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Cato Daily Podcast - E-Verify and Tea Partiers
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Start the Week - 19/09/2011
Andrew Marr talks to the journalist Misha Glenny about the murky world of internet crime, as the cybercops pit their wits against the cyberthieves and hackers. The creative director at google, Tom Uglow, celebrates the art and ingenuity that comes with he calls, 'the post-digital age'. It's more colourful, but no less subversive, at an exhibition of Postmodernism at the V&A. The curator Jane Pavitt argues that for this radical movement, style was everything. And the art historian Martin Kemp explores how image, branding and logos have become the obsessions of our age - from the coca cola bottle to the images of Christ and Che Guevara.
Producer: Katy Hickman.
Cato Daily Podcast - State Reciprocity and the Second Amendment
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Cato Daily Podcast - Federalism, ObamaCare and Bond v. United States
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Cato Daily Podcast - Considering ‘Subsidy Risk’
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Cato Daily Podcast - ObamaCare Glitch Could Unravel Law
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Cato Daily Podcast - Osama Bin Laden’s Goals
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Cato Daily Podcast - The Risks of Terrorism
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Start the Week - Vasily Grossman: his life and legacy
Andrew Marr discusses the life and work of the writer Vasily Grossman in a special programme recorded at an event in Oxford to celebrate his greatest novel, Life and Fate. Grossman was a Ukrainian Jew who spent most of WWII reporting on the front line with a humanity and attention to detail that defied the Soviet censors. His masterpiece, Life and Fate, pitted communism against fascism but came down on the side of human kindness. Start the Week looks at the legacy of a writer who is largely ignored in his own country, and asks how Grossman's depiction of the war compares to the authorised version in Russia today. Andrew talks to the historian Antony Beevor, the writers Andrey Kurkov and Linda Grant.