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.)
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Many BTL interviews are excerpted from Scott Harris' WPKN
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Scott Harris' "Counterpoint" talk show
Between The Lines Executive Producer Scott Harris' live, 2-hour "Counterpoint" program is now archived in its entirety on The White Rose Society website at www.whiterosesociety.org
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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
"Iran: The Next War," by James Bamford, Rolling Stone, July 24, 2006
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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Interview with Beth Gilson,
On April 2, the U.S. Supreme Court, in a split decision, declined to hear appeals from 45 detainees at America's Guantanamo Bay prison camp in Cuba. Their lawyers had hoped to challenge the constitutionality of a new law in the ongoing saga of the men who have been imprisoned there without charges for more than five years. The law strips federal judges of the authority to hear challenges to the open-ended confinement of foreign citizens held as enemy combatants. The court's action lets stand a ruling by a lower court that upheld a section of the Military Commissions Act passed by Congress in 2006. Usually, the Supreme Court makes no comment when it turns down an appeal. But in this case, the court issued two separate opinions accompanying the one-sentence order denying the two petitions. One represented the view of three justices who felt that the Court should hear the men's cases; the other said the detainee's lawyers could go back to a lower court to exhaust all their remedies before the Supreme Court would rule on the matter. Between The Lines' Melinda Tuhus spoke with Beth Gilson, an attorney working as co-counsel with the Center for Constitutional Rights, which is overseeing all the Guantanamo cases. She is representing two Muslim men from the Uighur ethnic group in China, who are still being held, despite the release of other Uighurs arrested under the same circumstances after U.S. officials determined they were not enemy combatants. Gilson explains the relevant history of the Guantanamo prisoners, and what this latest Supreme Court decision might mean for the detainees' efforts to be granted a fair trial. For more information, contact the Center for Constitutional Rights at (212) 614-6464 or visit their website at www.ccr-ny.org
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