Prospect's
web site.
Dean had just written the article, "Help
Workers, Not Wall Street," for the Guardian.
Our live irregular correspondents were:
live from Budapest, Todd Williams was the host
of the recently canceled Hungarian TV show "Feszti
Korkep" ...
Andrew Bacevich, author of the new book, "The
Limits of Power: The End of American Exceptionalism"
(Metropolitan
Books). Andrew is a professor of history and international
relations at Boston University. He retired from the US Army
with the rank of colonel.
John R. MacArthur, publisher of Harper's Magazine,
is an award winning journalist and author. His new book
is called, "You Can't Be President: The Outrageous
Barriers to Democracy in America" (Melville
House).
This week's irregular correspondent was Jeff Dorchen
who delivered a Moment
of Truth entitled, "Finding common ground with the
crazy stupid white people."
Michael Schwartz is the author of "War Without
End: The Iraq War in Context" (Haymarket
Books). Michael is a professor of sociology and the
founding director of the Undergraduate College of Global
Studies at Stony Brook University.
Thomas
Frank whose latest book is "The Wrecking Crew:
How Conservatives Rule" (Metropolitan Books). Tom is
a regular columnist for the Wall Street Journal.
live from Afghanistan, Anand Gopal discussed his
TomDispatch article, "The
Surge That Failed: Afghanistan under the Bombs."
Anand is a correspondent for the Christian Science Monitor,
based in Afghanistan.
Steven Rosenfeld is a senior fellow at AlterNet
and author of "Count My Vote: A Citizen's Guide to
Voting" (AlterNet Books). His recent writing at AlterNet
includes, "Voter Purges Could Cause Florida-like Presidential
Recounts," "Democratic Election Protection Strategy's
Missing Link: Electronic Vote Counts," and "Big
Presidential Vote Count Error Found and Fixed in New Mexico."
Thomas Ferguson is professor of political science
at the University of Massachusetts, Boston. Thomas is the
author of "Golden Rule: The Investment Theory of Party
Competition and the Logic of Money-Driven Political Systems"
(University of Chicago Press). He is also a contributing
editor at The Nation where his most recent writing includes,
"Bridge
Loan to Nowhere."
Alan Snitow wrote last month's TomDispatch article,
"Drinking
at the Public Fountain: The New Corporate Threat to
Our Water Supplies." Alan Snitow made the documentary
"Thirst" with Deborah Kaufman. The film brought
attention to the global movement against water privatization.
Their book
by the same name exposed how the corporate drive to control
water has become a catalyst for community resistance to
globalization. Alan is on the board of Food
and Water Watch.
And our irregular corespondents were:
live from Portland, Maine, Danny Muller of Peace
Action Maine gave us his 'Wasted Energy Report' ...
live from Cochabamba, the Democracy
Center's Jim Shultz explained what the hell is
going on in the near civil war in Bolivia. You can read
Jim's blog by visiting http://www.democracyctr.org/blog/.
The Democracy Center "works globally to advance social
justice through investigation and reporting, training citizens
in public advocacy, and leading international citizen campaigns."
journalist and author Nomi Prins most recent writng
includes the articles, "Will
the Government Bailout Work?," "The
$700 Billion Bailout Plan's Fine Print" and "Why
the Bailout Sells America Short." Nomi is a Senior
Fellow at Demos, a non-partisan public policy research and
advocacy organization. She is the author of 2004's "Other
Peoples Money: The Corporate Mugging of America"
(The New Press), which was chosen as a Best Book of 2004
by The Economist, Barron's and The Library Journal. She
also wrote 2006's "Jacked: How 'Conservatives' are
Picking your Pocket (whether you voted for them or not)"
(Polipoint Press). Nomi worked on Wall Street as a managing
director at Goldman Sachs, and ran the international analytics
group at Bear Stearns in London.
author Dave Zirin writes the column 'The Edge of
Sports' at http://www.edgeofsports.com
and is a regular contributor to SI.com, The Nation, SLAM
and the Los Angeles Times. Dave's new book is "A People's
History of Sports in the United States" (The New Press).
Chalmers Johnson wrote the TomDispatch piece,
"We
Have the Money: If Only We Didn't Waste It on the Defense
Budget." Chalmers is the president of the Japan Policy
Research Institute and professor emeritus at the University
of California, San Diego. Chalmers wrote the trilogy that
includes, "Nemesis: The Crisis of the American Republic,"
(Metropolitan
Books) "Blowback: The Costs and Consequences of
American Empire" (Metropolitan
Books) and "The Sorrows of Empire: Militarism,
Secrecy, and the End of the Republic" (Metropolitan
Books).
Our irregular correspondents this Saturday were:
Jeff Dorchen deliver a Moment
of Truth entitled "Don't Piss On My Face and Tell
Me It's Raining" ...
and live from San Francisco, Kate O'Donnell gave
us her Woman's Perspective on Sarah Palin.
John Atlas is founder, president and former executive
director National
Housing Institute. NHI is "a think tank dedicated
to promoting empowerment and community building strategies
that will help lead to affordable housing, urban revitalization,
and an engaged civil society. NHI produces studies dealing
with public housing, homelessness, employee-assisted housing,
and crime prevention, and publishes Shelterforce, the oldest
independent magazine dedicated to creating and preserving
thriving communities". John co-wrote the story "
Foreclosing on the Free Market: How to Remedy the Subprime
Catastrophe" in the Fall issue of the New
Labor Forum.
Read John's blog at http://www.rooflines.org
Ken Menkhaus is a political science professor at
North Carolinas Davidson College and a former political
advisor to the UN Operation in Somalia. Ken has a new report
out called, "Somalia: A Country in Peril, A Policy
Nightmare." In the report, Ken says, "US counterterrorism
policies have not only compromised other international agendas
in Somalia, they have generated a high level of anti-Americanism
and are contributing to radicalisation of the population
In what could become a dangerous instance of blowback,
defence and intelligence operations intended to make the
United States more secure from the threat of terrorism may
be increasing the threat of jihadist attacks on American
interests." You can find Ken's report at the Enough
Project's web site (http://www.enoughproject.org/).
