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Nuclear Colonialism and The Story “Oppenheimer” Didn’t Tell (Encore)

Posted by on 4:00 am in All Shows, Environment, Featured Block, Featured Blogroll, Governance, Lucy Kang | Comments Off on Nuclear Colonialism and The Story “Oppenheimer” Didn’t Tell (Encore)

Nuclear Colonialism and The Story “Oppenheimer” Didn’t Tell (Encore)

Oppenheimer swept the Golden Globes, reigniting public interest in the Manhattan Project, the WWII-era secret program to develop the atomic bomb and the impacts of nuclear power. But what the film leaves out alters our understanding about the real impacts of this advancement. On today’s encore episode, we hear about nuclear colonialism and how it has changed the course of the people and places of New Mexico with Myrriah Gómez, author of Nuclear Nuevo México: Colonialism and the Effects of the Nuclear Industrial Complex on...

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Denial of the Funk: The Impact of Racism on our Nation’s Health

Posted by on 4:00 am in All Shows, Anita Johnson, Arts & Culture, Featured Block, Featured Blogroll, Health | Comments Off on Denial of the Funk: The Impact of Racism on our Nation’s Health

Denial of the Funk: The Impact of Racism on our Nation’s Health

The problem in America is, America’s been in denial about its problems. And that’s a problem.  America doesn’t have a race problem, in reality there’s been catastrophes visited upon Black people. Catastrophes visited on Indigenous brothers and sisters. Catastrophes visited on Latino brothers and sisters. Catastrophes visited on working people. Catastrophes visited on women of all colors. We can go on and on.  This week on Making Contact, we bring you a talk from noted author, scholar, and self-described intellectual freedom...

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The Rise of the New Labor Movement

Posted by on 4:00 am in All Shows, Economics, Featured Block, Featured Blogroll, Labor, Salima Hamirani | Comments Off on The Rise of the New Labor Movement

The Rise of the New Labor Movement

The last few years have seen a wave of labor organizing as it becomes more and more clear to workers that what they do is not expendable, but actually the heart of every business. From walkouts to unionization, workers everywhere, from Starbucks to Amazon to your local coffee shop have come together to build and exercise their power. In this episode we explore the issues that led people to organize their workplaces, the ins and outs and ups and downs of the process, and the backlash. On the forefront of the next labor revolution, we visit a...

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But Next Time Part 4: The Road to Rebuilding and Recovering, Better (Encore)

Posted by on 4:00 am in All Shows, Amy Gastelum, Economics, Environment, Featured Block, Featured Blogroll, Labor | Comments Off on But Next Time Part 4: The Road to Rebuilding and Recovering, Better (Encore)

But Next Time Part 4: The Road to Rebuilding and Recovering, Better (Encore)

When communities face the aftermath of catastrophes, what does it take to ensure that the next time will be different? In Houston, it takes a city council member who bicycles in her neighborhood to hear from constituents about what they need most. It takes 12 moms who organize to take legal action against the landlords that have kept their families in moldy, substandard apartments. And it takes a city official who blows the whistle on corrupt and dangerous practices related to housing policy.  Travel to Texas with our hosts Chrishelle Palay...

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But Next Time Part 3: The Fight for Fair Housing in the Face of Climate Change (Encore)

Posted by on 4:00 am in All Shows, Economics, Environment, Featured Block, Featured Blogroll, Lucy Kang | Comments Off on But Next Time Part 3: The Fight for Fair Housing in the Face of Climate Change (Encore)

But Next Time Part 3: The Fight for Fair Housing in the Face of Climate Change (Encore)

No matter where we come from, or how much money we make, we all deserve a safe and healthy place to call home. In this episode we meet Jamie, a mom who lives in subsidized housing in Houston, Texas, who joins with other moms to stand up to landlords and local officials whose policies have kept Black and brown families trapped in unsafe homes for years.  Before and after Hurricane Harvey, Jamie and organizers in Houston came together to take collective action and push for change. Along the way they connected with leaders in Puerto Rico who...

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But Next Time Part 2: Language Justice and the Road to Recovery After Disaster (Encore)

Posted by on 4:00 am in All Shows, Amy Gastelum, Anita Johnson, Economics, Environment, Featured Block, Featured Blogroll, Labor, Lucy Kang, Salima Hamirani | Comments Off on But Next Time Part 2: Language Justice and the Road to Recovery After Disaster (Encore)

But Next Time Part 2: Language Justice and the Road to Recovery After Disaster (Encore)

This week we continue delving into community-rooted disaster relief in California, from wildfires to the pandemic. From building mutual aid networks, to translating emergency messages in common local languages, we see in action the incredible difference language justice can make in our communities. In Sonoma County, organizers hit the field with information on where to get food, shelter, and support.  In San Francisco, they set up a much needed support response to COVID-19 in the city’s Mission District.  Tune in and hear how these leaders...

