Just posted to my radio archive
<http://www.leftbusinessobserver.com/Radio.html>:

September 11, 2003 9/11 show, sorta: Ruy Teixeira on George Bush's
poll numbers two years after the WTC went down * Nicole Speulda of
the Pew Center on foreign attitudes towards the U.S. * Leslie
Kauffman of UFPJ on Cancun and the state of activism today

September 4, 2003 Yale prof Michael Denning on the strike against the
university (ignore promise of Laura Smith at beginning of show - she
didn't answer her phone) * Heather Boushey on the disappearance of
the jobs that ex-welfare recipients were supposed to fill * Sharon
Beder, author of Power Play, on the worldwide privatization and
deregulation of electricity

it joins
--------

August 28, 2003 return after vacation, blackout, and fundraising
pre-emptions: Michael Albert on Parecon (participatory economics) *
Christian Parenti on his visit to Iraq

July 31, 2003 Ken Sherrill of the Hunter College poli sci department,
on the perils of nonpartisan elections * nurse-practitioner Helen
Ruddy-Brachman on the perils of Medicare reform

July 24, 2003 labor law professor Marc Linder on work hours and the
lack of pee breaks * Chris Carlsson on the bicycle anarcho-activists
of Critical Mass

July 17, 2003 Faye Wattleton, director of the Center for the
Advancement of women, on a poll of American women * Anatol Lieven on
postwar Iraq * Michael Shifter of Inter-American Dialogue on Bush &
Latin America

July 10, 2003 George Monbiot on global governance (and why the WTO
isn't so evil) * author and ctivist Marta Russell on the UN
conference on disability

July 3, 2003 Berkeley geographer Richard Walker on the geography of
the boom and bust * DH on the mess we're in with some listener phone
calls on the topic

along with
----------

* Nina Revoyr on the history of Los Angeles, real and fictional
* Bill Fletcher on war and peace
* Slavoj Zizek on war, imperialism, and fantasy
* Susie Bright on sex and politics
* Joseph Stiglitz on the IMF and the Wall St-Treasury axis
* Naomi Klein on Argentina and the arrested political development of
the global justice movement
* Michael Hudson, author of a report on the sleazy world of "subprime" finance
* Patrick Mason on the economics of racial discrimination
* Hilary Wainwright, editor of Red Pepper, on Blair's political troubles
* Hamid Dabashi on Iran
* William Pepper on the state-sponsored assasination of Martin Luther King
* Sara Roy on the Palestinian economy
* Tariq Ali, Noam Chomsky, and Cynthia Enloe on the then-impending
war with Iraq
* Michael Hardt on Empire
* Judith Levine on kids & sex
* Walden Bello on the World Social Forum and alternative development models
* Christopher Hitchens on Orwell and his new political affiliations
* Mark Hertsgaard on the U.S. image abroad
* Ghada Karmi on her search for her Palestinian roots
* Jonathan Nitzan on the Israeli economy
* Alexandra Robbins on Skull & Bones

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