A talk by author Joshua Clark Davis to mark the publication of his book of the same name. Joshua Clark Davis is an associate professor of U.S. history at the University of Baltimore, and his research has earned awards from the Fulbright Program, the Silvers Foundation, and the NEH Public Scholars Program.
He's joined by moderator Chenjerai Kumanyika, host of the podcast Empire City, and son of Herb Callendar, a '60s era civil rights activist who later changed his name to Makaza Kumanyika.
Joshua Clark Davis' book, Police Against the Movement, shatters one of the most pernicious myths about the 1960s: that the civil rights movement endured police violence without fighting it. Instead, activists confronted police abuses head-on, staging sit-ins at precinct stations, picketing department headquarters, and blocking traffic to protest officer misdeeds. In return, organizers found themselves the targets of overwhelming political repression in the form of police surveillance, infiltration by undercover officers, and retaliatory prosecutions aimed at derailing their movement.
The talk took place on November 6, 2025 at The Word Is Change, a radical bookstore in Brooklyn, NY.
Welcome to Indigenous in Music with Larry K! This week we welcome Robin Cisek, a powerful voice from the Métis Nation—alternative pop singer-songwriter. She’s joining us from Edmonton, Alberta, and she’s here with her brand-new album “Tempered,” a bold, self-produced project that blends dark-pop, electro-pop, and raw emotional storytelling. Robin is featured in our current issue of the SAY Magazine, read all about them at our place www.indigenousinmusicandarts.org/past-shows/robin-cisek.
Enjoy music from Robin Cisek, Dani Lion, Celeigh Cardinal, QVLN, Amaru Tribe, Bebel Bilberto, Elastic Bond, Thea May, Logan Staats, XIT, Tom Bee, Diyet & the Love Strangers, Pony Man, Raven Reid, Mimi O'bonsawin, Vince Fontaine, The Melawmen Collective, Kind of Sea, Iskwe, Joyslam, Spirit Cry, Jace Martin, Blue Moon Marquee, Norther Cree, Link Ray, The Band Blackbird, Elisapie and much more.
Visit us on our home page to learn about us and our programs at www.indigenousinmusicandarts.org, check into our Two Buffalo Studios and our SAY Magazine Library to find out all about our Artists and Entrepreneurs.
This week there's country classics from Patsy Cline, George Jones and Tennessee Ernie Ford. We've got blues from Louisiana Red, Blue Moon Marquee and the little-known Willie Egan plus the first recording of a standard made famous by Elvis and Willie Nelson.
Today, we begin with a question that refuses to die:
Why has the world ganged up on Palestine?
Why have more than sixty countries—powerful, wealthy, and self-proclaimed defenders of human rights—lined up behind Israel as it wages a campaign of annihilation against a besieged, stateless people?
This is not just war.
This is genocide.
And it is not being committed in isolation.
It is being funded, armed, and politically shielded by a global coalition of complicity.
According to UN Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese’s report, over 60 member states have contributed to Israel’s assault on Gaza—through weapons, surveillance tech, military aid, and diplomatic cover. These include the United States, Germany, the United Kingdom, France, Italy, Canada, and Australia. But also Arab states like Egypt, Jordan, and the UAE, who enforce the blockade, normalize relations, and offer logistical support.
Together, they have enabled the destruction of homes, hospitals, schools, water systems, and entire families.
Together, they have tried to erase Gaza from the map.
And together, they have failed.
Because the people remain.
Holding on to every grain of sand.
Holding on to the name: Palestine.
We demand answers.
Why does the world help Zionists steal the land from its rightful inhabitants?
Why do they reward apartheid with trade deals, arms contracts, and diplomatic immunity?
Why do they silence the truth, criminalize solidarity, and punish resistance?
This is not just about Palestine.
It’s about the moral collapse of the international order.
It’s about the Genocide Convention being shredded in real time.
It’s about the cost of silence—and the price of complicity.
So today, we name the countries.
We trace the weapons.
We follow the money.
And we ask the question that history will not forgive us for ignoring:
Why did the world choose genocide over justice?
Stay with us.
This is This Week in Palestine.
And this is where the silence ends.
Sonic Café, ahh we’ve officially entered the age of stupid, that’s 2024 music from the Jellybricks. If you would to see what your future looks like, check out the 2006 movie Idiocracy to see ahh what happens next. So hey, welcome to our little coastal radio café, I’m Scott Clark and this is episode 458. This time the Sonic Café presents a wild and really fun music mix pulled from 53 years. From the 1970’s we’ll Slip Into Darkness with War, and Deal with the Preacher from Bad Company. We’ve got great 90’s tracks from The Soup Dragons, Soul Coughing. All that plus Ok Go with Here It Goes Again. The tune featured a choreographed music video shot on moving treadmills. It blew up the Internet in 2005. To date the video has 66 million You Tube views. Then from 2017 great punk from The Chats, listen for Smoko. Also 2024 music from Dynamite Shakers, and David Gilmour featuring his daughter Romany Gilmour, and of course many more. Wedged in between these great tunes are comedy shorts from the late Norm MacDonald, also Drew Dunn and Jack Whitehall, along with some other neat stuff. So join us as the Sonic Café enters the age of stupid, here’s Cake from 1998 and we’re the Sonic Café.
The Gaza government media office stated on November 6th that barely a quarter of the expected and needed aid has entered the strip since the October 10th ceasefire, confirming that “the occupation continues its policy of strangulation, starvation, humanitarian pressure, and political blackmail against Palestinians in the Gaza strip.”
Dorotea Gucciardo speaks with host Nora Barrows-Friedman about the current health, medical and humanitarian situation there. She’s the director of development with the medical solidarity organization, Glia and joins us from Gaza.
On the Resistance Report, Jon Elmer covers recent messages from the resistance in Gaza acknowledging two years of armed forces support operations during the Battle of al-Aqsa Flood.
My guest in this program is Sam La Budde, a catalyst, if not the catalyst, in getting dolphins out of tuna nets. He has been an activist with the Earth Island Institute and a number of other organizations. In this conversation, we discussed the history of the dolphins, endangered species in Taiwan, and a potential economic boycott of redwood lumber. This program was originally broadcast in September of 1992, when Radio Curious was called Government, Politics and Ideas.
Originally Broadcast: September 14, 1992
A weekly 30 minute review of international news and opinion, recorded from a shortwave radio and the internet. With times, frequencies, and websites for listening at home. 3 files- Highest quality broadcast, regular broadcast, and slow-modem streaming. Germany, Japan, France, and Cuba.
It shore ain't grandpappy's playlist. It's the Contemporary Celtic Countdown, your chance to catch up with today's Celtic taste-makers, innovators and fusionists - 10 of our top tracks from our latest chart, plus a debut or two. Keep it fresh, Canada! You got yer Celt In A Twist with Patricia Fraser!