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- 726 - Katherine Gallagher on Abu Ghraib Verdict
A federal jury has just found military contractor CACI responsible for its part in Abu Ghraib abuse, in a ruling being called “exceptional in every sense of the term.”
Fri, 29 Nov 2024 - 27min - 725 - Amos Barshad on Legalized Sports Betting
Legal sports gambling is the apple of the eye of many corporate and private state actors—but how does it affect states, communities, people?
Fri, 22 Nov 2024 - 27min - 724 - Adam Johnson on Charlottesville March (2017), Jacinta Gonzalez on Criminalizing Immigration (2018)
If we're to believe the chest-thumping, high on Trump's agenda will be the enforced criminalization of immigration.
Fri, 15 Nov 2024 - 27min - 723 - Julie Hollar and Jim Naureckas on Placing Blame for Trump
We talk about what just happened, and corporate media’s role in it, with Julie Hollar, senior analyst at the media watch group FAIR, and FAIR’s editor Jim Naureckas.
Fri, 08 Nov 2024 - 27min - 722 - Nicole Foy on Immigration and Labor
News media start with the premise of immigration itself as a “crisis,” with the only debate around how to "stem" or "control" it.
Fri, 01 Nov 2024 - 27min - 721 - Shawn Musgrave, Orion Danjuma on Vote Fraud Hoax as Voter SuppressionFri, 25 Oct 2024 - 27min
- 720 - Chip Gibbons on Gaza First Amendment Alert
Defending Rights & Dissent has started a project called the Gaza First Amendment Alert, which is going to come out every other Wednesday.
Fri, 18 Oct 2024 - 27min - 719 - George Lipsitz on the Impacts of Housing Discrimination
A new book doesn’t just illuminate the thicket of effects of systemic racism as it affects where people live; it reframes the understanding of the role of housing.
Fri, 11 Oct 2024 - 27min - 718 - Derek Seidman on Insurance and Climate, Insha Rahman on Immigration Conversation
Why are events we pay insurance for a "crisis" for the industry we pay it to? The unceasing effects of climate disruption will only throw that question into more relief.
Fri, 04 Oct 2024 - 27min - 717 - Mohamad Bazzi on Israeli Terror Attacks
As every day brings news of new carnage, US citizens have a duty not to look away, given our government’s critical role in arming Israel and ignoring its crimes.
Fri, 27 Sep 2024 - 27min - 716 - Jen Senko on The Brainwashing of My Dad
Jen Senko’s film and the book based on it are an effort to engage the effects of that yelling, punching down, reactionary media.
Fri, 20 Sep 2024 - 27min - 715 - Gregory Shupak on Palestinian Genocide, Robert Spitzer on Gun Rights and Rules
Why do the press corps need a constitutional amendment to protect their ability to speak if all they’re going to say is, “oh well”?
Fri, 13 Sep 2024 - 27min - 714 - Dedrick Asante-Muhammad & Algernon Austin on the Black Economy
A people-centered press corps would spell out the meaning of economic “indicators” in relation to where we want to go as a society that has yet to address deep historical and structural harms.
Fri, 06 Sep 2024 - 27min - 713 - Freddy Brewster on Supermarket Megamerger
Kroger is currently raising the prices of things like eggs and milk above inflation rates, simply because they can get away with it.
Fri, 30 Aug 2024 - 27min - 712 - Steve Macek on Dark Money
How do we acknowledge the fact that many people’s opinions are shaped by messages that are created and paid for by folks who work hard to hide their identity and their interests?
Fri, 23 Aug 2024 - 27min - 711 - Emily Sanders on Criminalizing Pipeline Protest, Victoria St. Martin on Suing Fossil Fuel Companies
The crickets you’re hearing about efforts to eviscerate the right to protest the impacts of climate disruption? That’s all intentional.
Fri, 16 Aug 2024 - 27min - 710 - Lee Hepner on Google Monopoly, Shayana Kadidal on Guantanamo Plea Deal
Does the company that "corners the market" do so because people simply prefer what they sell? The anti-monopoly ruling against Google challenges that idea of how things work.
