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    militarism

    Explore " militarism" with insightful episodes like "Season 3, Episode 5: Norman Solomon, War Made Invisible: How America Hides the Human Toll of Its Military Machine", "- WEAPON MENTALITY 1", "Michael Kazin! The Democratic Party, Leftism, and Global Policy | Ep. 150", "Space Invaders" and "Everything Looks Like a Nail: Why the Military Can't Save the Planet (SE4 EP7)" from podcasts like ""Book Club with Jeffrey Sachs", "WORLD WAR COVID GUERRE MONDIALE: From WeaponWorld to PeaceWorld; Learner, begin... De la terre en armes au monde paisible ; Apprenti, débute", "The Un-Diplomatic Podcast", "Spatial Delight" and "Warrior Nation"" and more!

    Episodes (44)

    Season 3, Episode 5: Norman Solomon, War Made Invisible: How America Hides the Human Toll of Its Military Machine

    Season 3, Episode 5: Norman Solomon, War Made Invisible: How America Hides the Human Toll of Its Military Machine

    Join Professor Jeffrey Sachs and political and media analyst Norman Solomon as they discuss Solomon’s important new book, War Made Invisible: How America Hides the Human Toll of Its Military Machine

    Listen in as Solomon and Sachs explore the intricate interplay between the mainstream media and powerful political forces that promote America’s disastrous “wars of choice” – including the US-led wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, and currently the US-Russia proxy war in Ukraine and the US backing of Israel’s war in Gaza.   

    Solomon’s book explores how American foreign policy has become one of perpetual war, and how the media systematically hide the tragic human and political consequences of these wars, thereby enabling the US Government to perpetuate these conflicts.

    Footnotes:

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    ➡️ Website: bookclubwithjeffreysachs.org

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    Michael Kazin! The Democratic Party, Leftism, and Global Policy | Ep. 150

    Michael Kazin! The Democratic Party, Leftism, and Global Policy | Ep. 150

    The legendary New Leftist and historian Michael Kazin joins the pod to talk about his recent essay in Dissent, "Reject the Left-Right Alliance in Ukraine." We also talk he ended up on the New Left, socialism in the Democratic Party, why he supported Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders, the politics of being anti-war, the role of World War I in leftist historical memory, and his recent book What It Took To Win: A History of the Democratic Party.

    Dissent Essay: https://www.dissentmagazine.org/online_articles/reject-the-left-right-alliance-against-ukraine

    What It Took To Win Book: https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780374200237/whatittooktowin

    War Against War Book: https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/War-Against-War/Michael-Kazin/9781476705910

    Follow Michael Kazin on Twitter: https://twitter.com/mkazin

    Subscribe to the Un-Diplomatic Newsletter: https://www.un-diplomatic.com

    Buy Me A Coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/undiplomatic

    Now on YouTube! https://www.youtube.com/@un-diplomaticpodcast

    Space Invaders

    Space Invaders

    Though she was a life-long Liverpool FC fan, Doreen Massey felt like a “space invader” whenever she attended matches, as she’d often be one of the few women on football terraces. Inspired by Massey’s usage of the term, sociologist Nirmal Puwar developed it into a sociological concept to understand “what happens when women and racialized minorities take up ‘privileged’ positions which have not been ‘reserved’ for them”. What kind of bodies are the somatic norm? What are the conditions of inclusion? 

    Spatial Delight host Agata Lisiak speaks with Nirmal Puwar about her book Space Invaders: Race, Gender and Bodies Out of Place (2004), and about the postcolonial acts of space invading that Nirmal and her collaborators staged in Coventry’s iconic cathedral.

    We’d love to hear your stories too. Are you a space invader? Please share your experiences with us here

    Episode Credits
    Host: Agata Lisiak
    Guest: Nirmal Puwar
    Also Featured: Doreen Massey
    Writer and Producer: Agata Lisiak
    Senior Editor: Susan Stone 
    Sound Producer: Reece Cox
    Production Assistant: Adèle Martin
    Music: Studio R
    Artwork: Bose Sarmiento
    Special Thanks to: Nitin Sawhney, Kuldip Powar
    In partnership with: The Sociological Review Foundation
    Funded by: Volkswagen Foundation

    Find more about Spatial Delight at The Sociological Review

    Episode Resources

    Doreen Massey’s work quoted or mentioned in this episode:

    Nirmal Puwar’s selected works:

    Everything Looks Like a Nail: Why the Military Can't Save the Planet (SE4 EP7)

    Everything Looks Like a Nail: Why the Military Can't Save the Planet (SE4 EP7)

    As the impacts of the climate crisis escalate, there is a growing trend for securitised responses that foreground the role of militaries in tackling the fallout. But whose interests do these militaries serve and what role have they played in bringing about environmental catastrophe.

