Iran Maintains Upper Hand over US and Israel in Escalating and Costly War; Trump DOJ Wins Terrorism Conviction of Accused Antifa Activists, Criminalizing Dissent; Senate Confirms ‘Unqualified Hothead’ Markwayne Mullin as DHS Secretary.
Ngugi wa Thiong'o left us last May, 2025. He was one of the greatest voices in African and world literature. In an interview with Michael Slate, he discusses how his art developed, the role of art and writing in politics, the struggle against colonial and neo-colonial oppression and the movement to build a whole new world worthy of human beings.
If you're still driving a combustion engine vehicle, you've probably noticed that within a matter of weeks the price of gas has increased by about a third, courtesy of the illegal war being waged on Iran by the US and Israel. This week on Sea Change Radio, we welcome returning guest and oil expert Daniel Dicker to get an inside perspective on the latest spike in the global price of oil. We discuss the impact the high prices have on the renewable energy industry, ponder how it could affect U.S. domestic oil producers, and examine how the Trump Administration's manipulation of markets has made oil a very risky commodity to trade.
Danni Hoshino (AKA Light Bird) previews her Transgender Day of Visibility release, “Alright”! Birthday wishes to journalist Rachel Maddow, actor David Hyde Pierce, and science fiction writer Samuel R. “Chip” Delany, who reads from “Among the Blobs.” Plus India’s transgender people stripped of rights, IOC bans trans women athletes with “sex texting,” and more global LGBTQ news.
The first talk of 2012 by the social critic and noted author Michael Parenti fit perfectly into the debates of the time, that of the One versus the 99% and the finally no longer taboo question: What exactly is CAPITALISM? Parenti is debunking some of the myths of capitalism: That it creates jobs, peace, democracy and wealth - etc.
EVERGREEN. Contact: sean@armedia.ca
The Mix Sessions is a journey through hypnotic rhythms and soulful deep house groove. Featuring slush, atmospheric textures.
TRACKLIST
01. Jon Billick - Down
02. Jef Kearns-I Wanna Be The One (Savage Groove Mix)
03. Sue Avenue - Hermeto
04. Gene King & Demuir - 3:33 AM
05. Catz'n Dogz - It's Happening (DJ Steaw Remix)
06. Jay Tripwire - Filament Burst
07. Daniel Dubb - Little Helper 260-3
08. Kevin Yost - High Standards
09. Vincent Kwok - Eyes On You
10. Demiur - Unicorn
EVERGREEN. Contact: sean@armedia.ca
Trip Hop Radio is a sonic escape into a world of dreamy beats and introspective melodies, featuring an eclectic blend of trip hop, chillout, and downtempo grooves. Updated weekly.
TRACKLIST
01. Now Always Fades - Into The Doldrums
02. Beatowls - All I See Is Trouble
03. a.s.o. - Rain Down
04. Massive Attack - Teardrop
05. Telenova - SIlver Lining
06. Bob Moses - Like It Or Not
07. Gruve Collective - Try Harder
08. Everything But The Girl - Before Today
09. The xx - Angels (Four Tet Remix)
10. Hudson Alexander - Waiting
11. Sean Savage - Sound 805
12. Tricky - Pumpkin
The Appalachian Sunday Morning is a two hour all Gospel Music Radio program with radio station & program host Danny Hensley. The program is recorded live each Sunday morning while being broadcast on 91.7 FM Community radio and streamed world wide on www.sbbradio.org.
This program is uploaded to SoundCloud, RSS.com, radio4all, Podbean and iTunes to mention a few.
Record-smashing winter heat in the U.S. - is not a story about America. In 20 years, heat domes appeared over Europe, Russia, Canada, Iran, Japan, China, and Australia just to name a few - stalled heat waves out of season and in new geography. Pro journalists on the scene with CoveringClimateNow. Then Dr. Thomas Gasser takes us into the long future as nature's greenhouse continues to emerge. Right now and then, on Radio Ecoshock.
Lots of trailblazers again this week on Backbeat, you'll hear the first country artist to use a solid-body electric guitar, the first female vocal group stars, the first female country star, the Harmonizing Four reviving an old spiritual with an implied anti-slavery message, plus another gospel group with another much more direct message and a lot more. A radio show unlike any other.
