The Source - Rethinking meat: Philosopher John Sanbonmatsu challenges America’s ‘humane’ illusion
PBS News Hour - World - Hurricane Melissa nears landfall in Jamaica as Cat. 5: ‘This will be unprecedented’
PBS News Hour - World - News Wrap: Federal workers union calls for end to shutdown
PBS News Hour - Art Beat - Sudan’s cultural heritage becomes a casualty in its civil war
PBS News Hour - Art Beat - Abby Phillip explores the political legacy of Jesse Jackson in ‘A Dream Deferred’
Marketplace All-in-One - A sluggish spin cycle
The shutdown has delayed October's durable goods report. But fear not! Michigan-based appliance manufacturer Whirlpool reported earnings today, and they were pretty tepid. What does that tell us about Trump's tariffs, or the housing market? In this episode, corporate earnings act as a stand-in for missing federal data. Plus: There are winners and losers during a period of high beef prices, small business owners scrutinize their staffing strategies, and regional banks consolidate to compete with fintech.
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The Gist - Barista Michelle Eisen on Face Tattoos, Short Staffs, and Union Shots Fired
Michelle Eisen, barista-turned-organizer from Buffalo's first unionized Starbucks, breaks down how Workers United grew from one store to hundreds—and why the real fight now is over pay, scheduling, and the right to keep your piercings. She pushes back on what she calls "the most aggressive union-busting in modern labor history." Plus, examples of great journalism from The Daily on the Hole in The White House and The Atlantic on The Death Train. Also: a Spiel on tariffs, psyops, and Meet the Press mind games.
Produced by Corey Wara
Production Coordinator Ashley Khan
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1A - ‘If You Can Keep It’: Trump, Hate Speech, And Free Speech
Those are a few of the racist, antisemitic forms of speech and expression tied to notable Republicans in recent weeks. Vice President JD Vance downplayed outrage over some of these incidents as “pearl clutching.”
Meanwhile, President Donald Trump signed a memo designating groups like “Antifa” and Black Lives Matter as terrorist organizations. It’s part of the administration’s larger effort to crack down on what it calls a widespread left-wing conspiracy to carry out acts of political violence.
In this installment of “If You Can Keep It,” our weekly series on the state of our democracy, we talk about the Trump administration and the fine lines between hate speech, violence, and political dissent.
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Consider This from NPR - What happens if Antifa is labeled a foreign terrorist organization
NPR's Ryan Lucas reports that it could have enormous consequences, including making it illegal to provide something as meager as a bottle of water to what the Trump administration deems to be Antifa.
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This episode was produced by Tyler Bartlam and Connor Donevan, with audio engineering by Josephine Nyounai. It was edited by Justine Kenin and Krishnadev Calamur. Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.
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