Liberadio(!) Podcast: Ahmed Mustafa, 3 Years Old, We Remember You

Posted by Liberadio(!) on September 18, 2007 under Uncategorized | Be the First to Comment

Summary: In this segment, Mary and guest co host, Lonnie Atkinson, interview Kathy Kelly, co-coordinator of Voices for Creative Nonviolence. Back in the day (1996), Kelly helped initiate Voices in the Wilderness, a campaign to end the UN/US sanctions against Iraq and has been to the country many times since then. In an emotional interview, Kelly suggests that there’s another, more humanitarian way forward in Iraq that doesn’t include our complete withdrawal nor the continued waste of blood and treasure. She also tells of her first-hand experience with Iraqi refugees living in Amman, Jordan. Tips for what to do instead of Christmas shopping this year also included.

Listen: Ahmed Mustafa, 3 Years Old, We Remember You (23.6MB, approx. 22 minutes)

On A Clear Monday, You Can See the Humanitarian Crisis

Posted by Liberadio(!) on September 17, 2007 under Uncategorized | Be the First to Comment

Links from this morning’s show:

Kathy Kelly, Voices for Creative Nonviolence
Rep. Mike Turner, the Fightin’ 51st!

Will the Democrats Betray Us?,” By Frank Rich (The New York Times)

Mr. Bush, confident that he got away with repackaging the same bankrupt policies with a nonsensical new slogan (”Return on Success”) Thursday night, is counting on the public’s continued apathy as he kicks the can down the road and bides his time until Jan. 20, 2009; he, after all, has nothing more to lose. The job for real leaders is to wake up America to the urgent reality. We can’t afford to punt until Inauguration Day in a war that each day drains America of resources and will. Our national security can’t be held hostage indefinitely to a president’s narcissistic need to compound his errors rather than admit them.

The Spoils of War: Billions Over Baghdad,” By Donald L. Barlett and James B. Steele (Vanity Fair)

Between April 2003 and June 2004, $12 billion in US currency - much of it belonging to the Iraqi people - was shipped from the Federal Reserve to Baghdad, where it was dispensed by the Coalition Provisional Authority. Some of the cash went to pay for projects and keep ministries afloat, but, incredibly, at least $9 billion has gone missing, unaccounted for, in a frenzy of mismanagement and greed. Following a trail that leads from a safe in one of Saddam’s palaces to a house near San Diego, to a P.O. box in the Bahamas, the authors discover just how little anyone cared about how the money was handled.

It Only Takes 51 Senators to End This War,” By Robert Naiman (CommonDreams.org)

With less than 60 votes, the Senate attached a timetable for withdrawal. The President, as expected, vetoed the legislation. Then the Senate backed down.

Fed’s Ex-Chief Attacks Bush on Fiscal Role,” By Edmund Andrews and David E. Sanger (NY Times)
And on his politics, and his war, and his abandonment of “conservative” principles…but it’s ok, he’s just trying to sell books.

Leave General Petraeus Alone!

Posted by Liberadio(!) on under Uncategorized | Be the First to Comment

File Under: Wish We’d Thought of That.

Tell It to Omar Mora’s Mom

Posted by Mary Mancini on September 14, 2007 under Uncategorized | Be the First to Comment

Big controversy brewing over comments made this week by GOP House Leader John Boehner. During a CNN interview with Wolf Blitzer he said, “the investment that we’re making today [in Iraq] will be a small price if we’re able to stop al-Qaida here, if we’re able to stabilize the Middle East.”

Perhaps Congressman Boehner doesn’t really understand the definition of “small price.” For clarification he should ask Mrs. Mora who lost her son, Omar, this week. Then maybe he can move on to the families of the other 3779 servicemen and women killed during this bloody thing. And while he’s at it, he can ask the millions of killed and displaced Iraqis if they think losing their lives, livelihoods, homes, and families are a “small price.” Then he can finish by asking the American people, a large majority of whom are against continuing with this horrible mess and could have come up with a better use for the half a trillion we’ve spent on this thing so far.

Boehner’s “by any means necessary” attitude is simplistic, short-sighted, insulting, and, as John Kerry labeled it, “stunningly cavalier.” Unless the “we’re” he referred to includes him or a member of his family what are doing some actual fighting in Iraq, he needs to rethink his trivialization of the “price” being paid.

Bush to Petraeus: It’s Nice To Share

Posted by Mary Mancini on under Uncategorized | Be the First to Comment

During his testimony to congress this week, General David Petraeus made it clear that he wrote his testimony himself and that it had “not been cleared by, nor shared with, anyone in the Pentagon, the White House, or Congress.” Of course, sharing the actual pieces of paper the report was written on is a lot different than say, discussing the content of the report. Jon Stewart and The Daily Show showcase the remarkable coincidences between Petraeus’s report and some of President Bush’s previous remarks.

Clement’s Poor People Bus

Posted by Mary Mancini on September 13, 2007 under Uncategorized | Read the First Comment

Tireless local activist, role model, and nicest person in the world, Pam Kidd, emailed me today with her Nashville mayoral run-off election day experience. She called it a “post-card from the other side.” I call it an antidote to election season myopia.

