A-Infos Radio Project

This Way Out - Celebrating Rev. Dr. Pauli Murray

15 hours 19 minutes ago
Hear amazing tales of the binary-defying civil rights activist, labor organizer, lawyer, author and first Black woman Episcopal priest the Rev. Dr. Pauli Murray. In the news, marriage equality is outlawed in Senegal, there’s no port for the gay Scarlet Lady cruise ship in Egypt either, and New Hampshire and California adopt different attitudes about transgender youth while Trans and Intersex Pride Marchers in Dublin target the One Percent.
Lucia Chappelle

TUC Radio - Suzanne Simard – Dispatches from The Mother Tree Project

21 hours 31 minutes ago
A report on the underground networks in the forest Suzanne Simard is Professor of Forest Ecology in the University of British Columbia’s Faculty of Forestry. In spite of her status in academia, rigorous research and love and respect from her students it took over 30 years for her ideas to break through. Ferris Jabr writes in the New York Times Magazine: “By analyzing the DNA in root tips and tracing the movement of molecules through underground conduits, Simard has discovered that fungal threads link nearly every tree in a forest — even trees of different species. Carbon, water, nutrients, alarm signals and hormones can pass from tree to tree through these subterranean circuits… Resources tend to flow from the oldest and biggest trees to the youngest and smallest. Chemical alarm signals generated by one tree prepare nearby trees for danger. Seedlings severed from the forest’s underground lifelines are much more likely to die than their networked counterparts. Crucially, a majority of the carbon sequestered in forests resides in the soils, anchored by networks of symbiotic roots, fungi and microbes. Each year, the world’s forests capture more than 24 percent of global carbon emissions. When a mature forest is burned or clear-cut, the planet loses an invaluable ecosystem and one of its most effective systems of climate regulation. The razing of an old-growth forest is not just the destruction of magnificent individual trees — it’s the collapse of an ancient republic whose interspecies covenant of reciprocation and compromise is essential for the survival of Earth as we’ve known it.” On May 4, 2021 Suzanne Simard’s book, “Finding the Mother Tree” came out. In a rare Ted talk in June 2016 Simard laid out what she discovered. This radio program also includes excerpts from her Zoom seminar at UBC: Dispatches from The Mother Tree Project, on Oct 22, 2020. And in late 2020 the acclaimed environmental writer Ferris Jabr accompanied Suzanne Simard for several days of field research in rough terrain for what became a cover story in The New York Times Magazine. This program ends with quotes from his extraordinary science based article. Ferris Jabr has also written for the Scientific American, The Atlantic, Harper’s, and The New Yorker. By now Suzanne Simard’s insights are beginning to influence the thoughts about climate change, carbon sequestration and harvesting techniques in departments of forestry throughout Canada and the US. A quick note: I’m stopping to do radio programs in August 2025. Just had my 79 birthday and have been producing radio for almost 50 years – beginning at KPFA in Berkeley. Most recently my home is an oak and madr0ne forest in Northern California. Thanks to Otis Maclay from Audioport who has placed re-runs for over a year now. He told me that more than 120 stations are taking TUC Radio every Tuesday. Good Bye to you all!!
Otis Maclay

The Richie Allen Show - The Strange Murder of Ann Widdecombe, Police Lies. Reform's Justice Brief, Tony Gosling Richie Allen

