Episodi
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Legal sports gambling is the apple of the eye of many corporate and private state actors—but how does it affect states, communities, people?
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Episodi mancanti?
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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.
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News media start with the premise of immigration itself as a “crisis,” with the only debate around how to "stem" or "control" it.
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Trump’s “Big Lie” attorneys are not so much returning to the field, but actually never left.
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Defending Rights & Dissent has started a project called the Gaza First Amendment Alert, which is going to come out every other Wednesday.
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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.
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The more a strike affects the economy, i.e., the more effective it is, the harder corporate media try to smear workers as selfish and destructive.
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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.
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Musk’s Twitter is keeping certain information out of the public view—information that just happens to damage the presidential ticket he supports.
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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.
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Jen Senko’s film and the book based on it are an effort to engage the effects of that yelling, punching down, reactionary media.
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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”?
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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.
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Kroger is currently raising the prices of things like eggs and milk above inflation rates, simply because they can get away with it.
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More than 20 years after the New York Times was catastrophically wrong on the Iraq War, the paper cannot forgive anyone who was right.
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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?
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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.
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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.”
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