Fri, 09 Aug 2024 - 27min - 709 - Tim Wise on ‘DEI Hires,’ Keith McHenry on Criminalizing the Unhoused
The right wing has gotten much more overt about their intention to defeat the prospect of multiracial democracy, as demonstrated by its latest weaponized trope—the “DEI hire.”
Fri, 02 Aug 2024 - 27min - 708 - Ari Berman on Minority Rule
If voting were made easier, Donald Trump said, "You'd never have a Republican elected in this country again."
Fri, 26 Jul 2024 - 27min - 707 - Phyllis Bennis on Israel’s War on Palestinians
Years from now, we’ll hear about how everyone saw the nightmare and everyone opposed it. But history is now, and the world is watching.
Fri, 19 Jul 2024 - 27min - 706 - Shelby Green & Selah Goodson Bell on Utility Profiteering, Jane McAlevey on #MeToo & Labor
At some point, we will get tired of hearing news reports on "record heat"—because "heat" will have stopped meaning what it once may have meant.
Fri, 12 Jul 2024 - 27min - 705 - Hatim Rahman on Algorithms’ ‘Invisible Cage’
Algorithms create an environment where organizations enact rules for workers’ behavior, reward and sanction them based on that, but never allow workers to see these accountancies.
Fri, 05 Jul 2024 - 27min - 704 - David Himmelstein on Medicare Dis-Advantage, Tauhid Chappell on Cannabis Equity
The cynical maneuvers of Medicare Advantage don’t lead to good health outcomes, but they serve the real goal: netting private insurers more money.
Fri, 28 Jun 2024 - 27min - 703 - Saru Jayaraman on Tipped Wages
This week on CounterSpin: Donald Trump told a Las Vegas crowd earlier this month that, if elected, the “first thing” he would do would be to end the IRS practice of taxing tips as part of workers’ regular income. “For those hotel workers and people that get tips, you’re going to be very […]
Fri, 21 Jun 2024 - 27min - 702 - Jim Naureckas on Secret Alito Tape, Kennedy Smith on Dollar Store Invasion
Will elite news media now suggest we just go back to considering the Supreme Court a neutral body, deserving of life terms because they’re above the fray of politics?
Fri, 14 Jun 2024 - 27min - 701 - Matt Gertz on Trump Trial Verdict, Kandi Mossett on Dakota Access Struggle
It is a moment to examine the right-wing media that have fomented this scary nonsense, but also to look to reporting from the so-called “mainstream” to go beyond the “some say, others differ” pablum we often see.
Fri, 07 Jun 2024 - 27min - 700 - Katherine Li on Corporations’ First Amendment Dodge
Some courts are indulging the bizarre notion that regulation should be illegal, essentially, because it forces companies to say stuff they’d rather not say.
Fri, 31 May 2024 - 27min - 699 - Ellen Schrecker on the Attack on Academic Freedom
The violent attacks on college students and faculty across the country showcase the abandonment by many educational institutions of their responsibility to protect not only students, but the space in which they can speak and learn freely.
Fri, 24 May 2024 - 27min - 698 - Steven Rosenfeld on Election Transparency, Ian Vandewalker on Small Donors
The 2020 election was not stolen from Donald Trump through skullduggery--but many people who vote do believe that.
Fri, 17 May 2024 - 27min - 697 - Ahmad Abuznaid on Rafah Invasion
US press are so used to driving the narrative they don’t know what to do except yell “shut up shut up shut up” and send in the cops.
Fri, 10 May 2024 - 27min - 696 - Joseph Torres & Collette Watson on Media for Racial Justice
Different media, telling different stories, can change our understanding of our past, our present and our future.
Fri, 03 May 2024 - 27min - 695 - Sam on Students for Justice in Palestine, Sally Dworak-Fisher on Delivery Workers
Colleges’ official responses to protests are gutting the notion that elite higher education entails respect for the free expression of ideas.
