For anyone confused about the current impasse, we offer historical information that helps explain it. For anyone who has been hearing only a one-sided narrative that lacks balance and context, we offer a balanced narrative.
Accordingly, we broadcast interviews with journalists, scholars, policy experts and activists who provide perspectives from both sides. In contrast to headline news that focus on the what but not the why, our programs clarify underlying issues. The programs reveal the counter-productive role the United States has played over the years in supporting one side over the other.
Public debate about the oppression of Palestinians continues to be stifled. For this reason, we offer these programs as a resource for those seeking truthful, uncensored information about relations between Israel, Palestine, and the United States. Furthermore, we hope these programs get people to listen, learn, and do their own research into what is and has been taking place in Israel Palestine.
March 21, 2025 Local, News & Public Affairs, Podcast
Image and Reality of the Gaza Genocide (Part 2)
This is the second part of a talk given by Dr. Norman Finkelstein at the University of Connecticut on February 27. The talk was sponsored by the Northeast Connecticut Gaza Peace Group. In this part, Dr. Finkelstein discusses the consequences of the horror inflicted on Gaza and makes recommendations for the tactics and strategy of the movement moving forward.
ListenMarch 14, 2025 Local, News & Public Affairs, Podcast
Image and Reality of the Gaza Genocide
This is the first part of a talk given by Dr. Norman Finkelstein at the University of Connecticut on February 27. The talk was sponsored by the Northeast Connecticut Gaza Peace Group. In this part, Dr. Finkelstein dismantles the characterization of the devastation in Gaza as a war between Israel and Hamas. To make this argument, he makes observations about the nature of Israel's actions in Gaza, notes the rulings of international legal institutions, and points out the reports of major human rights organizations.
ListenMarch 7, 2025 Local, News & Public Affairs, Podcast
Part 8 (cont) of “What Is Zionism?”: The Jewish History of Anti-Zionism
Shaul Magid, visiting professor of modern Judaism at Harvard Divinity School, talks to Margot Patterson about the long-standing debate among Jews over Zionism and about the impact of the 1967 Six-Day War on the Zionization of American Jews. The author of several books on Jewish mysticism, radicalism and identity, Magid says anti-Zionism is a Jewish phenomenon as old as Zionism itself, and distinct from anti-Israelism among non-Jews.
ListenFebruary 21, 2025 Local, News & Public Affairs, Podcast
Part 7 of “What is Zionism?”: Zionism after October 7th
What is the spectrum of Zionism in modern-day Israel? How has this changed over time, especially since October 7? And what forces are driving the continuation of the current ceasefire deal? Ori Goldberg, a political analyst and academic based in Israel, joined the show to answer these questions.
ListenFebruary 14, 2025 Local, News & Public Affairs, Podcast
Part 6 of “What is Zionism?”: The Principles and Politics of Liberal Zionism
Historian Michael Brenner discusses the secular roots of Zionism, the difficult stance of liberal Zionists and the shrinking space liberal Zionists occupy in Israel today. A professor of Jewish history and culture at the University of Munich, Brenner also holds the Seymour and Lillian Abensohn Chair in Israel Studies at the American University in Washington D.C. There he is also the directer of the Center for Israel Studies.
ListenFebruary 7, 2025 Local, News & Public Affairs, Podcast
Part 5 of “What is Zionism:” Christian Zionism, a Theology of Western Empire
Though Christian Zionism precedes Jewish Zionism by almost two centuries, this fact is often overlooked in discussions of Palestine and Israel. In this illuminating discussion with Prof. Robert Smith (Chickasaw), he defines Christian Zionism, pinpoints its historical origins, and connects this to the interplay between theology and Western empire in the past and present.
ListenJanuary 31, 2025 Local, News & Public Affairs, Podcast
Can the Gaza Ceasefire Last?
A retired 28-year veteran of the CIA, a senior fellow at the Center for Security Studies at Georgetown University and the author of several books on U.S. foreign policy Paul Pillar discusses his recent article on why the ceasefire in Gaza is unlikely to last. The political situation in Israel militates against making the ceasefire anything but a temporary pause and explains Israel's escalating attacks in the West Bank, the continued presence of Israeli troops in Lebanon and Syria, and Israel's determined pursuit of war.
ListenJanuary 24, 2025 Local, News & Public Affairs, Podcast
The Gaza Genocide in Historical Perspective
For centuries, Western countries have been attacking indigenous peoples and stealing their land in an ongoing process of settler colonialism, engendering resistance and international solidarity. Mazin Qumsiyeh returns to the show to place the Gaza genocide into this historical continuum.
ListenJanuary 17, 2025 Local, News & Public Affairs, Podcast
Jimmy Carter’s Unsung Advocacy for Palestinian Rights
Following his death Dec. 29th, 2024, President Jimmy Carter received accolades for his many achievements, among them the 1978 Camp David peace agreement between Israel and Egypt that he brokered. However, little attention has been paid to President Carter's efforts to make peace between Israelis and the Palestinians. An international human rights lawyer and the executive director of the Christian Palestinian organization Friends of Sabeel North America (FOSNA), Jonathan Kuttab met Carter on several occasions. He talks about Carter's advocacy for Palestinians, which has been largely ignored by the media despite the ongoing war in Gaza.
ListenJanuary 10, 2025 Local, News & Public Affairs, Podcast
Internationalism, Palestine, and the Fall of Assad
How should those committed to human rights and Palestinian liberation analyze the geopolitics of the Middle East? What does it mean to be an internationalist when it comes to the question of Palestine and the fall of Assad? Answering these questions is Joseph Daher, author of Syria after the Uprisings, The Political Economy of State Resilience; Hezbollah: the Political Economy of Lebanons Party of God; and Marxism and Palestine.
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