What Next | Daily News and Analysis - The Toxic Combo Behind Colorado’s Police Shootings
Colorado has one of the highest rates of officer involved shootings in the country. After looking at the data, reporters from Colorado Public Radio found that the problem is exacerbated by a complex mix of meth addiction, illegal firearms, and car theft.
Guest: Allison Sherry, Reporter for Colorado Public Radio
This episode originally aired in February 2020.
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Social Science Bites - Gurminder K Bhambra on Postcolonial Social Science
“I grew up in this country,” says Gurminder K Bhambra, a professor at the University of Sussex’s School of Global Studies, “and [yet] I always thought I was an immigrant. School told me I was an immigrant; the media told me I was immigrant; everything around me was that I was immigrant. When the Brexit debates were happening, I was talking to my dad about this. He keeps things, so he pulled out his old passports, my grandparents’ old passports, and all the passports were British.”
“So I’ve always been a British citizen, my parents have always been British citizens, and my grandparents have always been British citizens – not because we lived in Britain, but we lived in those parts of the world that were the British Empire at the time. Britain came to us, incorporated us within its polity, within its understanding. We were seen to be British, and yet when we traveled within the imperial polity and ended up in Britain, somehow we became migrants.”
This account and its summary – “people constructed their Britishness in opposition to me, as opposed to inclusive of me” – encapsulates Bhambra’s academic field: postcolonial and decolonial studies. In this Social Science Bites podcast, she discusses with interviewer David Edmonds why we should speak about the Haitian revolution in the same breath as the contemporaneous American and French revolutions, how former empires conveniently forget the contributions of their colonies now that those empires have downgraded to mere ‘nations,’ and what lessons we should draw from the current iconoclastic impulse toward imperial statuary. (Bhambra says she’s less focused on statues themselves than in “the histories that are embodied within them, and the extent to which people know and understand those histories and what it means for us, in the public sphere, to be defined by them.”)
Their talk begins with a quick primer of the origin of the complementary fields of post-colonialism and decoloniality. Each examines the legacy and lasting effects of European colonialism, but use different times and places as their starting points.
Postcolonialism emerged after the publication of its “keystone text” - Edward Said’s Orientalism – in 1978. “I don’t think Said necessarily thought that he was setting out to create a field when he wrote this book,” Bhambra explains. “But it was so influential – initially within English literature but then the humanities more generally – that it built up a body of scholarship in its wake that came to be understood as post-colonial studies.”
Initially, postcolonialism was interested in the interplay between the Middle East and South Asia and of Europe, generally starting around the 19th century.
Decoloniality, in contrast, initially explored Europe and Latin America and the Caribbean beginning with Columbus encountering the Americas.
As these fields expanded throughout the humanities and into areas such as historical sociology, scholars sought “what the place of the colonial was within their disciplines, find it missing, and seek to explain that absence.”
One absence that Bhambra herself explored in her own studies and her book Rethinking Modernity: Postcolonialism and the Sociological Imagination is how ‘the modern’ came to be seen as the province of Europe (and its North American domains) and their three revolutions, the American, French and Industrial. Her research quickly showed here that while sociologists might disagree on some particulars, they fully agreed that the modern world began with a dramatic break “between a pre-modern agrarian past and a modern industrial present, and that that temporal rupture could be located spatially within Europe, and that Europe (and North America is often encapsulated within this) marked a cultural separation from the rest of the world.”
That historical take is, she argues, a distortion. Modernity wasn’t manufactured in Manchester or drafted in a salon in Paris; it arose from existing colonial connections. “Modernity isn’t something that emerges endogenously and autonomously within Europe, from which it then spreads around the world. There were already global connections, and those connections were through processes of colonization, enslavement, imperialism, and so on. Those processes are the condition for things that we call modernity.”
The bill for that modernity, she adds, has yet to be paid in full.
“There is no institution in Britain or France to which colonial wealth has not contributed ... anybody who has an historical connection to the empire has a right to the wealth and benefits of what is now the nation.”
More or Less: Behind the Stats - Why did the UK have such a bad Covid-19 epidemic?
The UK has suffered one of the worst outbreaks of coronavirus anywhere in the world. We?ve been tracking and analysing the numbers for the last 14 weeks, and in the last programme of this More or Less series, we look back through the events of March 2020 to ask why things went so wrong - was it bad decision-making, bad advice, or bad luck?
The NewsWorthy - 100K Daily Cases Possible, New NAFTA & Baseball is Back- Wednesday, July 1st, 2020
The news to know for Wednesday, July 1st, 2020!
We’re covering:
- the newest prediction for the pandemic
- a historic trade deal taking effect today
- why China's crackdown on Hong Kong comes at such a significant time
- which airline will stop blocking middle seats
- Major League Baseball beginning its comeback
- what Bob Dylan just accomplished before anyone else
...and more in just 10 minutes!
Award-winning broadcast journalist and former TV news reporter Erica Mandy breaks it all down for you.
Head to www.theNewsWorthy.com to read more about any of the stories mentioned under the section titled 'Episodes' or see sources below...
This episode is brought to you by www.FunctionofBeauty.com/newsworthy.