The conversation, heard early on election day, went something like this:

“Thank goodness it’s raining.”
“Why?”
“Don’t you know? … the rain will keep Clement’s old people and poor people from getting out to vote.”
“Oh, please, the rain’s not gonna’ help,” the second lady replied to the first, “Clement probably already has his poor-people bus out there in the projects, hauling ‘those’ people to the polls.”

Well, the second lady was right. I know, because I was there that very morning helping load Clement’s so-called “poor people bus.”

Earlier my son had called…”Why are you doing this again, Mom, going out into those neighborhoods. It’s dangerous…”

“Don’t be silly, Brock,” is my only reply.

I want to say more to my son, but really, there’s no way to explain what waits for me or why I go:

What sort of words can recount the crinkled face of the old, old man who cracks open the door to see whose there…as an appealing food smell wafts out from his kitchen. He’s delighted to hear he’s got a ride to the polls but…”can we please wait for him to finish frying his potatoes?”

An artist could never paint the joy that spreads across the face of a black woman, as she struggles out the door with her walker, recounting the time Bob Clement helped her family secure an apartment. In her experience, this is the only thing an “important person” has ever done for her. In that fleeting moment, as I help her board “Clement’s poor people bus,” I have become a tiny extension of that life changing event. For a millisecond, I am her hero.

Could a poet relate the poignancy of a beautiful, clear-faced man in his sixties who sits on his tiny porch and tells me how much he’d love to vote…”but when I was a kid…I messed up with the law…and they took my right to vote away forever?”

Not even in the movies, could someone invent a script showing an unremarkable person like me…knocking on a door, meeting a young mother whose baby has died the day before, wrapping my arms around that weeping woman…delivering something I have yet to understand.

Is there a great novelist who could record the sweep of hope and hopelessness, beauty and ugliness, pain and joy…that I inhale as I move through this Nashville neighborhood, gathering bits and pieces of it’s epic story.

And selfishly, Is there a deeper joy that that of seeing my daughter Keri, hold the hand of her own four year old daughter, Abby, as they knock on doors and talk and laugh with “those” people, as they hand out stickers and invite them to vote?

…Or of sharing the day with people like Reverend Ray Bowman who after hearing a man make an anti-immigration statement, says, “You see, Pam, our work will never be done until there’s not one single bigot like that man, left in the state of Tennessee?”

…Or of watching my friend Beckie, knock on that first door and seeing the true humanity of the person who answers, reflected on her face.

Chances are good that I’ll meet one of those ladies (quoted in the first paragraph) at some social event or community gathering. In the grand scheme of things, I’m at least marginally “a person of privilege” and I’m sure our paths will cross. By first impression, they’ll never guess that I step over the line from time to time (though not nearly often enough) to that place where Clement’s poor people live. Unfortunately, those same ladies will never know that their conversation (as it was related to me) has illuminated a truth that I’ve never been able to name until now:

Why do those faces on the “poor people bus” keep calling me back to that place that feels like, for lack of a better word….home?

Ahh, the truth so simple, it takes my breath…”Whatever you do for the least of these … you do for Me.”

My son’s phone call floats through my mind,”Why are you doing this Mom?”

My answer becomes a question for us all:

“Is there a more important spot in all of Nashville, than a seat on the “poor people’s bus?”

Pam Kidd as “unremarkable?” I don’t think so.

beats beyond borders

Posted by Mary Mancini on under Uncategorized | Read the First Comment

Tonight, Thursday, September 13, is beats beyond borders, a benefit concert for the Tennessee Immigrant & Refugee Rights Coalition, a statewide, immigrant and refugee-led collaboration whose mission is to empower immigrants and refugees throughout Tennessee to develop a unified voice, defend their rights, and create an atmosphere in which they are viewed as positive contributors to the state. Appearing at the benefit: Trio Ginga (Brazilian Roots), Seed & Soil (Reggae/Dancehall), Danny Salazar y trova urbana (Latino Roots).

Doors at the Rutledge, 410 4th Ave South, open at 7pm and the concert begins at 8pm. $10 cover goes to a good cause. Call 615.833.0384 for additional details.

We Are in Ur Tubes, Talkin’ on Ur Bandwidth

Posted by Liberadio(!) on September 12, 2007 under Uncategorized | 2 Comments to Read

We had some tech diffs during this morning’s inaugural Liberadio(!) Internet Radio Show so only half the show is available in the archive, which will be playing continuously during the day on our station.

Special Post-Election Live Show This Morning 8 - 9am

Posted by Liberadio(!) on under Uncategorized | Read the First Comment

Nashville has a new mayor and a new metro council and to celebrate we’re going live* this morning on our new internet radio station!

Click the link below to listen to us this morning from 8:00 to 9:00 am (CDT).

Listen to Liberadio(!)

*If you miss the live show, it will be available at the same link throughout the day.

Liberadio(!) Podcast: Gore Vidal Tonight at Vanderbilt

Posted by Liberadio(!) on September 11, 2007 under Uncategorized | 3 Comments to Read

Summary: Long before the events of September 11, Gore Vidal cemented his place as a harbinger of the negative effects of America’s aggressive foreign policies. So it’s only fitting that tonight, Tuesday, September 11, at 8 p.m. in Benton Chapel, Vanderbilt University will host a “A Conversation with Gore Vidal” as part of its Project Dialogue series. Vidal was our guest on the show Monday and we have to say, he does a very funny impression of W.

Listen to: Interview with Gore Vidal (00:21:54 20.6MB)