23 hours ago
Shocking news about Ann Widdecombe murdered in her home on Dartmoor. https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/richieallen/episodes/2026-07-13T11_15_06-07_00 Her father was from Saltash and her mother from Plymouth. Her father had been the Director of Armament Supply in the Admiralty and had distinguished himself as head of Armament Supply in Malta during its siege. Her family had very strong ties to this area dating back to the early 18th Century. Richie is joined by Tony Gosling and Marilyn Hawes. Counter terrorism police are now leading the investigation into the death of Ann Widdecombe after "new information and evidence" came to light, officers have said. A 28-year-old white British man from Rotherham, South Yorkshire, originally arrested on suspicion of murder on Saturday, has now been re-arrested on suspicion of commission, preparation or instigation of acts of terrorism. Speaking in the House of Commons on Monday, Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood confirmed the suspect was not known to the government's Prevent anti-terror scheme. Widdecombe, a 78-year-old former Conservative minister turned Reform UK spokeswoman, was found dead at her home in Devon, having sustained serious injuries. To discuss this and more, Richie is joined by the writer and broadcaster, Tony Gosling https://politicsthisweek.gn.apc.org/2026/07/the-bristol-politics-show-presented-by-tony-gosling-29/ She was a conviction politician who did argue her corner forcefully but she was always happy to engage with those who disagreed with her and never took anything personally. She could laugh at herself and was always willing to get stuck in. She was a devout Christian in an era when that is increasingly unusual. I do not know what is happening to our society that these murders can happen in such a tranquil and beautiful place? I am also aghast that some people who disagree with her politics are being very disrespectful. We are living in disturbing times. I appreciate this quote she gave on Graham Norton: “we get one go this side of eternity, one go. Life is not a dress rehearsal, you take opportunities that you like and you go for it, that’s my philosophy.” Harvey Proctor has written a very powerful article about her: The death of Ann Widdecombe marks the passing of one of the last politicians who believed that principle mattered more than popularity. She was, of course, many things: a formidable parliamentarian, a woman of profound Christian faith and conviction, an accomplished author and broadcaster and someone who never sought the comfort of fashionable opinion. She spoke her mind, often to the irritation of opponents and sometimes even allies. Yet, whether one agreed with her or not, there was never any doubt about the sincerity of her beliefs.” “It is easy in the days following her death to celebrate those qualities in general terms. I remember them for a far more personal reason. When I became caught up in the grotesque injustice of Operation Midland, much of public life fell silent. Allegations that would later be exposed as heinous lies were treated as established fact. My reputation, painstakingly built over decades, was destroyed almost overnight. I lost my home, my livelihood and, for a time, I thought my entire life would be extinguished. Many people who knew me, and many who privately doubted what was unfolding, chose discretion over courage. They calculated that association with someone under suspicion carried greater risk than remaining silent while obvious injustice took its course.” “Ann Widdecombe made a different calculation. She understood that the presumption of innocence is not an inconvenience to be discarded in difficult cases but one of the foundations of a civilised society. She recognised that due process exists precisely because public opinion can be wrong, institutions can fail and allegations are not evidence.” “She was one of the very few members of parliament prepared to say so publicly. Her support was never loud or theatrical. It was something far rarer. It was principled. She offered practical advice and support, personal kindness and public solidarity when these things carried political cost rather than reward. She neither sought headlines nor applause. She simply believed that justice demanded it. That commitment never left her. In September 2023, long after Operation Midland had been comprehensively discredited and after I had received an apology and compensation from the Metropolitan Police, Ann attended a demonstration outside New Scotland Yard to mark Falsely Accused Day.” “Some misunderstood her position, as they often did. Defending the presumption of innocence does not diminish genuine victims of crime. On the contrary, justice depends upon fairness for everyone. A criminal justice system that abandons impartiality ultimately fails victims as well as the accused.
Bristol Broadband Co-operative

- The Appalachian Bluegrass Music Hour with Danny Hensley

1 day 7 hours ago
The Appalachian Bluegrass Music Hour with Danny Hensley. A weekly program featuring the latest in Bluegrass Music track distribution by record labels such as Pinecastle, Billy Blue, Compass, Mountain Home Music, Mountain Fever Records, Turnberry Records, Sound Biscuit, Gravy Records, Sugar Hill, Rebel Records, Rounder Records and music distribution sources such as Get it Played and Airplay Direct.
Danny Hensley

The Mix Sessions - The Mix Sessions 26.7.13.

1 day 14 hours ago
IF YOU AIR THE SHOW PLEASE SEND ME AN EMAIL TO LET ME KNOW! 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. DJ Christian B - We Be Free 02. Alex Finkin, Dj Disciple, N-W-N-House Music Is (N-W-N- B Mix) 03. El Bravo - Sonic Abstract EP (Depths Unknown) 04. DJ Spen, Gary Hudgins, Sarah Sophia - Don-t Be Afraid (Sarah Sophia-s Disco Party Mix) 05. Jullian Gomes, Sio - 1000 Memories 06. Stacy Kidd, Tiffany Jenkins - Look In My Eyes (Main Mix) 07. Abel, Brutha Basil, Peacey - Hand Made (Peacey Remix Instrumental) 08. Miss Malevich, Kali Mija, Doug Gomez - The Difference (Doug Gomez Remix) 09. Tshegotmm, Pat Lezizmo - Life Is Too Short 10. Seb Skalski, Rona Ray - It-s Getting Started (House Extended Mix)

Trip Hop Radio - Trip Hop Radio 26.7.13.

1 day 14 hours ago
IF YOU AIR THE SHOW PLEASE SEND ME AN EMAIL TO LET ME KNOW! 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. Mono - The Blind Man 02. JMJ, FLytonix - In Too Deep 03. Massive Attack - Better Things 04. Morcheeba - Enjoy The Ride 05. Nightmares On Wax - Les Nuits 06. Tosca - Suzuki 07. Smith - Same 08. Martina Topley-Bird - Wanted 09. PLAID - Lilith 10. Rae & Christian - The Hush 11. Quantic - Snakes In The Grass

WINGS: Women's International News Gathering Service - WINGS #14-26 Rape Culture in History and Today

1 day 16 hours ago
Historian, archivist and archaeo-mythologist Max Dashu collects and analyzes texts and images to learn what women have done and what has been done to women. Her book Women in Greek Mythography exposes the role of rape in god- and hero-narratives and art. She traces how acceptance of rape and violence against women has been carried forward, sometimes coyly, throughout Western civilization " including in colonization and slavery " and finds its apotheosis in ubiquitous gonzo porn. She advises unity against the promotions of violent sex that now indoctrinate the young.
WINGS: Women's International News Gathering Service