Thanks to The NewsWorthy INSIDERS for your support! Become one here: www.theNewsWorthy.com/insider
Sources:
Fauci: Cases Could Hit 100,000 Per Day: WSJ, FOX News, AP, Reuters, Axios
Case Count/Death Toll: Johns Hopkins
Lawmakers Push Mask Wearing: AP, WaPo, Politico
Vaccine Must be 50% Effective: WSJ, Reuters, USA Today
USMCA Goes into Effect: Politico, CNN, USMCA
China Passes Hong Kong Security Law: Reuters, BBC, NY Times, CNN
Carl Reiner Dies: TMZ, NY Times, Reuters, USA Today
AA to Book Flights to Capacity Again: AP, USA Today, American Airlines
MLB Spring Training 2.0: NBC Sports, AP, CBS Sports
Minor Leagues Canceled: AP, CNN, USA Today
Red Light Could Preserve Vision: Newsweek, CNN, Gizmodo, Study
YouTube TV Raises Monthly Rate: TechCrunch, Mashable, Engadget, YouTube
Bob Dylan Milestone: NME, NY Times, Billboard
Work Wednesday: Microsoft Launches Job Skills Initiative: Microsoft, Engadget, TechCrunch
Short Wave - One Way To Slow Coronavirus Outbreaks At Meatpacking Plants? A Lot Of Testing
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In the Bubble with Andy Slavitt - Fighting the Crisis with Food (with José Andrés)
Andy catches up with Chef José Andrés in a rare moment of rest. Chef Andrés has been jumping from one crisis to the next since February, feeding people around the world affected by the pandemic. His organization, World Central Kitchen, is now providing 250,000 fresh meals a day in dozens of cities across America. In total, they’ve served nearly 18 million meals worldwide. They talk about how the pandemic has exacerbated the global hunger crisis and what Chef Andrés is doing to try and solve it. Plus: how to re-open restaurants safely.
Keep up with Andy on Twitter @ASlavitt and Instagram @andyslavitt.
Follow Chef José Andrés @chefjoseandres on Twitter and Instagram.
In the Bubble is supported in part by listeners like you. Become a member, get exclusive bonus content, ask Andy questions, and get discounted merch at https://www.lemonadamedia.com/inthebubble/
Support the show by visiting our sponsors!
- Teladoc provides access to certified doctors from the comfort and safety of home. Register now at www.teladoc.com/
- Talkspace online therapy works with thousands of licensed therapists. Use the promo code BUBBLE to get $100 off your first month and help support the show at talkspace.com
Check out these resources from today’s episode:
- Zach Fact Update: How much will the COVID-19 drug Remdesivir cost? https://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/2020/06/29/remdesivir-gilead-coronavirus-covid-19-drug-price-criticism/
- Dr. Peter Bach of Sloan Kettering Cancer Center weighs in on the price: https://twitter.com/peterbachmd/status/1277600751204917248
- Check out Chef Andrés’s opinion piece in the New York Times: https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/22/opinion/restaurants-coronavirus-food-aid.html
- And in the Washington Post: https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/04/20/our-people-are-hungry-we-need-leader-who-will-feed-them/
- Read more about World Central Kitchen’s Covid-19 food relief efforts: https://wck.org/chefsforamerica
- Meet Masky, World Central Kitchen’s safety mascot: https://wck.org/masky
- Learn about how the Independent Restaurant Coalition is working to save local restaurants affected by COVID-19: https://www.saverestaurants.com
- Here’s more information about the RESTAURANTS Act, a bipartisan bill which would establish a revitalization fund for independent restaurants affected by COVID-19: https://restaurant.org/news/pressroom/press-releases/restaurants-act-of-2020
- More on the FEED Act: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/voraciously/wp/2020/05/07/a-bipartisan-group-of-lawmakers-and-jose-andres-want-to-empower-fema-to-meet-americas-growing-hunger-crisis/
To follow along with a transcript and/or take notes for friends and family, go to www.lemonadamedia.com/show/in-the-bubble shortly after the air date.
Stay up to date with us on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram at @LemonadaMedia.
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array(3) { [0]=> string(184) "https://www.omnycontent.com/d/clips/796469f9-ea34-46a2-8776-ad0f015d6beb/202f895c-880d-413b-94ba-ad11012c73e7/4b28f1d5-1a9a-4f04-a116-ad1101326fb9/image.jpg?t=1619030146&size=Large" [1]=> string(10) "image/jpeg" [2]=> int(0) }The Goods from the Woods - “The Corona Diaries #48” with Alexis from The Violet Wanderers Podcast
Three L.A. comedians are quarantined in a podcast studio during a global pandemic. There is literally nothing to be done EXCEPT make content. These are "The Corona Diaries" and this is Episode #48. Our special guest today is Alexis from The Violet Wanderers Podcast! Check out their AMAZING podcast and follow them on Twitter @VioletWanderers. Music at the end is "Songbird" by Kenny G.
The Daily Signal - Students, Faculty Target Professor for Writing Honest History of Black Lives Matter
Views that part from far-left progressivism apparently aren't tolerated any longer by many colleges and universities. Bill Jacobson, founder and publisher of Legal Insurrection and professor of law, joins The Daily Signal Podcast to explain why he is being publicly shamed for writing the truth about the Black Lives Matter coalition.
Jacobson, who also directs the Securities Law Clinic at Cornell Law School, wrote a blog post in June explaining the tainted history of the Black Lives Matter movement, as well as another post about “anti-American, anti-capitalist activists” who started the movement. For this, Jacobson received a public rebuke from the dean of the law school and faces a student-led effort to boycott his class.
We also cover these stories:
- Dr. Anthony Fauci delivers a stern warning that America needs to change its approach to COVID-19.
- The Supreme Court issues a 5-4 win for families on school choice.
- The European Union won't allow visitors from America this summer.
Enjoy the show!
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Brought to you by... - 49: Making Nathan’s Famous
Nathan’s Famous turned the hot dog into a symbol of July 4th. But the story of how that happened says a lot more about America than just its love of a good BBQ. It’s immigrants striving for the American dream, hucksters spinning tall tales, underdogs fighting against the odds. The good, the bad, and the ugly of the US stuffed through a meat grinder, bigger and better than Nathan’s ever dreamed.
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