This week's irregular correspondent was Jeff Dorchen
who delivered a Moment
of Truth entitled, "Wall Street Celebrates Socialism."
live from Estonia, we will speak with Rein Müllerson
who wrote the article, "The
world after the Russia-Georgia war," which is posted
at openDemocracy.net. Rein is professor and chair of international
law at King's College, London. Rein has been a visiting
professor at the London School of Economics, a member of
the United Nations Human Rights Committee, and (in 1991-92)
first deputy foreign minister of Estonia. He is the author
of seven books on international law and politics, including
most recently, "Central Asia: A Chessboard and Player
in the New Great Game" (Kegan
Paul).
This week's irregular correspondent was Jeff Dorchen
delivered a Moment
of Truth
Mark Weisbrot, co-director at the Center
for Economic Policy Research, who has just co-authored
a report entitled, "Oil Drilling In Environmentally
Sensitive Areas: The Role of the Media."
Matt Kennard is a writer who, while studying for
his Master's in Investigative Journalism at Columbia University
in New York. looked into the increasingly liberal attitude
of the US military to allow neo-Nazis and white supremacists
to serve in the armed forces.
Read Matt's work at http://nazisinthemilitary.com/
Jessica Montell, executive director of B'Tselem,
the Israeli Information Center for Human Rights in the Occupied
Territories. Jessica will discuss her group's work on human
rights and their "Shooting
Back" project.
Here's how B'Tselem describes the project: "In January
2007, B'Tselem launched "Shooting Back", a video
advocacy project focusing on the Occupied Territories. We
provide Palestinians living in high-conflict areas with
video cameras, with the goal of bringing the reality of
their lives under occupation to the attention of the Israeli
and international public, exposing and seeking redress for
violations of human rights."
as a reporter, Gregg Erickson (http://www.ericksoneconomics.com)
has covered Sarah Palin for over 20 months. Gregg is an
independent economic consultant serving clients in "government,
business and the legal profession." He is also editor-at-large
and reporter for the Alaska Budget Report, a newsletter
covering the state's the state budget, economy and government.
And Gregg's a columnist for the Anchorage Daily News and
the Juneau Empire.
Dr. Phillip Butler wrote the opinion piece, "Why
I Will Not Vote for John McCain," for the web site
Military.com.
Phil is a 1961 graduate of the United States Naval Academy
and a former light-attack, carrier pilot. In 1965 he was
shot down over North Vietnam where he spent eight years
as a prisoner of war. He is a highly decorated combat veteran
who was awarded two Silver Stars, two Legion of Merits,
two Bronze Stars and two Purple Heart medals.
After his repatriation in 1973 he earned a PhD in sociology
from the University of California at San Diego and became
a Navy Organizational Effectiveness consultant. He completed
his Navy career in 1981 as a professor of management at
the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California.
Phil then founded Camelot Enterprises, a management seminar,
professional speaking and consulting services business.
As a professional keynote speaker he told his story of how
POW's were able to survive and succeed. In 2000 he retired
as a traveling professional speaker and consultant. He is
now a peace and justice activist with Veterans
for Peace.
Barbara Crossette wrote the article "After
Musharraf" for The Nation this week. Barbara is
a former foreign correspondent for the New York Times, was
South Asia bureau chief from 1988 to 1991 and UN bureau
chief from 1994 to 2001.
James K. Galbraith, author of the new book, "The
Predator State: How Conservatives Abandoned the Free Market
and Why Liberals Should Too" (Free Press).
Alice Farmer wrote a joint report for Human Rights
Watch and the American Civil Liberties Union this week entitled,
"A
Violent Education: Corporal Punishment of Children in
US Public Schools." Alice is the Aryeh Neier Fellowat
Human Riughts Watch and the ACLU.
Ivan Eland wrote this week's Consortiumnews.com
story, "Mixed
Truth of the Russia-Georgia War." Ivan is Director
of the Center on Peace & Liberty at The
Independent Institute. He has spent 15 years working
for Congress on national security issues, including stints
as an investigator for the House Foreign Affairs Committee
and Principal Defense Analyst at the Congressional Budget
Office.
Timothy Canova wrote the article, "The
Legacy of the Clinton Bubble" for the Summer edition
of Dissent. Timothy is the Betty Hutton Williams Professor
of International Economic Law at the Chapman University
School of Law in Orange, California.
And our irregular correspondents this were reporting in from
a fishing trip in western Michigan.
Dr. Krys Bigosinski, MD, a former college athlete
himself and currently studying sports medicine, gave us
his thoughts on the Olympics ...
Christian Parenti returned to This is Hell! Christian
is the author of, most recently, "The Freedom: Shadows
and Hallucinations in Occupied Iraq" (New Press). This
week, he wrote the Nation piece, "Class
Struggle in the New China."
Peter Rogers who wrote the Scientific American
article, "Facing
the Freshwater Crisis." Peter argues that, "As
demand for freshwater soars, planetary supplies are becoming
unpredictable. Existing technologies could avert a global
water crisis, but they must be implemented soon." Peter
is Gordon McKay Professor of Environmental Engineering and
professor of city and regional planning at Harvard University.
He's also a senior adviser to the Global
Water Partnership, an organization devoted to improving
global water-management practices, as well as a recipient
of Guggenheim and Twentieth Century Fund fellowships.
Stacey Philbrick Yadav is assistant professor
of political science at Hobart and William Smith Colleges
in Geneva, New York. Last summer, she was a faculty affiliate
of the Center for Arab and Middle East Studies at the American
University in Beirut. This week she wrote the Middle East
Report article, "Lebanons
Post-Doha Political Theater."
And our irregular correspondents were:
live from some social science convention in Boston, 'The
Radical Pessimist' Kevan Harris ...
live in studio, Dr. Krys Bigosinski talked up something
medical ...
and also live in the studio, Jeff Dorchen delivered
a Moment of Truth.
live from (not) Dublin, Lyndall Stein is executive
director of Concern,
an "humanitarian organisation dedicated to the reduction
of suffering and working towards the ultimate elimination
of extreme poverty in the worlds poorest countries."
Lyndall's most recent writing includes her openDemocracy
article, "Ethiopia:
the tears and the rains."
Ismael Hossein-zadeh teaches economics at Drake
University and is the author of "The Political Economy
of U.S. Militarism." (Palgrave-Macmillan).
Ismael's most recent writing includes the Counterpunch pieces,
"Is
There an Oil Shortage?" and "Are
They Really Oil Wars?"