    In this episode we speak with Nick Buxton, a communications specialist with 20 years experience in climate sustainability and international development, to pick his brain on the intersection between climate change, the military and security. Nick has produced an incredible body of work for the Amsterdam-based Transnational Institute, covering climate change, border securitisation, Big Tech and much more.

    Follow this link to read Nick's  Primer on Climate Security | Transnational Institute (tni.org). You can also follow him on Twitter via @nickbuxton.

    Support the show via the Warrior Nation Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/WarriorNation

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    You can discover Housmans Bookshop's amazing selection here: https://housmans.com/

    Music by Esion Noise.

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    CV S10 Ep 1: The Three Evils of Society - Honoring the Reverend Dr Martin Luther King, Jr

    CV S10 Ep 1: The Three Evils of Society - Honoring the Reverend Dr Martin Luther King, Jr

    Welcome to Season 10 of CommunityVOZ! In this episode, we honor the life of Dr Martin Luther King Jr with a closer look at his speech The Three Evils of Society: Materialism, Capitalism and Racism. Community organizers Melissa Wisener, Markis Dee Stidham, Tara Villalba, Eve Smason-Marcus and Terrance Morris join us for conversations about how those evils are still as prevalent  today as they were in 1967 and what people in Bellingham are doing about it. Also: Teejay offers to teach Liz how to dance.

    Listen to the full speech by Dr Martin Luther King here

    Read the full transcript of the speech here

    Register for the 25th Annual Whatcom Human Rights Task Force Reverend Dr Martin Luther King Jr Conference here

    Get your tickets for the 2023 Dr Martin Luther King Jr Unity Masquerade Ball here

    Support the show

    Part II: Unsettling Liberal Hegemony with Jeannie Morefield | Ep. 134

    Part II: Unsettling Liberal Hegemony with Jeannie Morefield | Ep. 134

    In this interview episode, Van sits down with Professor Jeanne Morefield to discuss critiques of liberalism and empire. Why does liberalism seem to always be obsessed with crisis and triumphalism, often at once? What is the shared DNA of Edwardian imperialism, neoconservatism, and liberal internationalism? Why has G. John Ikenberry's theoretical project of liberal hegemony recently pivoted from Woodrow Wilson to Franklin Roosevelt as the standard bearer? And isn't liberal hegemony just a ruling class ideology? Lots of controversy on the table. 

    Jeanne's latest book: https://rowman.com/ISBN/9781442260283/Unsettling-the-World-Edward-Said-and-Political-Theory 

    Empires without Imperialism book: https://www.google.com/books/edition/Empires_Without_Imperialism/869LjwEACAAJ?hl=en 

    Ikenberry Readings: 

    Survival piece: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00396338.2021.1956187 Foreign Affairs piece: https://www.foreignaffairs.com/united-states/why-american-power-endures-us-led-order-isnt-in-decline-g-john-ikenberry 

    A World Safe for Democracy book: https://yalebooks.yale.edu/book/9780300271010/a-world-safe-for-democracy/

    Dirty Secrets: the Press and the Military (SE4 EP1)

    Dirty Secrets: the Press and the Military (SE4 EP1)

    Back in 2003, every national British newspaper bar the Guardian supported the invasion of Iraq - including The Guardian's sister paper, The Observer. Unfortunately, this was not an anomaly (dodgy dossiers or not). The sad truth is that it is very hard to find critical pieces on the UK's armed forces. And since the Edward Snowden leaks, Britain's intelligence establishment has worked assiduously to ensure that even The Guardian begins to tow the line.

    You really can’t talk about British defence and security journalism without mentioning today’s guest. Richard Norton-Taylor covered defence and security for The Guardian newspaper for over 40 years, reporting on everything from the Cold War to the 'War on Terror'. Winner of a number of awards he was once described by a GCHQ officials as a thorn in the side of the intelligence establishment.