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But Next Time Part 1: California Wildfires and Protecting Our Farmworkers (Encore)

Posted by on 4:00 am in All Shows, Environment, Featured Block, Featured Blogroll, Labor, Salima Hamirani | Comments Off on But Next Time Part 1: California Wildfires and Protecting Our Farmworkers (Encore)

But Next Time Part 1: California Wildfires and Protecting Our Farmworkers (Encore)

As fires ravaged California’s world-famous wine country in 2017, a community radio station, emergency dispatcher, and tenant organizers helped the most vulnerable in their community survive and recover. Community organizers and hosts of the podcast But Next Time Chrishelle Palay and Rose Arrieta bring us the first of four stories of hard-won lessons learned from people on the frontlines of California’s wildfires and Texas’ storms as they work to answer the question, how can next time be different? In this first episode we discuss...

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Gaza, Solidarity, and the Movement for Palestinian Liberation

Posted by on 4:00 am in All Shows, Amy Gastelum, Anita Johnson, Featured Block, Featured Blogroll, Governance, Lucy Kang, Making Contact News, Salima Hamirani | Comments Off on Gaza, Solidarity, and the Movement for Palestinian Liberation

Gaza, Solidarity, and the Movement for Palestinian Liberation

For weeks people around the world have been witness to Israel’s deadly assault on Gaza. Today, we uncover the military corporations profiting from the war, and highlight the activism in every corner of the world in support of Palestinian liberation.  We’ll hear from Rami Almeghari, a Gaza-based journalist, to get insight on the conditions on the ground in Gaza before zooming out with Nora Barrows-Friedman to look at Israel’s military industrial complex and how the Unites States is enabling this genocide, both through it’s...

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How Ollas Populares fed Buenos Aires through a pandemic (Encore)

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How Ollas Populares fed Buenos Aires through a pandemic (Encore)

We travel to Buenos Aires with reporter Rosina Castillo who immerses us in the culture of a local community arts organization who saw a need in their community and took action during the height of the pandemic. La Casona de Humahuaca transformed their operations to host “ollas populares” or community kitchens to help support their community and make it through the toughest parts of COVID together, all the while learning more about their organization and purpose in the community. We follow that with a conversation with Belen Desmaison, an...

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Powerlands (Encore)

Posted by on 1:00 am in All Shows, Economics, Environment, Featured Blogroll, Lucy Kang | Comments Off on Powerlands (Encore)

Powerlands (Encore)

On this week’s Making Contact, we bring you a special encore of an episode that first aired in June. We’ll hear an extended interview with Ivey Camille Manybeads Tso, a queer Diné filmmaker and director of the award-winning documentary Powerlands. Powerlands traces how multinational energy corporations extract resources and profits while displacing and harming Indigenous communities around the world. The film follows Indigenous activists in Navajo Nation, Colombia, Mexico and the Philippines who are fighting back against...

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Not Just Speed Traps: Alabama Community Fights Back Against For-profit Policing – A 70 Million Story (Encore)

Posted by on 1:00 am in All Shows, Anita Johnson, Governance | 1 comment

Not Just Speed Traps: Alabama Community Fights Back Against For-profit Policing – A 70 Million Story (Encore)

Just 20 minutes north of Birmingham on Interstate 22, Brookside, Alabama is a working-class town with less than 1,300 residents. From 2018 to 2020, income from traffic fines and forfeitures increased 640%, accounting for 49% of the town’s revenue. In 2019, Brookside saw its first lawsuit from a motorist that included allegations of racism and police misconduct. It caught national attention for being a predatory speed trap in 2022 and now facing a class-action federal lawsuit. Thank you to our podcast partner, 70 Million, for the story...

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The Promise and Peril of Geoengineering

Posted by on 1:00 am in All Shows, Environment, Salima Hamirani | 2 comments

The Promise and Peril of Geoengineering

As we head into an ever warming world, some experts and politicians are embracing a possible solution to climate change called geoengineering. Theoretically geoengineering could slow down climate change, stop it, and maybe even remove carbon from the air. It sounds like the perfect answer in for a global political system that just can’t stop burning fossil fuels even if it kills us all. However, it might not be the easy fix we’re hoping for. We talk to scientists and activists about what geoengineering is and why it could actually...