Lawrence Velvel is the Dean of the Massachusetts
School of Law, Lawrence writes the blog Velvel
on National Affairs, where his most recent entries are
entitled "Zbigniew Brzezinski, Lawrence Wilkerson,
And Barack Obama On Afghanistan," "Forgetting
The Fundamentals In Regard To Oil And Afghanistan,"
"Evil Judges And Dumb Politicians," and "Prosecuting
For War Crimes: As Lincoln Said, The Battle Of Today Is
Not For Today Alone, But For A Vast Future." He is
an honors graduate of the University of Michigan Law School,
has practiced law in the public and private sectors, and
been a law professor. He is also the author of "Thine
Alabaster Cities Gleam (Doukathsan
Press) which is "a look at the determinants of
success in America during the last half of the 20th century
and extensively criticizes the dishonesty, elitism, celebrification
and braggadocio that now pave the road to success in our
society and are tarnishing the American Dream."
And our irregular correspondents this week include:
live from Portland, Maine, Danny
Muller gave us his 'Wasted Energy Report'
live from New York City, Drew Youngren ...
live from San Francisco, Kate O'Donnell gave an
'Antarctic Perspective' ...
Kai
Wright is a Brooklyn writer and editor whose work
focuses on the politics of sex, race, and health. He is
author of "Drifting Toward Love: Black, Brown, Gay
and Coming of Age on the Streets of New York" (Beacon
Press). Kai's most recent writing includes the American
Prospect article, "America's
AIDS Apartheid: The domestic HIV/AIDS epidemic is increasingly
black and Southern -- and spiraling out of control"
and the Nation story "The
Subprime Swindle: How banks stole black Americas
hard-won wealth and gambled it away in risky investment
schemes."
C. Peter Timmer is a visiting professor with the
Program on Food Security and Environment at Stanford University,
and non-resident fellow with the Center for Global Development
in Washington, DC. This week, he wrote "Japan
and a Solution to the World Rice Crisis" for Japan
Focus.
Russell Carollo is a Pulitzer Prize winning investigative
reporter who now writes for the Sacramento Bee. Russell
just wrote the amazing "Suspect
Soldiers" series which follows the story of "16
Iraq-era soldiers and Marines who ran into trouble with
the law and/or the military. Some had troubled histories
before they joined the service, while others carried that
trouble through their service and back into civilian life."
kitteninfinite is a member of Sex
Workers Outreach Project Chicago, a grassroots organization
dedicated to improving the lives of current and former sex
workers in the Chicago area, on and off the job. SWOP-Chicago
is a political group with a decriminalization agenda, the
human trafficking issue (or the anti-prostitution industrial
complex as kitteninfinite likes to call it) and anti-prostitution
policies that SWOP claims are diverting billions in AIDS
relief funding for abstinence-only missionaries.
Irregular correspondents were:
Kevan Harris, 'The Radical Pessmist,' gave a report
live from Turkey ...
Jeff Dorchen delivered a Moment of Truth entitled,
"Thomas Friedman Versus The Methodist Fish Fry"
...
and Dan ' The Auto Man' Litchfield reported on
what's happening in the automotive industry, and he also
gave us his insight on T. Boone Pickens and Al Gore's plans
for an overhaul of the US energy industry.
Joanne Landey is the co-director of the Campaign
for Peace and Democracy. Joanne's going to talk with
us about the movement against US 'Missile Defense' in the
Czech Republic and Poland.
John
Thomson is research affiliate at MIT and served
as the United Kingdom Ambassador to India and as the Permanent
Representative in the United Nations. He has co-written
"Iran as a Pioneer Case for Multilateral Nuclear Arrangements"
and several other articles about the Iranian nuclear situation.
And our irregular correspondents are:
live from a drum and bass festival in Romania, Todd
Williams, the former host of the recently canceled Hungarian
TV show "Feszti
Korkep" ...
live from a sailboat docked somewhere along the west coast,
Mike Dvorak gave his 'Wind Blows' report. This week,
it was on the utility of using electricity in place of gasoline/diesel
as a transportation fuel ...
and live from San Francisco, Elvis
DeMorrow told us what's creeping around the Konspiracy
Korner.
Pervez Hoodbhoy wrote the article, "Anti-Americanism
in Pakistan and the Taliban Menace." Pervez is
chairman of the Department of Physics at Quaid-e-Azam University
in Islamabad. He is chairman of Mashal, a non-profit organization
which publishes books in Urdu on womens rights, education,
environmental issues, philosophy, and modern thought. He
is author of "Islam and Science: Religious Orthodoxy
and the Battle for Rationality", now in 5 languages.
In 2003, Dr. Hoodbhoy was awarded UNESCOs Kalinga
Prize for popularizing science in Pakistan with TV serials,
and his film "The Bell Tolls for Planet Earth"
won honorable mention at the Paris Film Festival.
Rick Shenkman is the author of "Just How Stupid
Are We? Facing the Truth about the American Voter"
(Basic Books), the second chapter of which was excerpted
at TomDispatch.com as the article, "How
Ignorant Are We?: The Voters Choose but on the
Basis of What?." Rick is an Emmy Award-winning investigative
reporter, New York Times bestselling author, and associate
professor of history at George Mason university is also
the founder and editor of History News Network, a web site
that features articles by historians on current events.
He also blogs at "How Stupid?"
Rami Khouri's most recent articles included, "Winds
of Diplomacy," "Pretzels and Policies with Mohammad
Khatami," "The US War of Ideas at Home,"
"Israels New Diplomacy Needs Palestinians' New
Unity," and "Washingtons Grim Performance
in the Middle East." All of these can be read by clicking
here.
Rami is the Director of the Issam Fares Institute of Public
Policy and International Affairs at the American University
of Beirut as well as editor-at-large of the Beirut-based
Daily Star newspaper, published throughout the Middle East
with the International Herald Tribune. In November 2006,
he was the co-recipient of the Pax Christi International
Peace Award for his efforts to bring peace and reconciliation
to the Middle East.
Patrick Cockburn is the author of Muqtada:
Muqtada Al-Sadr, the Shia Revival, and the Struggle for
Iraq. His most recent writing included, "Who's
Actually Winning in Iraq?"
Dean Baker is the co-director of the Center
for Economic and Policy Research. Dean is the author
of "The
Conservative Nanny State: How the Wealthy Use the Government
to Stay Rich and Get Richer." He also has a blog, "Beat
the Press," where he discusses the media's coverage
of economic issues. You can find it at the American Prospect's
web site.
And our irregular correspondents were:
live from San Juan, Dave Buchen ...