Fri, 26 Apr 2024 - 27min - 694 - Baher Azmy on Abu Ghraib Lawsuit, Dave Lindorff on Spy for No Country
The long-fought effort to get legal acknowledgement of the abuse of Iraqi detainees in the Iraq War is coming to a federal court in Virginia.
Fri, 19 Apr 2024 - 27min - 693 - Chris Bernadel on Haiti
What needs to change in Haiti includes Western media presentations that ignore or erase even recent history.
Fri, 12 Apr 2024 - 27min - 692 - Rakeen Mabud on Greedflation, Rachel K. Jones on Mifepristone
Corporate profit margins are at a level not seen since the 1950s, as abject greed was whistled past by the press corps.
Fri, 05 Apr 2024 - 27min - 691 - Phyllis Bennis on Gaza Ceasefire Resolution, Robert Weissman on Boeing Scandal
A senior UN human rights official says there is a "plausible" case that Israel is using starvation as a weapon of war in Gaza, a war crime.
Fri, 29 Mar 2024 - 27min - 690 - Evlondo Cooper on Climate Coverage, Rick Goldsmith on Stripped for Parts
Elite media still can’t quite connect images of floods or fires to the triumphant shareholder meetings of the fossil fuel companies.
Fri, 22 Mar 2024 - 27min - 689 - Gay Gordon-Byrne on Right to Repair, Suyapa Portillo Villeda on Honduran Ex-President Conviction
Industry still argues that that cellphone isn't really "yours," in the sense that you can't fix it if it breaks.
Fri, 15 Mar 2024 - 27min - 688 - Ian Millhiser on Supreme Court Trump Protection, Alfredo Lopez on Radical Elders
Donald Trump could declare himself above the law—and that’s just been enabled by a recent Supreme Court ruling.
Fri, 08 Mar 2024 - 27min - 687 - Victor Pickard on the Crisis of Journalism
If we don’t ask different questions about what we need from journalism, we will arrive at the same old unsatisfactory responses.
Fri, 01 Mar 2024 - 27min - 686 - Gregory Shupak and Trita Parsi on Gaza Assault
As the US falls more out of step with the world, many in the US press seem divorced from the idea of US responsibility.
Fri, 23 Feb 2024 - 27min - 685 - Ariel Adelman on Disability Civil Rights
Acheson v. Laufer is another example of “weaponizing the courts to dismantle labor protections, housing rights and health guidelines.”
Fri, 16 Feb 2024 - 27min - 684 - Rakeen Mabud on Greedflation
The same people who earn wages also buy groceries, and pretending that we’re pitted against one another is not just mis- but disinformation.
Fri, 09 Feb 2024 - 27min - 683 - Aron Thorn on Texas Border Standoff
What if there isn’t a "border crisis" so much as an absence of historical understanding, of empathy, of community resourcing?
Fri, 02 Feb 2024 - 27min - 682 - Monifa Bandele on Reimagining Public Safety, Svante Myrick on Roadblocks to Voting
Communities are hard at work reimagining public safety without punitive policing. There’s new work on those possibilities.
Fri, 26 Jan 2024 - 27min - 681 - Gregory Shupak on Gaza and Genocide
How does the New York Times’ assertion that “what Israel is fighting to defend is a society that values human life” stand up now?
Fri, 19 Jan 2024 - 27min - 680 - Sebastian Martinez Hickey on Minimum Wage, Saru Jayaraman on History of Tipping
Elite reporters are so removed from daily reality that they assume a raise in wages means fast food employees have to lose their jobs.
Fri, 12 Jan 2024 - 27min - 679 - Chip Gibbons on the Right to Protest
US journalists invoke the First Amendment a lot, but not so much when it extends to regular folks saying NO to the US government.
Fri, 05 Jan 2024 - 27min - 678 - Best of CounterSpin 2023
CounterSpin is thankful to all the activists, researchers, reporters and advocates who appear on the show to help us see the world more clearly.