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Behind the Sound: Adwoa Gyimah-Brempong

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Welcome to Behind the Sound, an interview series with the folks who make Making Contact. This month we interviewed Adwoa Gyimah-Brempong, a freelance reporter, producer, and Making Contact’s sound editor.  How did you get into this line of work? I got into audio while I was getting an MFA in Creative Writing. I’d been a writer and editor for most of my life, and grew up on NPR (my parents are not native English speakers, so when they moved to the U.S. they got in the habit of listening). When I started working as a reporter and...

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Statement of Palestinian Solidarity

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Statement of Palestinian Solidarity

We want to acknowledge that recent events have thrown into sharp relief the violence, displacement, and apartheid that Palestinians in Gaza have lived under for decades. As a media organization, we bear responsibility for telling the truth about the historical context leading us to this current crisis, one founded on the ethnic cleansing of Palestine in 1948. Making Contact staff have joined other solidarity media makers and organizations in endorsing this open letter in response to the genocidal violence happening in Gaza. We know listeners...

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Modern Parenting… The Latino Way

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Modern Parenting… The Latino Way

How do you decide what kind of parent you want to be? Our friends at Pulso Podcast, Maribel Quezada Smith and Liz Alarcón, discuss ways they maintain their children’s cultural identity as Latinos. They also touch on what they have changed from how their immigrant parents raised them. And, Liz sits down with Latinx parenting coach Leslie Priscilla to talk about her work using an antiracist, anticolonial and child-centered lens.  Like this program? Please show us the love. Click here and support our non-profit journalism. Thanks! Featuring Liz...

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Whose Point Reyes? Indigenous History and Public Lands

Posted by on 1:00 am in All Shows, Environment, Featured Block, Featured Blogroll, Lucy Kang, Uncategorized | Comments Off on Whose Point Reyes? Indigenous History and Public Lands

Whose Point Reyes? Indigenous History and Public Lands

Dive into the history of Point Reyes National Seashore in northern California with us. It’s one of the most iconic national parks in the region, known for rugged sweeping beaches and the famous tule elk. We’ll recount the waves of colonization that violently upended the lives of the Coast Miwok peoples who lived there – and one Indigenous woman’s struggle to preserve her family history. The story of Point Reyes is a story about how the forces of colonialism continue to shape the fate of public lands in the United States. ...

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Saltwater Soundwalk: Indigenous Audio Tour of Seattle (Encore)

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Saltwater Soundwalk: Indigenous Audio Tour of Seattle (Encore)

In this special encore episode of Making Contact, we present “Saltwater Soundwalk”: Indigenous Audio Tour of Seattle. Produced by Jenny Asarnow and Rachel Lam, this rhythmic, watery audio experience, streams of stories that ebb and flow, intermixes English with Coast Salish languages. Indigenous Coast Salish peoples continue to steward this land and preserve its language, despite settler colonialism, industrialization and gentrification. Part story, part sound collage, this piece is scored entirely with the sounds of the waters and animals...

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The Rest of the Story: Indigenous Resistance

Posted by on 1:00 am in All Shows, Amy Gastelum, Anita Johnson, Environment, Featured Block, Featured Blogroll, Governance, Lucy Kang, Salima Hamirani | Comments Off on The Rest of the Story: Indigenous Resistance

The Rest of the Story: Indigenous Resistance

In this episode, we revisit two stories concerning indigenous rights we’ve covered in the past. In the first half, Rebecca Nagle joins us to discuss the Supreme Court decision to uphold the Indian Child Welfare Act and why the legitimacy of the law is so important to tribal sovereignty. We also talk about the right’s legal strategy in the last few decades and what that means for decisions at the Supreme Court.  In the second half we hear from the Chairman of the Amah Mutsun tribal band, Valentin Lopez, about the most recent...

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Inclusion on Purpose

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Inclusion on Purpose

George Floyd’s murder sparked increased attention toward Black liberation and by extension, racial discrimination. Institutions raced to check boxes for workplace diversity, equity and inclusion, but how do we know whether real work has been done?  In this episode, two thought leaders around race and belonging, Ruchika Tulshyan and Ijeoma Oluo, discuss the finer points of how to create equity in the workplace. This conversation takes place at Town Hall Seattle and center’s Tulshyan’s book Inclusion on Purpose: An Intersectional Approach to...

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The Shadow of Nuclear Colonialism

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The Shadow of Nuclear Colonialism

The film Oppenheimer has reignited public interest in the Manhattan Project, the WWII-era secret program to develop the atomic bomb. But the movie leaves out important parts of the story. On today’s show, we hear about the impact of nuclear colonialism and the Manhattan Project on the people and places of New Mexico with Myrriah Gómez, author of Nuclear Nuevo México: Colonialism and the Effects of the Nuclear Industrial Complex on Nuevomexicanos. And then we dig into how nuclear testing during the Cold War led to dangerous and lasting...

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