Jeff Dorchen delivered a Moment of Truth ...
and producer Drew Colglazier reported live from
the back of a Mustang in Bedford, Indiana, where he will
be in a parade supporting his brother's campaign for State
Senate.
Mike
Marqusee, is the author of "If I Am Not Myself:
Journey of an Anti-Zionist Jew" (Verso
Books). Mike also writes for The Guardian and The Hindu.
Elliot Cohen wrote the truthdig piece, "John
McCains Chilling Project for America." Elliot
is the editor in chief of the International
Journal of Applied Philosophy and ethics editor for
Free
Inquiry magazine. He is also the author or editor of
many books in journalism, professional ethics and philosophical
counseling, including his most recent work, 2007's "The
Last Days of Democracy: How Big Media and Power-Hungry Government
Are Turning America into a Dictatorship" (Prometheus).
Elliot was the first-prize recipient of the 2007 Project
Censored Award for his investigative reporting on the corporate
takeover of the Internet. Elliot is a professor of philosophy
and chair of the Department of Humanities at Indian River
Community College in Fort Pierce, Florida.
Paul Street is a writer and author based in Iowa
City. Paul's next book, "Barack Obama and the Future
of American Politics" (Paradigm)
will be released later this Summer. He is also the author
of "Empire and Inequality: America and the World Since
9/11 (Paradigm), "Segregated Schools: Educational Apartheid
in the Post-Civil Rights Era (Routledge) and "Racial
Oppression in the Global Metropolis (Rowman & Littlefield).
He is a regular contributor at Z Magazine's web site, ZNet
where his most recent article was entitled, "Man
Versus Nature?: The politics of the Iowa Floods."
Dr. Stephen
Zunes returns to This is Hell! to talk about his
most recent writing including, "Obama
and AIPAC" and "Why
Obama Won". Stephen is a Professor of Politics
and International Studies at the University of San Francisco,
where he chairs the program in Middle Eastern Studies. He
is also the author of "Tinderbox: U.S. Middle East
Policy and the Roots of Terrorism" (Common
Courage Press) and co-author (with Jacob Mundy) of the
forthcoming "Western Sahara: Nationalism, Conflict,
and International Accountability" (Syracuse
University Press).
Greg Grandin wrote the TomDispatch piece, "Losing
Latin America: What Will the Obama Doctrine Be Like?,"
earlier this month. Greg teaches history at New York University.
He is the author of "The Last Colonial Massacre: Latin
America in the Cold War" (University
of Chicago Press), Truth Commissions: State Terror,
History, and Memory" (Duke
University Press), "The Blood of Guatemala"
(Duke
University Press), and "Empire's Workshop: Latin
America, The United States and The Rise of the New Imperialism"
(Metropolitan)
which was endorsed by Hugo Chávez when he spoke at
the United Nations.
And our irregular correspondents were:
LaddieO.com
gave us a live report on web, tech and science news from
the hermetically sealed clean room at URL Labs ...
Steven Greenhouse, author of "The Big Squeeze:
Tough Times for the American Worker (Knopf).
Steve has been the labor and workplace correspondent for
the New York Times since 1995.
John
Bowe is the author of "Nobodies: Modern American
Slave Labor and the Dark Side of the New Global Economy
(Random
House). In 2004, John received the J. Anthony Lukas
Work-in-Progress Award, the Sydney Hillman Award for journalists,
writers and public figures who pursue social justice and
public policy for the common good, and the Richard J. Margolis
Award, dedicated to journalism that combines social concern
and humor. He is the co-editor of "Gig: Americans Talk
About Their Jobs which was one of Harvard Business Review's
best books of 2000. He also is co-screenwriter of the 1996
movie, "Basquiat."
Sue Branford is co-editor of Seeding
and manages the publications of the agricultural-diversity
NGO, Grain.
She reports regularly from Latin America for the BBC and
the Guardian. She is co-author with Jan Rocha, of "Cutting
the Wire: the Story of the Brazilian Landless Workers' Movement
(Latin America Bureau) and wrote "Chemical Warfare
in Colombia: The Costs of Fumigation" (Latin America
Bureau) with Hugh O'Shaughnessy. She is also the author
of "The Last Frontier: fighting over land in the Amazon"
and "The Debt Squads: the US, the banks and Latin America."
This week, her story, "The
world food summit: a lost opportunity" was posted
at openDemocracy.
David Cay Johnston is an independent investigative
journalist, formerly for The New York Times, who now focuses
on the subject of taxation. David's most recent book is
last year's "Free
Lunch: How the Wealthiest Americans Enrich Themselves
at Government Expense and Stick You With The Bill."
Martin Beck Matustik author of "Radical Evil
and the Scarcity of Hope: Postsecular Meditations"
(Indiana
University Press). Martin is Professor of Philosophy
at Purdue University.
Ha-Joon Chang is an economist specializing in development
economics. Ha-Joon Reader in the Political Economy of Development
at Cambridge University. Ha-Joon is the author of several
books including last year's "Bad Samaritans: Rich Nations,
Poor Policies and the Threat to the Developing World"
(Bloomsbury)
and 2002's "Kicking Away the Ladder: Development Strategy
in Historical Perspective (Anthem
Press).
James Howard Kunstler's most recent book is "World
Made By Hand: A Novel of the Post-Oil Future."
Jim also writes The Daily Grunt, if he has something to
say that day, and offers the Eyesore of the Month which
always features a horrific piece of architecture, both at
his web site, http://www.kunstler.com.
And our irregular correspondents were:
Jeff
Dorchen delivered a 'Moment of Truth' live from
WNUR studios ...
Dan "The Auto Man" Litchfield talked
cars ...
and Danny
Muller gave us his 'Wasted Energy Report' live from
Portland, Maine.
Jeff Sharlet is author of the new book, "The
Family: The Secret Fundamentalism at the Heart of American
Power" (HarperCollins).
Jeff is a contributing editor at Harper's and Rolling Stone.
He is also an associate research scholar at New York University's
Center for Religion and Media. He is also the editor of
the web site, The
Revealer.
Dr. Carsten Wieland wrote the piece, "The
Syria-Israel talks: old themes, new setting," at
openDemocracy. In the article, Carsten explains that 'The
latest phase of negotiations between Damascus and Jerusalem
will need the right constellation of events to become more
than another lost opportunity.' He is the author of the
book "Syria - Ballots or Bullets? Democracy, Islamism,
and Secularism in the Levant" (Cune
Press), and "Syria at Bay: Secularism, Islamism
and Pax Americana" (Hurst).
