A weekly radio newsmagazine WHO WE AREARCHIVES"Between The Lines Q&A"/Transcripts [If you don't already have the FREE RealPlayer 8 Basic, then download it here.] BROADCAST SCHEDULEClick here to find a radio station which broadcasts Between The Lines near you. ACTIVIST RESOURCESGlobal social justice movement resourcesCollection of interviews and Web sites with contacts for breaking news about the global social justice movement. (Audio files in MP3 and RealAudio formats.) SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATIONGet "Between The Lines" delivered right to your desktop! For more information, click here. To sign up for Between The Lines Q&A, a weekly interview transcript with RealAudio link, send an email by clicking here! To sign up for Between The Lines Weekly Summary, a summary of the week's program with RealAudio link, send an email by clicking here! Listener/Activist Network Subscriptions
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![]() WPKN Radio mentioned in Danny Schechter's "The News Dissector" column on independent media values. Click here to view the column on Mediachannel.org.
New Haven Advocate's "Giving Voice to Dissent: Bridgeport's WPKN Radio Covers The News With Left-Of-Center Takes Not Found In The Mainstream Media" Hartford Courant, Feb. 26, 2003 "The Rest of the News," New Haven Advocate, July 3, 2003
ISSUES IN-DEPTH
War And Profiteering
Those Who Dared to Come Forward
Project for the New American Century's Letter to President Clinton on Iraq, Jan. 26, 1998 Urges President Clinton to remove the threat that Iraq poses by stating a strategy to do so in his "upcoming State of the Union Address."
"Iraq On The Record," U.S. Rep. Henry Waxman report, March 16, 2004
"Greenspan Testimony Highlights Bush Plan for Deliberate Federal Bankruptcy," by Michael Meurer, truthout.org, March 2, 2004
"Noam Chomsky on Middle East Conflict and U.S. War Plan Against Iraq," Between The Lines interview with Noam Chomsky, conducted by Scott Harris, for the Week Ending May 3, 2002
"The Iraq War & The Bush Administration's Pursuit of Global Domination," Counterpoint, Sept. 15, 2003
The Iraq Crisis, a Global Policy Forum, U.N. Security Council section on the 13 years of sanctions and other background of the war, the humanitarian situation, the importance of Iraq's huge oil resources, and disputes over a post-war government and reconstruction plan
"Occupation, Inc." Southern Exposure, Winter, 2003/2004
"Pipeline
Politics: Oil, The Taliban, and the Political Balance of Central
Asia," World Press Review Special Report, Nov.-Dec. 2001
"War
Profiteering," by The Nation editors, April 24, 2003
"An Annotated Saddam Chronology," ZNet, Dec. 15, 2003
Civil Liberties
"The Global Gulag: Into The Shadows," by Tom Engelhardt, TomDispatch.com, April 5, 2004
"Keeping Secrets: The Bush administration is doing the public's business out of the public eye. Here's how--and why," by Christopher H. Schmitt and Edward T. Pound, U.S. News & World Report, Dec. 12, 2003
"FBI Memo: Tactics Used During Protests And Demonstrations" Federal Bureau of Investigation, Oct. 15, 2003
"F.B.I. Scrutinizes Antiwar Rallies" by Eric Lichtblau, New York Times, Nov. 23, 2003
"Fascism Anyone?" 14 Signs of Fascism, Free Inquiry Magazine, Volume 23, No. 2
"Germany In 1933:
The Easy Slide Into Fascism," The Crisis Papers, June 9, 2003
Multi-Ethnic Issues Advocacy
Dr. Earl Ofari Hutchinson's Commentaries, The Hutchinson
Report
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
THIS WEEK'S PROGRAM
Interview with Adnan Rashed,
A network of more than 100 national, regional and local groups called U.S. Labor Against the War sponsored the first-ever U.S. tour of Iraqi labor activists in June. Six representatives of three Iraqi labor federations visited 20 American cities, with the goal of educating U.S. trade unionists about the conditions faced by Iraqi workers and their struggle to build direct worker-to-worker, union-to-union solidarity. The three federations represent a broad spectrum of the Iraqi labor movement, but all call for the withdrawal of U.S. and British occupation forces and all are working to build a democratic, secular society in Iraq. Adnan Rashed, a mechanic and a leader of the Iraqi Federation of Labor, spoke in Hartford, Conn. on June 22 at the state headquarters of the Service Employees International Union/1199. While stating that repression of labor was at its worst under Saddam Hussein, Rashed describes how U.S. military forces occupied his union's offices for eight months last year, evidence he says that repression of unions continues. Between The Lines' Melinda Tuhus spoke with Rashed through a translator. He discusses the history of repression, current economic conditions, and the support that Iraqi union activists seek from their brothers and sisters in the U.S. labor movement. Translation for this interview was provided by Mazin Qumsiyeh. Contact the sponsoring organization of the Iraqi labor tour, U.S. Labor Against the War, by visiting their website at www.uslaboragainstwar.org
![]() Giant September Anti-War Protests in Washington, D.C.