    Support us via the Warrior Nation Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/WarriorNation

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    You can discover Housmans Bookshop's amazing selection here: https://housmans.com/

    Music by Esion Noise.

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    From Imperial Agent to Anti-War Advocate: Interview w/ Lyle Jeremy Rubin | Ep. 127

    From Imperial Agent to Anti-War Advocate: Interview w/ Lyle Jeremy Rubin | Ep. 127

    Lyle Jeremy Rubin joins the podcast to talk about his new memoir "Pain Is Weakness Leaving the Body: A Marine's Unbecoming." Lyle and Van discuss the way that hypocrisy radicalizes people, the trouble with imperialism, the psychosexual insecurities mixed into military life, how personal violence affects foreign policy, the Karate Kid, the paradoxically traumatizing lack of combat on the front lines of war, and much more. 

    Pain is Weakness Leaving the Body: https://www.boldtypebooks.com/titles/...

    Guest Website: https://www.lylejeremyrubin.com

    Podcast: https://www.undiplomaticpodcast.com

    Buy Me a Coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/undiplom...

    Newsletter: https://www.un-diplomatic.com

    Readings:

    Aime Cesaire, Discourses on Colonialism: https://www.amazon.com/Discourse-Colonialism-Aimé-Césaire/dp/1583670254

    William James, "The Moral Equivalent of War": https://brocku.ca/MeadProject/James/James_1911_11.html

    Nikhil Pal Singh, Black is a Country: https://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674019515

    Nikhil Pal Singh, Race and America's Long War: https://www.ucpress.edu/book/9780520318304/race-and-americas-long-war

    Christopher Lasch, The True and Only Heaven: https://www.amazon.com/True-Only-Heaven-Progress-Critics/dp/0393307956

    #3. The dynamics of conflict economies in Syria with Omar Dahi

    #3. The dynamics of conflict economies in Syria with Omar Dahi

    In the second episode with Omar Dahi, he continues the discussion on the impact and dynamics of conflict economies within a broad framework that includes the global, regional and local actors in Syria. He also highlights the continuation of the conflict foundations and tools despite the decline in major military operations. He concludes with the importance of the Syrian society's role in creating alternative pathways to peace and justice.

    Speakers:

    Omar Dahi: Professor of economics at Hampshire college in the USA and researcher with the Syrian Center for Policy Research. He is the director of Security in Context, a research initiative and network on peace, conflict and international affairs. His publications have appeared in journals such as Journal of Development Economics, Applied Economics, Southern Economic Journal, Political Geography, Middle East Report, Forced Migration Review, and Critical Studies on Security. His last book was South-South Trade and Finance in the 21st Century: Rise of the South or a Second Great Divergence (co-authored with Firat Demir).

    Security in Context website: www.securityincontext.com

    His latest paper is: "Conflict Economies in Syria: Roots, Dynamics, and Pathways for Change". 

    www.scpr-syria.org/conflict-economies-in-syria-roots-dynamics-and-pathways-for-change/

     
    Rabie Nasser: Economist, researcher and co-founder of the Syrian Center for Policy Research (SCPR).

    SCPR website: https://www.scpr-syria.org/

    Episode Producers

    Houda F Jawadi, Klaudia Wieser.

    Unpacking Armed Forces Day (feat. Dr Ross McGarry)

    Unpacking Armed Forces Day (feat. Dr Ross McGarry)

    In this special episode of Warrior Nation, Joe is joined by Dr Ross McGarry to discuss the deeper and varied meanings behind Armed Forces Day. In 2017, when Liverpool hosted the Armed Forces Day national event, Ross ventured out onto the streets of his home town to experience proceedings with a critical - and analytical - eye. He reflects on his findings and highlights how the event offered up a sanatised view of military life that is out of touch with the reality.

    You can read Ross' 2019 article in the journal Visual Ethnography here. To find our more about his research areas you can head over to his profile on the University of Liverpool website.

    Support us via the Warrior Nation Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/WarriorNation

    Or follow us on Instagram (@forceswatch) and Twitter (@ForcesWatch).

    Music by Esion Noise.