Fri, 29 Dec 2023 - 27min - 677 - Wadie Said on the New McCarthyism
Powerful institutions, including the media, combine a selective understanding of free expression with a vehement desire to enforce it.
Fri, 22 Dec 2023 - 27min - 676 - Richard Wiles & Matthew Cunningham-Cook on Climate Disruption Filtered Through Corporate Media
We can't have a public conversation about how fossil fuels cause climate disruption in a corporate media moneyed by fossil fuel companies.
Fri, 15 Dec 2023 - 27min - 675 - Sonya Meyerson-Knox on Jewish Voice for Peace
The devastation of Gaza, and the vehement efforts to silence anyone who wants to challenge it, is the story for today.
Fri, 08 Dec 2023 - 27min - 674 - Melissa Gira Grant on Abortion Rights & Politics
Too many outlets seem to have trouble shaking the framing of abortion as a "controversy," or as posing problems for this or that politician.
Fri, 01 Dec 2023 - 27min - 673 - Mark Weisbrot on Argentina’s Javier Milei
Argentina's new president questions the death toll of the country's military dictatorship and calls climate change a “lie of socialism.”
Fri, 24 Nov 2023 - 27min - 672 - Scott Burris on US v. Rahimi
The question is whether the Court’s conservative majority can use its special brand of backwards-looking to determine this country’s future.
Fri, 17 Nov 2023 - 27min - 671 - Jamil Dakwar on US & Human Rights, Matt Gertz on Mike Johnson
Shouldn't the press corps be actively involved in informing us about the person third in line for the presidency?
Fri, 10 Nov 2023 - 27min - 670 - Raed Jarrar on Biden & Saudi Arabia, Joe Torres on Tulsa Massacre
“The newspapers will have you hating the people who are being oppressed, and loving the people who are doing the oppressing.”
Fri, 03 Nov 2023 - 27min - 669 - Peter Maybarduk on Paxlovid, Maya Schenwar on Grassroots Journalism
Paxlovid's "transition" to the commercial market entails hiking the cost of the treatment to 100 times the cost of production.
Fri, 27 Oct 2023 - 27min - 668 - Christopher Bosso on Food Assistance, Barbara Briggs on Workplace Disasters
The primary food aid program, SNAP, while the constant target of the racist, drown-government-in-the-bathtub crowd, keeps on keeping on.
Fri, 20 Oct 2023 - 27min - 667 - Phyllis Bennis on Gaza
This week on CounterSpin: In the wake of the October 7 attacks by Hamas and the ensuing bombing campaign from Israel on the Gaza Strip, many people were surprised that CNN‘s Fareed Zakaria aired an interview with a Palestinian activist who frankly described the daily human rights violations in Gaza, the right of […]
Fri, 13 Oct 2023 - 27min - 666 - Rodrigo Camarena on Wage Theft
Corporate media tell us to be mad at the rando taking toilet paper from Walgreens, but not the executive who’s skimming your paycheck.
Fri, 06 Oct 2023 - 27min - 665 - Stephen Zunes on Menendez Indictment
The story is mostly about the political fortunes of an individual; the huge numbers of less powerful people impacted are, at best, backdrop.
Fri, 29 Sep 2023 - 27min - 664 - Lisa Xu on Auto Workers Strike
An unprecedented labor action is underway as thousands of Midwest autoworkers working for the Big 3 went on strike at the same time.
Fri, 22 Sep 2023 - 28min - 663 - Maha Hilal on Innocent Until Proven Muslim
September 11, 2001, is the exemplar of a past that isn’t dead, or even past, and for no one more particularly than Muslims.
Fri, 15 Sep 2023 - 27min - 662 - Amanda Yee on Korean Travel Ban, Hyun Lee on Korea History
Media have an active disinterest in telling the story of the Korean peninsula in anything other than static, cartoonish terms.