He is a consultant and journalist and was a research fellow
at Georgetown University in Washington. He spent several
years living in various countries of the Middle East. Wieland
studied history, political science, international relations
and philosophy at Humboldt University in Berlin, Jawaharlal
Nehru University in New Delhi and Duke University in North
Carolina.
the Democracy
Center's Jim Shultz returned to This is Hell!
to give us the skinny on what's happening in Bolivia. You
can read Jim's blog by visiting http://www.democracyctr.org/blog/.
The Democracy Center, based in both San Francisco and Cochabamba,
Bolivia, "works globally to advance social justice
through investigation and reporting, training citizens in
public advocacy, and leading international citizen campaigns."
And our irregular correspondents were:
live from Budapest, Todd Williams was the host
of the recently canceled Hungarian TV show "Feszti
Korkep" ...
Siri
Carpenterwrote the Scientific American article,
"Buried
Prejudice: The Bigot in Your Brain" which says
that 'Deep within our subconscious, all of us harbor biases
that we consciously abhor. And the worst part is: we act
on them." Siri is a science writer and editor and a
social psychologist with a Ph.D. from Yale. His articles
have appeared in Science, Scientific American Mind, Prevention,
ScienceNOW, the HHMI Bulletin, Science News, the APA Monitor
(the magazine of the American Psychological Association),
and the APS Observer (the magazine of the Association for
Psychological Science). Siri is coauthor with psychologist
Karen Huffman, of "Visualizing Psychology" (John
Wiley & Sons).
Jim Quilty, live from Beirut where he is a writer
for the Daily Star. This week, he wrote the Middle East
Report Online article, "Lebanons
Brush with Civil War."
AlterNet staff writer Joshua Holland returned
to This is Hell! to tell us about his two-part story, "Enforcement
on Steroids: Homeland Security's Emerging Immigration Police
State." Part one can be read by clicking here.
And here's part
two.
And our irregular correspondent were:
Dave Buchen, 'Our Man in San Juan,' reported to us live
from Puerto Rico.
Jeff
Dorchen delivered a Moment of Truth from Los Angeles.
And from San Francisco, Elvis
DeMorrow told us what's slunking around the Konspiracy
Korner.
David Rothkopf, author of "Superclass: The
Global Power Elite and the World They Are Making" (MacMillan).
David is a visiting scholar at the Carnegie
Endowment and directed the efforts of the Carnegie Economic
Strategy Roundtable. He is also the author of "Running
the World: The Inside Story of the NSC and the Architects
of American Power."
Janet Redman is a researcher in the Sustainable
Energy and Economy Network at the Institute for Policy Studies.
Janet's attending this weekend's World Bank meetings in
Washington DC. Her recent writing includes "World
Bank: Climate Profiteer" and "The
World Banks Carbon Deals."
John
Perkins, author of "Confessions of an Economic
Hit Man," returns to This is Hell! to discuss the new
paperback edition of his book, "The Secret History
of the American Empire: Economic Hit Men, Jackals, and the
Truth about Global Corruption."
Doug Gurian-Sherman is the senior scientist in
the Food and Environment Program at the Union of Concerned
Scientists. Doug recently released the report, "CAFOs
Uncovered: The Untold Costs of Confined Feeding Operations."
Doug was the senior scientist at Washington DC's Center
for Food Safety from 2004 to 2006.
Bob Fitrakis is co-author with past This is Hell!
guest Harvey Wasserman of "How the GOP stole America's
2004 Election & Is Rigging 2008" (Free
Press) and, with another past This is Hell! guest Steve
Rosenfeld, of "What Happened in Ohio?" (New
Press). This week, Bob co-wrote the Counterpunch article,
"Did
the Supreme Court Just Elect John McCain?," again,
with Harvey Wasserman. Bob is publisher of Free
Press.
Paul
Roberts, author of 2005's "The End of Oil:
on the Edge of a Perilous World" (Houghton
Mifflin) which was a finalist for the New York Public
Library Helen Bernstein Book Award for Excellence in Journalism.
In June, Paul will release his new book, "The End of
Food" (Houghton
Mifflin). Paul appeared on This is Hell! back in 1999
to discuss his Harper's article, "The Sweet Hereafter:
Our Craving for Sugar Starves the Everglades and Fattens
Politicians," for which he was a finalist for the National
Magazine Award. In the May/June issue of Mother Jones, Paul
wrote the article, "The
Seven Myths of Energy Independence: Why forging
a sustainable energy future is dependent on foreign oil."
And our irregular correspondents were:
Jeff
Dorchen delivered a Moment of Truth from Chicago's
south side ...
Loretta Napoleoni, author of "Rogue Economics"
(Seven
Stories) returns to This is Hell! Loretta was on our
show back in 2003 when we talked with her about her book,
"Terror, Inc.: Tracing the Money Behind Global Terrorism."
Loretta, an economist herself, is one of the world's leading
experts on money laundering and terror financing.
Michael Hudson is a former Wall Street economist
whose specialization was in the balance of payments and
real estate at Chase Manhattan Bank, Arthur Anderson, and
later at the Hudson Institute. In 1990 he helped establish
the world's first sovereign debt fund for Scudder Stevens
& Clark. Michael was Congressman Dennis Kucinich's chief
economic advisor in the recent Democratic primary presidential
campaign. He has also advised the US, Canadian, Mexican
and Latvian governments, as well as the United Nations Institute
for Training and Research. A Distinguished Research Professor
at University of Missouri-Kansas City, he is the author
of, most recently, "Super Imperialism: The Economic
Strategy of American Empire" (Pluto Press). This week,
Michael wrote the article, "Hillary
Joins the Vast, Rightwing Financial Conspiracy."
Michael
Grunwald is a reporter at The Washington Post and
a senior writer at TIME magazine. Michael is a winner of
the George Polk Award for national reporting, and the Worth
Bingham Prize for investigative reporting. He is the author
of "The Swamp: The Everglades, Florida and the Politics
of Paradise." Michael has done a significant amount
of writing on the Army Corps of Engineers including his
recent article, "How
the Army Corps is Swindling Americans."
live from Rome, Anuradha Mittal returns to This
is Hell! for the first time since 2005. Anuradha is the
executive director of the Oakland
Institute a progressive policy think tank she founded
in 2004. Anuradha is expertise is in trade, development,
human rights and agriculture issues. After working as the
codirector of Food
First, the Institute for Food and Development Policy.
