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

October 28, 2004 MARATHON SPECIAL: War at home, war abroad - Frances
Fox Piven, author of The War at Home, on Bush's domestic agenda:
repression, fundamentalism, and freeing capital from taxation * Tariq
Ali, author of Bush in Babylon on Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, and
the importance of Kerry beating Bush

it joins
--------

October 14, 2004 Sebastian Mallaby, author of The World's Banker, on
James Wolfensohn and the institution he heads, The World Bank *
Patrick McCully of the International Rivers Network responds to
Mallaby's claims about IRN and NGOs in general

October 7, 2004 Njoki Njehu of the 50 Years is Enough campaign on the
World Bank/IMF meeting and the state of the global justice movement *
Corey Robin, author of Fear, on the political uses of anxiety

September 30, 2004 Seth Kleinman of PFC Energy on $50 oil and the
production peak a decade or two in the future * DH on presidential
economics and an early version of a piece on Gallup's Republican bias
(available on the LBO website) * Glen Ford of The Black Commentator
on the importance of beating Bush even though the Dems are awful

September 23, 2004 Michael Hardt, co-author with Antonio Negri of
Multitude, on their follow-up to the international smash hit Empire

September 16, 2004 Mark Levitan of the Community Service Society on
poverty in New York City * Carol Brightman, author of Total
Insecurity, on war, empire, and the myth of American omnipotence

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

* Chalmers Johnson on the U.S. empire
* Jagdish Bhatwati on globalization
* Bill Fletcher on war and peace
* Slavoj Zizek on war, imperialism, and fantasy
* Naomi Klein on Argentina and the arrested political development of
the global justice movement
* Ralph Nader, at the Council on Foreign Relations, on foreign policy
* Susie Bright on sex and politics
* Richard Burkholder of Gallup on that firm's Iraq polls
* Anatol Lieven on Iraq
* Frank Newport of Gallup on polling
* Cynthia Enloe on masculinity in the Bush administration (and oil)
* Laura Flanders on Bushwomen
* Carlos Mejia, deserter from Iraq
* Norman Kelley on the crisis in black politics
* Joseph Stiglitz on the IMF and the Wall St-Treasury axis
* Lisa Jervis on feminism & pop culture
* Nina Revoyr on the history of Los Angeles, real and fictional
* Joel Schalit on anti-Semitism
* Robert Fatton on Haiti
* Gary Younge on a foreign journalist's view of the U.S.
* Ursula Huws on work and why capitalism has avoided crisis
* Michael Albert on participatory economics (parecon)
* Marta Russell on the UN conference on disability
* Corey Robin on the neocons
* Sara Roy on the Palestinian economy
* Christian Parenti on Iraq and surveillance
* Michael Hardt on Empire (several times, the last June 2004)
* 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

--

Doug Henwood
Left Business Observer
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