Interview with Leslie Cagan,
Recent public opinion polls indicate that increasing numbers of Americans now oppose the Bush administration's decision to launch the Iraq war and the continuing bloody occupation. A Washington Post-ABC News survey found that more than half of Americans believe the war has not made the U.S. safer. A Gallup poll found 56 percent believe the war to overthrow Saddam Hussein's government was not worth the sacrifice and 60 percent favor a reduction in U.S. troops deployed to Iraq. After the deaths of more than 1,700 American soldiers and news coverage of the British Downing Street memo that cast doubt on President Bush's stated justification for the war, some Democrats as well as a handful of Republicans in Congress are now openly calling for a timetable for a withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq. President Bush strongly opposes such a move and re-asserted in a June 28 national address his belief that there is a "clear path to victory" in Iraq. Over the past year, the U.S. peace movement has focused much of its energy on local organizing efforts. But anti-war groups are now planning for major protests this September in the nation's capital to give voice to the growing opposition to the war. Between The Lines' Scott Harris spoke with Leslie Cagan, national coordinator of United for Peace and Justice, who discusses the goals of the anti-war actions being organized by a coalition of peace groups for Sept. 24 through 26 in Washington, D.C. Contact the nationwide coalition United for Peace and Justice by calling (212) 868-5545 or visit their web site at www.unitedforpeace.org
![]() Few Winners if Congress Ratifies Central American Free Trade Agreement
Interview with Chris Slevin,
When the North American Free Trade Agreement, or NAFTA, was debated and approved by the U.S. Congress in 1993, little was known about the treaty's affect on workers in America, Canada and Mexico. But at the time, proponents of NAFTA promised that the agreement would boost the creation of high-paying jobs for thousands of Americans and lift millions of Mexicans out of poverty. More than 10 years later, critics of NAFTA point to data that indicates America has lost 900,000 jobs to cheap foreign labor and 1.3 million small Mexican farmers have lost their land due to unequal competition with giant multinational agribusiness. Now, President Bush has renewed his call for Congress to ratify the controversial Central America Free Trade Agreement, or CAFTA that would eliminate trade barriers between the U.S., Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua. Critics fear that like NAFTA, CAFTA could accelerate the loss of U.S. jobs, devastate small farmers and encourage the proliferation of sweatshops. Between The Lines' Scott Harris spoke with Chris Slevin, deputy director of Public Citizen's Global Trade Watch, part of a coalition of fair trade and labor groups opposing CAFTA. He considers the winners and losers if the Bush administration should prevail in its fight for congressional ratification of the Central American Free Trade Agreement. Contact Public Citizen's Global Trade Watch by calling (202) 546-4996 or visit www.tradewatch.org Related links:
![]() of under-reported news Compiled by Bob Nixon
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How You Can Support Between The Lines Click here to learn how to support our efforts! Last Week's Program Between The Lines Week Ending 7/1/05 Between The Lines Community Forum Share your thoughts with the Between The Lines crew and listeners' community! Between The Lines Special Report Speeches from "Denounce Torture: Torture and US Policy - What your government is doing in your name," Teach In at Yale University, by the Yale and New Haven chapters of Amnesty International, April 8, 2005
