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    Shouldn't have to choose between your vision and your voice

    en-usJuly 15, 2020
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    About this Episode

    In city after city, Americans protesting the murder of George Floyd were met by militarized police using excessive force and firing rubber bullets and other projectiles.  Three women blinded by police while at a protest describe what happened to them and why they continue to speak out against police violence.

    [01:24] Linda Tirado, author and professional photographer covering protests following the killing  of George Floyd by Minneapolis police

    [06:13] Nia Love, Sacramento resident joining with neighbors to protest police violence in her hometown

    [10:22] Vanessa Dundon, a Navajo and mother of four serving as a Water Protector at Standing Rock

    NOTE: The intro music is shorter in later episodes

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    Censorship is on the rise in America, as more states ban books and pass laws restrictng what teachers can talk about  from the country's troubled history.  This mimics the dangerous approach by the Chinese government which blocks its citizens from accessing  independent reports about current events or the country’s past.  But artists like Badiucao are challenging the regime in ways that aren't easily erased.


    The power of music

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    Photo: Theodore Bikel, Pete Seeger and Bob Dylan in Greenwood, Mississippi 1963.

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