This week, she released two reports: "Food Price Crisis:
A Wake Up Call for New Policies to Eradicate Hunger"
and "The Status of International Food Aid Negotiations."
And our irregular correspondents were:
Kevan
Harris,
'The Radical Pessimist,' pissed off a lot of people over
what he said about Tibet and Zimbabwe ...
LaddieO.com
gave a web and technology report from the hermetically sealed
clean rooms at URL Labs ...
and Jeff
Dorchen delivered a Moment of Truth from Chicago's
south side.
Haifa Zangana, author of "City Of Widows:
An Iraqi Woman's Account of War and Resistance" (Seven
Stories). Haifa was a prisoner of Saddam Hussein's regime.
She is a weekly columnist at al-Quds newspaper and a commentator
for The Guardian, Red Pepper and al-Ahram Weekly.
Gary Brecher writes the War Nerd column at eXile.ru.
Garys first book, aptly named "War Nerd,"
is due out on June 1. This week, Gary posted the article
"Who
Won Iraq's 'Decisive' Battle?" at eXile.
Jeff Faux is founder and former president of the
Economic Policy Institute (http://www.epinet.org/)
where he is currently a distinguished fellow. Jeff's most
recent article was a piece in The Nation entitled, "Is
This The Big One?" Jeff is also a contributing
editor to American Prospect and a member of the editorial
board of Dissent.
Michael Massing, a contributing editor at the Columbia
Journalism Review, who also writes frequently on the
press and foreign affairs on the pages of the New
York Review of Books. Michael's article, "The
Volunteer Army: Who Fights and Why?," appears in
the April 5th issue. Michael's article in the March/April
issue of CJR is "Out of Focus: How indie dogma undercuts
the documentary."
writer Doug Henwood will discuss the latest issue
of his Left Business Observer (http://www.leftbusinessobserver.com/).
Articles include, "Obamamania: Want Change With That?"
in which he calls Senator Barack Obama "just another
Democrat with a sleazy real estate agent in his past."
So you're thinking Doug's a big backer of Senator Hillary
Clinton's presidential campaign, right? Guess again. Doug
calls her politics "bellicose and neoliberal."
In the most recent issue of LBO, Doug also takes on past
This is Hell! guest Naomi Klein's latest book as well as
the coming recession.
Spencer Ackerman wrote the American Prospect cover
story "The
Obama Doctrine." The subtitle asks, "Barack
Obama is offering the most sweeping liberal foreign-policy
critique we've heard from a serious presidential contender
in decades. But will voters buy it?"
Eric Umansky returned after just four weeks because
he's written another amazing article. This time, it's for
Columbia Journalism
Review and it's called, "Lost Over Iran: How the
press let the White House craft the narrative about Tehran's
nukes."
And our irregular correspondents were:
live from Budapest, the host of the Hungarian TV show
"Feszti Korkep," Todd Williams ...
Jeff
Dorchen delivered a Moment of Truth from Chicago's
south side ...
and, from San Francisco, Kate O'Donnell gaves us
a "Science Researcher's Perspective."
Greg
Mitchell, editor of Editor
& Publisher and author of "So Wrong For So
Long: How the Press, the Pundits - and the President - Failed
on Iraq" (Sterling).
Maude Barlow is the head of the Council of Canadians,
Canada's largest public advocacy organization. She is a
past winner of the Right Livelihood Award (the "alternative
Nobel") for her work on water justice. We spoke with
Maude about her new book, "Blue Covenant: The Global
Water Crisis and the Coming Battle for the Right to Water"
(The
New Press).
Peter Erlinder is a law professor at William Mitchell
College of Law. Peter's work focuses on issues like the
death penalty, civil rights, claims of government and police
misconduct, and criminal defense of political activists.
He is also an attorney on appeal for past This is Hell!
guest Dr. Sami Al Arian in appeals to the US 4th
Circuit, the 11th Circuit and the Supreme Court of the United
States - all of which have declined to intervene in Dr.
al Arian's case. Despite al Arian being acquitted, he is
still being detained in a federal prison. Now, Sami is in
the midst of a hunger strike in protest for his continued
incarceration. Due to the hunger strike, he is in danger
of irreversible renal failure. Peter had just written the
Jurist article, "The
Torture of Sami Al Arian."
Nir Rosen is a fellow at the New America Foundation
and author of "In the Belly of the Green Bird: The
Triumph of the Martyrs in Iraq" (Simon
& Schuster). And get Nir's description of himself
at his web site (http://www.nirrosen.com/blog/):
"a freelance writer, photographer and film-maker who
has worked in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Somalia and other
popular tourist destinations." We talked with Nir about
his Rolling Stone article, "The
Myth of the Surge."
This week's irregular correspondents included:
Nicholas Hale reported from the UK with his "Fool
Britannia" ...
Jeff
Dorchen delivered a Moment of Truth ... the original
Moment of Truth, since 1997 ...
and Dave Buchen, 'Our Man in San Juan,' told us
what's happening in Puerto Rico.
Ken Silverstein is the Washington editor of Harper's
Magazine. We discussed his article in the March issue
entitled, "Beltway Bacchanal: Congress Lives High on
the Contributor's Dime."
Theresa Hitchens is the director of the Center
for Defense Information where she heads their Space
Security Project. Theresa is the author of "Future
Security In Space: Charting a Cooperative Course."
She wrote the Scientific American story, "Space
Wars - Coming to the Sky Near You?" which appears
in their March issue.
James Suggett writes at Venezuelanalysis.com.
This week he wrote on the tensions between Colombia and
their neighbors Ecuador and Venezuela. His writing included
"Venezuela, Ecuador, Argentina strengthen ties, embark
on 'true geopolitical shift'" and "OAS supports
Ecuador, Venezuela on 'path of true peace'."
David Rose is a contributing editor at Vanity
Fair and a special investigations reporter at The
Observer. He wrote "Gaza
Bombshell" which appears in the April issue of
Vanity Fair. And what a bombshell it is. "With confidential
documents, corroborated by outraged former and current U.S.
officials, David reveals how President Bush, Condoleezza
Rice, and Deputy National-Security Adviser Elliott Abrams
backed an armed force under Fatah strongman Muhammad Dahlan,
touching off a bloody civil war in Gaza and leaving Hamas
stronger than ever."