Indigenous in Music with Larry K and The City Lines in our Spotlight Interview (Rock)
Your tuned into Indigenous in Music with Larry K, and this week we welcome back a familiar voice and a powerful storyteller. Patrick Deneau, the creative force behind The City Lines, returns with brand new music that digs deep and speaks truth. His latest album, Prescribed Fires, is bold, intentional, and full of that honest songwriting we’ve come to expect. You can read all about The City Lines at our place at www.indigenousinmusicandarts.org/past-shows/the-city-lines.
And Jumping into our musicial circle today is The City Lines, Andrew Clingan, J.A.M, Donita Large, Aterciopelados, Teagan Littlechief, Tracy Bone, Burnstick, Solagua, The City Lines, Alex Anest, Lancelot Knight, LILI, Mike Paul, TRIBZ, Samantha Crain, Melody McArthur, Raven Reid, The North Sound, Raymond Sewell, JD Crosstown, Q052, Angela Amarualik, Def-i, Ariano, The Melawmen Collective, Kind of Sea, Irv Lyons Jr, The Deeds, Dan Scram, Brule, Hataalii, Levi Platero and much more.
Visit us at www.indigenousinmusicandarts.org to explore our programs, celebrate culture, and connect with powerful voices shaping our communities. Step inside Two Buffalo Studios, browse our SAY Magazine Library, and meet the incredible Artists and Entrepreneurs who are making an impact today.
In 1948, an entire world was overturned.
Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were uprooted from their homes, families pushed into exile, villages emptied, communities scattered across borders they never chose.
Homes were left behind with the doors still open, meals still on the table, keys still in the hands of those who believed they would return in a few days.
More than 400 towns and villages were depopulated or destroyed, their names erased from maps but not from memory.
For Palestinians, this was not just a political event, it was the shattering of a homeland, the breaking of a people’s continuity, the beginning of a wound that has never been allowed to heal.
And yet, when people try to speak about this history, they are often met with denial.
Some insist it never happened.
Some say the people left “voluntarily.”
Some try to rewrite the story entirely, as if erasing the truth could erase the trauma.
But history does not disappear because someone is uncomfortable with it.
History remains in the archives, in the testimonies, in the ruins of villages, in the memories passed from grandparents to grandchildren.
And nobody speaks this truth more clearly than those who have studied it deeply - historians, researchers, and even individuals who grew up inside the Israeli establishment itself.
Voices like Miko Peled, who comes from a prominent Israeli military family, speak openly about what happened in 1948, Palestinians struggle, and why acknowledging it matters.
He is not the only Jewish historians who have spent decades examining the archival record. There is Ilan Pappé, who has written extensively about the depopulation of Palestinian villages, and there is Benny Morris, who documented the displacement using Israeli military and government archives. There are many other voices that we will spend a day talking about them.
Their work does not rely on rumor or ideology.
It relies on documents, testimonies, and evidence.
But the story does not end in 1948.
It continues today, in Gaza, in the West Bank, in refugee camps, in the war with Iran, and in the global streets where people march for justice.
And the world is watching more closely than ever.
Because the Palestinian struggle is no longer just a regional issue.
It has become a mirror held up to the entire world.
A test of moral consistency.
A measure of whether nations truly believe in human rights, or only when it is politically convenient.
Many people around the world see a painful double standard:
When one people suffers, the world mobilizes.
When Palestinians suffer, the world hesitates.
When international law is violated in one place, it is condemned.
When it is violated in Palestine, it is debated.
And as long as these double standards persist, especially from powerful Western nations and the United States, the consequences will ripple far beyond the Middle East.
They will shape global alliances, fuel resentment, deepen mistrust, and weaken the credibility of institutions meant to protect human rights everywhere.
People across continents are beginning to ask:
If justice is selective, is it justice at all?
The Palestinian struggle has become a symbol of resilience, of dignity, of the universal demand for equality.
And the world’s response to it will determine not only the future of Palestine, but the moral direction of the international community.
History teaches us that truth cannot be buried forever.
Voices cannot be silenced forever.
And a people fighting for their rights will continue to rise, generation after generation, until justice is not a slogan, but a lived reality.
This is This Week in Palestine.