Mark Danner, New Yorker writer and author of "Torture and Truth," MacArthur Fellow
Barbara Olshansky, deputy director at the Center for Constitutional Rights
The Honorable John Conyers Jr., Congressman, Michigan's 14th District Broadcast-quality MP3s of these speeches available at www.radio4all.net U.S. Politics "Liberal Legislative Caucus Envisions Post-Bush Era," San Francisco Chronicle, July 5, 2005 "If Ax Falls On Roe, It May Also Split GOP," Los Angeles Times, July 4, 2005 "'Nuclear Option' Re-Emerges For Supreme Court Fight," Knight Ridder, July 2, 2005 "CAFTA Squeaks By Senate, By Tiniest Margin For Any Trade Bill In History," by Deborah James, Common Dreams, July 1, 2005 "Stage Set For Battle Over Supreme Court Future," by David Paul Kuhn, Salon.com, July 1, 2005 Bush Regime "Karl Rove Was Source Of PLame Leak," by Michael Isikoff, Newsweek, July 11, 2005 "Bush, The Obstacle To A Deal On Global Warming," Independent/UK, July 5, 2005 "Bush's Nuclear Nonsense," by Mark Hertsgaard, TomPaine.com, July 5, 2005 "Bush Speech Reveals Ongoing Deceptions About Iraq," by Stephen Zunes, Common Dreams, July 4, 2005 "Rove 'Knowingly' Refusing Interviews On Plame Leak," Editor & Publisher, July 4, 2005 "The Biggest Of Big Lies: A Speech Written And Delivered To Deceive," Capital Times editorial (Madison, WI), June 30, 2005 "Backing For Bush Is Gone, Say Local Veterans," by Michael Mayo, South Florida Sun-Sentinel, June 29, 2005 American Empire/War Profiteering "It's Imperialism, Stupid," by Noam Chomsky, Uruknet, July 5, 2005 "Military Recruiters Find The War A Difficult Sell," Boston Globe, July 5, 2005 "Barbarism, Inc.," by Gil Hubbard & David Miller, MediaChannel.org, July 1, 2005 "Bolton's Ready To Bomb Iran," by Michael Tomasky, The American Prospect, June 30, 2005 "Postwar" Occupation of Iraq, Afghanistan "The Rumsfeld Solution: Liberating Iraq, One Journalist At A Time," by Mike Whitney, SmirkingChimp.com, July 5, 2005 "U.S. Bombs Kill 17 Afghan Villagers As Search Continues For Soldiers," Guardian/UK, July 5, 2005 "Iraq Seen Emerging As Prime Training Ground For Terrorists," Knight Ridder, July 4, 2005 "Acid Attacks On 'Immodest' Women On The Rise In Iraq," Reuters, July 4, 2005 "UK Aid Funds Iraqi Torture Units," Observer/UK, July 3, 2005 "June One Of The Deadliest Months For Troops In Iraq," Knight Ridder, June 30, 2005 Civil Liberties/ Human Rights "The Right's Assault On The Academy: An Interview With Robert Jensen," by Bob Libal, Counterpunch, July 5, 2005 "Morphing The Gestapo," by Doris Colmes, SmirkingChimp.com, July 5, 2005 "Bush Team Uses 'Skin Game' To Attack Porn," by Patrick Moore, Newsday, July 5, 2005 "Patriotism Versus The PATRIOT Act," by Dorothy M. Ehrlich, San Francisco Chronicle, July 4, 2005 "Governmwent Secrecy Reaches Record High," The New York Times, July 3, 2005 "TSA Secretly Snoops On Air Passengers," by Jim Hightower, AlterNet, July 2, 2005 "California Spying, Schwarzenegger-Style," by Seth Sandronsky, Common Dreams, July 2, 2005 "The Stain Of Torture," by Burton J. Lee III, Washington Post, July 1, 2005 "Code Dumb: Look Who's Spying On Your Granny," Sacramento Bee (California) editorial, June 29, 2005 Media Issues "Koran Desecration Is Part Of The Torture Plan; So Is Media Silence," by Saul Landau, ZNet, July 5, 2005 "Court Limits Student Publishing Freedom," by Laura Van Hyfte, Michigan Daily News, July 5, 2005 "This July Fourth, Where's The Press?," by Mark Fitzgerald, Editor & Publisher, July 3, 2005 "Pliant American Press Behaving Like Pravda In Coverage Of U.S. President," by Linda McQuaig, Toronto Star/Canada, July 3, 2005 Activism "Protesters Prepare 'Warm' Welcome For G-8 Leaders," Inter Press Service, July 5, 2005 "Tens Of Thousands Of Anti-Poverty Demonstrators March Through Edinburgh," Associated Press, July 2, 2005 |