Fri, 08 Sep 2023 - 28min - 661 - Alfie Kohn, Diane Ravitch and Kevin Kumashiro on Education
It does no disservice to the education battles of the current day to connect them to previous battles and conversations.
Fri, 01 Sep 2023 - 27min - 660 - Kehsi Iman Wilson on Americans with Disabilities Act
The ADA demands all kinds of attention, every day—not a once a year pat on the back about "how far we’ve come."
Fri, 25 Aug 2023 - 28min - 659 - Baher Azmy on Abu Ghraib Torture Lawsuit, Thomas Germain on Online History Destruction
Unlike elite media’s misty memories, the lawsuit is a stubborn indication that those responsible for Abu Ghraib haven't been called to account.
Fri, 18 Aug 2023 - 27min - 658 - Shankar Narayan on Facial Misrecognition, Braxton Brewington on Student Debt Abolition
Facial recognition, a technology that has been proven wrong, has been deemed harmful, in principle and in practice, for years now.
Fri, 11 Aug 2023 - 27min - 657 - Teddy Ostrow on UPS/Teamsters Agreement, Matthew Cunningham-Cook on GOP Climate Sabotage
Elite media are deeply accustomed to calling any union action a harm, and any company acknowledgment of workers’ value a concession.
Fri, 04 Aug 2023 - 27min - 656 - Melissa Crow on Asylum Restrictions, Dave Zirin on NYT’s Vanishing Sports Section
Advocates have long declared that Biden’s asylum restrictions are not just harmful but unlawful. And a federal judge has just agreed.
Fri, 28 Jul 2023 - 27min - 655 - Kevin Minofu on Say Her Name
Say Her Name is about adding Black women to our understanding of police violence—to help make our response more meaningful and impactful.
Fri, 21 Jul 2023 - 27min - 654 - Arlene Martínez on Corporate Subsidies, Florín Nájera-Uresti on Journalism Preservation
White supremacy and economic policy are completely different stories for the press, but not for the people.
Fri, 14 Jul 2023 - 27min - 653 - Emily Sanders on How Not to Interview an Oil CEO, Kaufman & Bozuwa on Fighting Climate DisruptersFri, 07 Jul 2023 - 27min
- 652 - Taryn Abbassian and Others on Dobbs One Year Later
The impacts of the Dobbs ruling are still reverberating, as is the organized pushback that we can learn about and support.
Fri, 30 Jun 2023 - 27min - 651 - Nancy Altman on GOP Social Security Attack, Daniel Ellsberg Revisited
When Daniel Ellsberg died, media burnished their own reputation as truth-tellers while somehow dishonoring the practice of truth-telling.
Fri, 23 Jun 2023 - 27min - 650 - Sonali Kolhatkar on the Power of Narrative
Narrative is an important tool for folks looking to change the world for the better, in part by changing the stories we tell one another.
Fri, 16 Jun 2023 - 27min - 649 - Tauhid Chappell on Cannabis Justice, Evan Greer on Kids Online Safety Act
What will the legalization, and profitizing, of marijuana mean for the people and communities most harmed by its criminalization?
Fri, 09 Jun 2023 - 28min - 648 - Jeff Chang & Jeannie Park on Asian Americans and Affirmative Action
Asian-American students are being used as the face of attempts to eliminate affirmative action or race-consciousness in college admissions.
Fri, 02 Jun 2023 - 28min - 647 - Eric Thurm on the Hollywood Writers’ Strike
Many corporate news reporters seem unable to present a labor action as other than an unwonted interruption of a natural order.
Fri, 26 May 2023 - 27min - 646 - Cody Bloomfield on Anti-Activist Terrorism Charges
Some officials fully intend to treat anyone who stands in opposition to whatever they decide they want to do as enemies of the state.
Fri, 19 May 2023 - 27min - 645 - Ian Millhiser on Supreme Court Corruption
Whether the Supreme Court gets away with its rejection of ethics depends in part on journalists' willingness to stick with the stories.