Walkuman Style - Walkuman Style #432

1 day 23 hours ago
1. I Due It - Es & Nec Nymbl feat. DJ K-Flip 2. Word Is Bond - the intern & DJ Robert Smith 3. Choosing Me - C-Red 4. Never Been The Same - ScienZe & Parental 5. Same Vibes - Moka Only 6. Disagree - Declaime 7. Soul Of Sade - Supreme Cerebral 8. Black Jack - Tableek feat. Boogie Fields 9. Will Smithers - Sunk Giants feat. Homeboy Sandman 10. Make It Home - Calm feat. Skyzoo 11. Suspended In Time (instrumental) - DJ Premier 12. Rehearsal - Nicholas Craven 13. Sparkling Rain - KLIM Beats 14. STiiiL Ziz - Ziz 15. Be Water - The Troubles feat. Noveliss and Prowess The Testament 16. Now Is Here - Ras Austin 17. How It Is - King Magnetic 18. Work With My Hands - OCDC (Myer Clarity and Fresh Kils) feat. Uncle Fester 19. It's Nice To Help Cats - Midan Flughand 20. Make A Move - Fernquest & DJ Alkemy 21. Fin - Black Milk 22. Lullaby - Lesky & Midan 23. North North -Betty Ford Boys (Brenk Sinatra, Dexter and Suff Daddy)
Gamma Krush

Radio Ecoshock Show - HEAT STORM! How it kills and who

2 days 1 hour ago
Three experts on Extreme Heat: Elizabeth Hanna, Robert Kopp and Jonathan Patz. NASA announced Earth is heating faster than expected. Deadly heat in India, unheard-of heat in France and Alaska. The Arctic is thawing out. The U.S. East Coast roasted over 100 degree F. Around the world, people have died and many more will be killed by heat in the future. But how does heat kill? and who? A compilation from the best of Radio Ecoshock (replay).
Alex Smith

- The Appalachian Sunday Morning with Danny Hensley

2 days 6 hours ago
The Appalachian Sunday Morning is a two hour all Southern Gospel & Bluegrass 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, streamed through our radio station APP and streamed world wide on www.sbbradio.org. This program is uploaded to SoundCloud, RSS.com, radio4all, Podbean and iTunes
Danny Hensley

Backbeat - Episode 300 July 12, 2026 More hot vintage music to spice up your summer

2 days 9 hours ago
This week it's hot blues from Robert Nighthawk, sweet country from The Miller Sisters, jumping jazz from Joe Venuti, sizzling soul from Irma Thomas and intense gospel from The Soul Stirrers along with new tracks from two artists who settled in Nova Scotia, Joe H Henry and Dee Hernandez. Backbeat is also available in a 56 and 58 minute versions in three separate files if you want breaks. I am happy to provide custom station IDs, promos and liners. Email Lorne@Backbeatradio.com or visit www.backbeatradio.com for more information.
Lorne VanSinclair

This Week In Palestine - TWIP-260712

2 days 15 hours ago
Today begins with a fire that was supposed to be extinguished. A fire America itself has restarted. In the middle of negotiations, in the fragile space where diplomats whisper and ceasefires try to breathe, the United States strikes Iran again. Not by accident. Not by miscalculation. But with full awareness of what a single missile can do to a region already stretched thin. The talks freeze. The room goes silent. And the message is unmistakable: Washington is willing to reignite the flames even while sitting at the negotiation table. And now the question rises quietly across the Gulf. Are the Gulf states negotiating with Iran behind closed doors? Are they trying to build a safety net before the next escalation? And if they are, what does that mean for Palestinians who live under the shadow of every regional shift, every foreign strike, every diplomatic tremor? While America restarts the fire, CNN runs the numbers. Their report lays out the cost of war, the cost of instability, the cost of Trump’s policies. Not just in dollars, but in credibility, alliances, and the global standing America once took for granted. CNN shows how much the country has paid, and how much more it may pay if escalation becomes habit rather than strategy. In the middle of all this, a chant echoes across parts of the Middle East. Death to America. A chant born not from hatred of people, but from decades of intervention, sanctions, wars, and political decisions that reshaped lives without consent. A chant that Trump mockingly responds to with a smirk: Did you expect a thank you note. A reply that reveals the gap between how America sees itself and how the region experiences its power. And then, standing almost alone in the storm, Francesca Albanese. A UN official who refused to look away, who refused to soften her language, who refused to treat Palestinian suffering as a diplomatic inconvenience. She faced attacks, campaigns, pressure, and attempts to silence her. But she kept speaking. She kept documenting. She kept insisting that human rights apply to Palestinians too, even when the world sleeps. This is where today’s story begins. With fire reignited, negotiations shaken, quiet diplomacy unfolding in the Gulf, a global superpower paying the price of its own decisions, a region chanting its frustration, and one-woman standing firm in the face of pressure. A story of silence, consequence, and the cost of ignoring what is right. If you have thoughts, I want to hear them. Email me at TWIPpodcasts@gmail.com and tell me how you see it. This is This Week in Palestine.
Truth & Justice Radio (WZBC)
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