57 Years After the March on Washington: White Supremacists Rise Again
On today's episode of Loud & Clear, Brian Becker and John Kiriakou are joined by
Sputnik News analysts and producers Walter Smolarek and Nicole Roussell.
Friday is Loud & Clear’s weekly hour-long segment The Week in Review, about the
week in politics, policy, and international affairs. Today they focus on Trump’s
speech accepting the Republican nomination last night, the RNC event as a whole,
the vigilante who killed two protesters in Kenosha, Wisconsin, the professional
sports strikes going on this week, and more.
In a presidential nomination acceptance speech as dark and angry as any ever
given, President Trump last night said that Joe Biden, if elected president,
would destroy the nation and would cede it to anarchists, extreme leftists,
looters, rioters, and criminals. He said that Biden would destroy America’s
suburbs, apparently by allowing African-Americans to live there, and he
ridiculously accused Biden of “ignoring science.” Pundits are calling the
speech, “a grinding monotone” and “low energy.” Others are calling it “one of
the most sustained displays of propagandizing in the modern history of Western
democracy.” Lee Camp, a writer, comedian, activist, journalist, host of the
television show “Redacted Tonight,” on RT America, whose latest book is called
“Bullet Points & Punch Lines,” and who’s at leecamp.com, joins the show.
China yesterday fired a barrage of missiles into the South China Sea in response
to rising tensions with the United States. The US, for its part, has repeatedly
sent ships into the South China Sea, has improved relations with Taiwan,
Beijing’s arch-rival, and initiated an arms race with China. President Trump
says that he’s the man to shepherd relations with China into a new, more
militarized, era. But is that just a recipe for war? Brian and John speak with
Mike Wong, the Vice President of the San Francisco chapter of Veterans for
Peace.
Prominent Indian civil liberties defender Prashant Bhushan defended himself from
possible imprisonment for insulting the country’s Supreme Court this week, the
latest in what activists say is a wave of repressive actions by the government
of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Draconian new laws, such as the Public Safety
Act, the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act, and tight internet curbs have
resulted in real pressure on the most basic civil rights like freedom of speech
and freedom of assembly. Dr. Ania Loomba, a literary scholar and the Catherine
Bryson professor of English at the University of Pennsylvania who teaches
English literature and early modern culture and the history of colonialism and
postcolonialism in South Asia, joins the show.
It’s Friday! So it’s time for the week’s worst and most misleading headlines.
Brian and John speak with Steve Patt, an independent journalist whose critiques
of the mainstream media have been a feature of his site Left I on the News and
on twitter @leftiblog, and Sputnik producer Nicole Roussell.