This week's irregular correspondents were:
Kevan
Harris, 'The Radical Pessimist,' returned ...
Jeff
Dorchen delivered a Moment of Truth ... the original
Moment of Truth, since 1997 ...
Elvis
DeMorrow came creeping out of the Konspiracy Korner.
Eric Umansky writes for Mother Jones and his article,
"Department
of Pre-Crime," is in the March/April issue. In
the story, Eric discusses, "Locking up Americans for
thinking bad thoughts. Catching 'terrorists' by encouraging
terrorist acts. Sound like sci-fi? Welcome to the Bush administration's
'strategic overinclusiveness' trap." Eric has written
for Slate, Washington Post, New York Times Magazine and
New Republic. He also blogs at ericumansky.com
David Leigh has been working with Rob Evans at
The Guardian on 'The
BAE Files.' BAE is Europe's biggest arms company, while
they deny any allegations they have engaged in large-scale
corruption to sell arms overseas, David and Rob have published
documents and other evidence gathered from around the world
that dispute BAE's assertion.
David is the Guardian's investigations editor and a professor
of reporting at City University in London. He was also a
producer at the acclaimed TV investigative program, "World
in Action."
Diana Johnstone is the author of "Fools'
Crusade: Yugoslavia, NATO and Western Delusion" (Monthly
Review Press). Last week, she wrote the story, "NATO's
Kosovo Colony." She is the European correspondent
for In
These Times.
This week's irregular correspondents were:
Jeff
Dorchen delivered a Moment of Truth ... the original
Moment of Truth, since 1997 ...
British historian Andy Worthington is the author
of the book, "The Guantanamo Files: The Stories of
the 774 Detainees in America's Illegal Prison."
Gary Leupp is Professor of History at Tufts University,
and Adjunct Professor of Comparative Religion. Gary's most
recent article, "The
Independence of Kosovo," is posted at Counterpunch.
He's also the author "Servants, Shophands and Laborers
in in the Cities of Tokugawa Japan," "Male Colors:
The Construction of Homosexuality in Tokugawa Japan,"
and "Interracial Intimacy in Japan: Western Men and
Japanese Women, 1543-1900."
author Juan Cole writes the blog "Informed
Comment: Thoughts on the Middle East, History, and Religion."
Juan's most recent writing also includes the Salon.com piece,
"Pakistan
turns scary for Bush's war on terror" and Juan's
the author of "Napoleon's Egypt: Invading the Middle
East" (Palgrave). Juan is also the President of the
Global Americana Institute.
journalist Sheila Kaplan wrote the story, "Great
Lakes Danger Zones?", posted at the Center for
Public Integrity and created with the support of the Nation
Institute Investigative Fund. It's "the report that
top officials of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
thought was too hot for the public to handleand the
story behind it."
Our irregular correspondent was:
from Chicago's near South Side, Jeff
Dorchen delivers a Moment of Truth ... the original
Moment of Truth, since 1997.
John Miller is a professor of economics at Wheaton
College and writes for Dollar and Sense. We talked with
John about his latest article, "Stormier
Weather: The economic recovery that's been officially
underway since late 2001 is probably overtoo bad many
Americans never got to experience it."
writer and researcher Alex de Waal is a fellow
of the Global Equity Initiative at Harvard University, program
director at the Social Science Research Council in New York
City, and co-director of Justice Africa in London. He recently
was part of a debate on Darfur in Newsweek.
His most recent writing includes, "Making
Sense of Chad."
John Feffer is the co-director of Foreign Policy
In Focus at the Institute for Policy Studies. He is the
author of the 2003 book "North Korea, South Korea:
U.S. Policy at a Time of Crisis" (Seven Stories). John's
on to tell us about his TomDisptach article, "Asia's
Hidden Arms Race: Six Countries Talk Peace While Preparing
for War."
Malinda Markowitz is a working registered nurse
in a hospital and also the President of the California Nurses
Association/ National Nurses Organizing Committee. Malinda
came on to compare presidential candidates health policies.
To find out more, visit http://www.guaranteedhealthcare.org.
And our irregular correspondents were:
LaddieO.comgave us a web and tech report
from the hermetically sealed clean room at URL
Labs ...
Jeff
Dorchen delivered a Moment of Truth from Chicago's
Pilsen neighborhood ...
and everybody's favorite New York City high school teacher
Drew Youngren, who has a PhD in mathematics, had
his first appearance since last August.
Paul Rogers, professor of peace studies at Bradford
University, northern England, returns to This is Hell! Paul
is a weekly columnist on global security at openDemocracy.net,
the most recent columns being "A
mission impossible" and "The
Iraq Project." Paul also writes an international
security monthly briefing for the Oxford Research Group,
the most recent briefing is entitled, "Change
- From Iraq Through to Pakistan." His latest book
is "Why We're Losing the War on Terror" (Polity)
which focuses on the post-9/11 era and why a new security
paradigm is needed.
journalist Robert Parry, whose work can be found
at ConsortiumNews.com,
returns to This is Hell! In 1984, Bob won the prestigious
Polk Award for National Reporting by breaking many of the
Iran-Contra stories for Newsweek and The Associated Press.
His recent columns include, "Injecting 'Terror' into
Campaign 2008," "Where Would Obama Take the Nation?,"
"Bush Era's Last Legs" and "The Democrats-Praise-Reagan
Game."
Michael Klare is professor of peace and world
security studies at Hampshire College. Michael is the author
of author of "Resource Wars" and "Blood and
Oil" Michael wrote the TomDispatch.com story, "Something
Had to Give: How Oil Burst the American Bubble."
He's got a new book, "Rising Powers, Shrinking Planet:
The New Geopolitics of Energy," (Metropolitan Books)
coming out in April 2008. Michael was last on This is Hell!
in January 2007.
live from Toronto, writer, translator, activist Justin
Podur wrote Tuesday's ZNet story, "Colombia's
war and Venezuela's foreign policy." Justin is
also an editor for ZNet, which is part of Z Magazine. Justin
has reported from Haiti, Venezuela, Colombia, Argentina,
Brazil, Israel/Palestine, and Mexico. His work has also
appeared in Dollars and Sense, New Politics, New Left Review,
rabble.ca and India's Frontline. Justin is part of the Pueblos
en Camino collective (http://www.en-camino.org)
and runs the blog (http://www.killingtrain.com).