Fri, 12 May 2023 - 27min - 644 - Chris Lehmann on Debt Ceiling Myths, Kyle Wiens on Right to Repair’s Moment
Republican brinkmanship could devastate millions of people—along with the harm to public understanding of what's actually going on.
Fri, 05 May 2023 - 27min - 643 - Jen Senko on the Cost of Hate Talk
Hate-fueled and hate-fueling media have political and historical impacts—and interpersonal, familial ones as well.
Fri, 28 Apr 2023 - 27min - 642 - Rachel K. Jones on Mifepristone, Donna Murch on Rutgers Labor Action
A Texas judge revoking FDA approval of mifepristone may be a "confusing legal battle" for media--but for most people, it's just frightening.
Fri, 21 Apr 2023 - 27min - 641 - Taxes: Who Pays and What For?
Tax season leads some of us to ponder what we get in return for our resources—streets and stop signs, to be sure, but also wars.
Fri, 14 Apr 2023 - 27min - 640 - Saurav Sarkar on Starbucks Organizing
Crushing Starbucks workers' attempts to work together is against the law—but it's not the sort of crime elite media seem able to identify.
Fri, 07 Apr 2023 - 27min - 639 - Silky Shah on Detention Center Fire, Eagan Kemp on Medicare Advantage
Do Black and brown people have a right to move freely in the world? The Ciudad Juárez fire and what it tells us about immigration policy.
Fri, 31 Mar 2023 - 27min - 638 - Norman Solomon on the Iraq Invasion, 20 Years Later
What passes for debate about why we must remain at war with whomever is designated has roots in 2003 worth studying.
Fri, 24 Mar 2023 - 27min - 637 - Kamau Franklin on Cop City Protests
The corporate press corps seems intent on forcing a vital, important situation into old, tired and harmful frames.
Fri, 17 Mar 2023 - 27min - 636 - Kim Knackstedt on Disability Policy, Algernon Austin on Unemployment & Race
Media interest in historic breakthroughs should extend to the barriers disabled people face in 2023, and how policies could address them.
Fri, 10 Mar 2023 - 27min - 635 - Makani Themba on Jackson Crisis
Jackson, Mississippi, residents who have been harmed many times over are being told that the appropriate response is to take away their voice.
Fri, 03 Mar 2023 - 27min - 634 - Ellen Schrecker on the New McCarthyism
Our past has not been fully grappled with or understood, and that has everything to do with what’s happening now.
Fri, 24 Feb 2023 - 27min - 633 - Maritza Perez Medina on Fentanyl, Nancy Altman on Social Security
Saying how hard you want to be on "dealers" is really an admission of a failure to address a public health issue as a public health issue.
Fri, 17 Feb 2023 - 27min - 632 - Evan Greer on the Fight for the FCC
What could be happening if Biden's long-languishing nomination of public interest advocate Gigi Sohn were put through?
Fri, 10 Feb 2023 - 27min - 631 - Shelby Green and Selah Goodson Bell on Utility Shutoffs & Profiteering
Electric utilities have disconnected US households more than 4 million times since the beginning of Covid, preceding the Ukraine War.
Fri, 03 Feb 2023 - 27min - 630 - Michael Mechanic on Underfunding the IRS
The message from many politicians and their media amplifiers: Cheating on taxes is a luxury only the rich can, or should be able to, afford.
Fri, 27 Jan 2023 - 27min - 629 - Maurice Carney on Patrice Lumumba
Lumumba's assassination, judging by attention, has no lessons for US citizens or the press corps about the past, the present or the future.
Fri, 20 Jan 2023 - 27min - 628 - David Sirota on Accountability Journalism
The public still look to news media to give them accurate, independently sourced and documented information to help them make decisions.
Fri, 13 Jan 2023 - 27min - 627 - Paul Hudson on Airline Meltdown, Melissa Crow on Asylum Policy
There's an unarticulated underpinning to elite media conversation that as a consumer, you don't have anything called a "right."
Fri, 06 Jan 2023 - 27min
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