Gareth Porter is an investigative journalist and
historian who writes for both the Inter Press Service and
the Huffington Post. This week, he posted the story, "Bush's
Iran/Argentina Terror Frame-Up," at The Nation.
His most recent book is "Perils of Dominance: Imbalance
of Power and the Road to War in Vietnam" (University
of California Press). Back in January, Gareth reported on
the Strait of Hormuz controversy, "Official
Version of Naval Incident Starts to Unravel."
live from London, Celia Szusterman wrote the article,
"Pulp
friction: the Argentina-Uruguay conflict," which
was posted at openDemocracy.net this week. Celia is principal
lecturer in Spanish and Latin American studies at the University
of Westminster and an associate fellow at the Institute
for the Study of the Americas, University of London.
Lawrence Mishel is the president of the Economic
Policy Institute (http://www.epi.org/).
Lawrence was one of the co-authors in EPI's recently released
briefing paper, "Strategy
for economic rebound," and has been critical of
the Bush administration's stimulus package.
Our irregular correspondents were:
live from Seattle, Dr. Krys Bigosinski gave us a medical
report ...
Jeff
Dorchen delivered a Moment of Truth from his digs
in Chicago's Pilsen neighborhood ...
and, from San Francisco, Kate O'Donnell gaves us
a "Campaigners Perspective.'
Eric Janszen wrote the cover story for the February
issue of Harper's entitled, "The Next Bubble: Priming
the Markets for Tomorrow's Big Crash." Eric is the
founder and president of iTulip, Inc. He formerly served
as the managing director of the ventures firm Osborn Capital,
CEO of AutoCell, Inc., and Bluesocket, Inc., and entrepreneur
in residence for Trident Capital.
Ayesha Siddiqa is the author of "Military,
Inc.: Inside Pakistan's Military Economy" (Pluto
Press). Ayesha is a military analyst with a PhD in War
Studies from King's College, London. She contributes regularly
to Jane's Defence Weekly. She was the 'Pakistan Scholar'
at the Woodrow Wilson Center for International Scholars
in Washington DC.
Ayesha will discuss her book next Friday, February 1st,
at 4 PM in the International House, 1414 East 59th Street.
Mark Winne is the author of "Closing the Food
Gap: Resetting the Table in the Land of Plenty" (Beacon
Press). For 25 years Mark was was the executive director
of Hartford Food System. He now writes, speaks and consults
extensively on community food systems.
Graham Fuller, was a senior political analyst at
Rand and Vice Chair of the National Intelligence Council
at the CIA. Graham is currently adjunct professor of history
at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver. He is the author
of three books on Islam including, "A Sense of Siege:
The Geopolitics of Islam and the West," "The Arab
Shi'a: The Forgotten Muslims," and "The Future
of Political Islam." Graham has also written the lead
article to the latest issue of Foreign
Policy. The story is entitled, "A World Without
Islam" and in it Graham considers which elements of
the current unpleasantness are due to Islam and which are
due to other factors.
And our irregular correspondents were:
live from Budapest, Todd Williams tells us what's
happening in Hungary ...
Jeff
Dorchen delivers a Moment of Truth from his digs
in Chicago's Pilsen neighborhood ...
and, from San Juan, Dave Buchen gives us the lowdown
from Puerto Rico.
former UN weapons inspector in Iraq Scott Ritter
returns to This is Hell! to talk about his latest writing
including, "Presidential
Hopefuls Need a Reality Check on Iraq." His last
book was last May's, "Waging Peace: The Art of War
for the Anti-War Movement" (Nation
Books).
Ira Chernus also returns to This is Hell! Ira is
Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Colorado
at Boulder and author of "Monsters To Destroy: The
Neoconservative War on Terror and Sin" (Paradigm).
He wrote the TomDispatch.com article, "Is
Religion a Threat to Democracy?: Faith Talk on the Campaign
Trail."
Thomas Geoghegan, author of "See You in Court:
How the Right Made America a Lawsuit Nation" (New
Press). Thomas is a Chicago attorney who has written
several books including the National Book Critics Circle
award finalist, "Which Side Are You On?" which
also received a special citation from the PEN/Martha Albrand
Award judges.
Thursday, January 24th, will discuss his new book at 6 PM
in 57th Street Books, 1301 East 57th.
Chris Hedges is the former Middle East bureau
chief for The New York Times and was part of Times team
that won the 2002 Pulitzer Prize for their coverage of global
terrorism. He also received the 2002 Amnesty International
Global Award for Human Rights Journalism. His most recent
book is, American Fascists: The Christian Right and
the War on America" (Free
Press). He writes a column that can be found every other
Monday on Truthdig, the most recent being, "The
End of the Road for George W. Bush." This week,
Chris also posted the Nation piece, "Christianizing
US History."
And our irregular correspondents were:
Kevan Harris,
'The Radical Pessimist,' gave us his thoughts from Baltimore
...
Jeff
Dorchen delivered a Moment of Truth from his digs
in Chicago's Pilsen neighborhood ...
and, from San Francisco, Elvis
DeMorrow took a break from the Konspiracy Korner
to give us a little travelogue on his Holiday trip to Beijing.
live from Karachi, Fatima Bhutto is a writer and
poet. She is the daughter of Mir Murtaza Bhutto, who was
killed in 1996 in Karachi when his sister, and Fatima's
aunt, Benazir, was prime minister. In the wake of her aunt's
death, Fatima recently wrote the article, "Farewell
to Wadi Bua."
Caroline Elkins is an associate professor of African
studies at Harvard University and the author of "Imperial
Reckoning: The Untold Story of Britain's Gulag in Kenya."
Caroline wrote last Sunday's Washington Post opinion piece,
"What's
Tearing Kenya Apart? History, for One Thing."
live from London, Patrick Cockburn is the Middle
East correspondent for the London-based newspaper the Independent
(http://www.independent.co.uk/).
He was one of only a handful of journalists who remained
in Baghdad throughout the first Gulf War. Patrick is the
author of "The Occupation: War, Resistance and Daily
Life in Iraq," (Verso
Books) a finalist for the 2006 National Book Critics
Circle award for nonfiction. His recent writing includes,
"Conscience
and Empire," and "What's
Really Happened During the Surge?" His forthcoming
book, "Muqtada! Muqtada al-Sadr, the Shia revival and
the struggle for Iraq," will be published in April.