    [Original image used in art-work was taken by Ross McGarry during his ethnographic study]

    Support the show

    The Myth of Security versus Human Rights, Taiwan Ambiguity, Realism about Cambodia, the Conservative Foreign Policy Debate | Ep. 121

    The Myth of Security versus Human Rights, Taiwan Ambiguity, Realism about Cambodia, the Conservative Foreign Policy Debate | Ep. 121

    If you pit human rights against security, you're doing foreign policy wrong.  How to think about LGBTQIA-plus rights and strategy.  Being realistic about China-Cambodia relations.  Why Biden is still ambiguous about Taiwan.  Dissecting what's wrong with the national security "Blob."  The role of a PMC technocracy in a social democratic order.  The importance of libraries to society. 

    Peter Beinart v. the Blob: https://www.nytimes.com/2022/06/02/opinion/biden-the-blob-china-us.html?smid=tw-share

    Blake Herzinger on Cambodia: https://foreignpolicy.com/2022/06/10/cambodia-navy-china-bombing/ 

    Kelsey Atherton Tweet: https://twitter.com/AthertonKD/status/1531685221682356231

    JP Bristol Tweet: https://twitter.com/JPierreBrissot/status/1528754834953932803?t=Dl2ib1LBBfQV5_xCU-lVlg&s=19

    Buffy the Psych Prof Tweet: https://twitter.com/drpsybuffy/status/1533459570747744258?s=21&t=lSlEy8gkkjW9U7yl0y-yKw

    Adam Mahoney Tweet: https://twitter.com/AdamLMahoney/status/1531851079276560384

    Contributors: Tejas Menon, Hunter Marston, Ciara Mitchell, Jake Dellow

     

    Red-Brown Alliances Suck, Singapore's Post-American Asia, War as the Enemy of Progress, Military-Climate Change Tradeoff | Ep. 117

    Red-Brown Alliances Suck, Singapore's Post-American Asia, War as the Enemy of Progress, Military-Climate Change Tradeoff | Ep. 117

    What Singapore's Prime Minister has to say about post-primacy Asia. The global peace dividend initiative. War as the enemy of progress. The problem with securitizing the climate crisis. MAGA militarism and the problem of red-brown alliances. Why there is no economic equality without political equality.  

    The Un-Diplomatic Podcast on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_42j11ZVmlF5jVbqdVcdog

    Global Peace Dividend Initiative: https://peace-dividend.org

    Tobita Chow and Ben Lorber on MAGA militarism: https://www.thenation.com/article/politics/carlson-russia-nationalism-far-right/

    Matt Duss Tweet: https://twitter.com/mattduss/status/1511310386636771335

    Chloe Farad Tweet: https://twitter.com/ChloeFarand/status/1511307959292334084

    Ginny Hogan Tweet: https://twitter.com/ginnyhogan_/status/1511400718627975168

    Hope Hodgeseck Tweet: https://twitter.com/HopeSeck/status/1513555823699574796?t=V-G49W3oa8KZBa6zxtgK-g&s=19

    Alex Dobrenko Tweet: https://twitter.com/Dobrenkz/status/1513632588241334272?s=20&t=P4s0Pk7QqeCAYXt6R8YrGg

    Contributors: Celia McDowall, Jake Dellow, Alex Auty, Hunter Marston

     

     

    Imagining a Militarized Japan and then Laughing (w/Tom Phuong Le)

    Imagining a Militarized Japan and then Laughing (w/Tom Phuong Le)

    Author of Japan's Aging Peace, Tom Le, stops in to talk about Japan's security concerns and help us think about an important hypothetical question. Ok, Japan, you CAN have a military. NOW WHAT?


    Ollie's river cruise recommendation is actually in Ukraine this week, but don't worry, if you wait long enough, it'll come to you.

    Bobby learned a little bit about haiku so he thinks he's better than you.

    Topics discussed on this episode range from:

    • What you can expect from Disney's Japan exclusive content programming
    • A brief look at the crypto crash: is it a big deal?
    • Bobby's home renovations gone wrong
    • Why DO people buy crypto?
    • Tom's thoughts on whether or not the aging population is going to lead to the end of Japan
    • Lots of thanks for new members and coffee buyers!
    • An explanation of how we've improved access to the extras, which makes it an EVEN BETTER TIME FOR YOU TO JOIN AS A MONTHLY MEMBER AND GET ACCESS TO LITERALLY DAYS OF AMAZING BONUS CONTENT from our wonderful guests
    • Why is North Korea being so active in the opening days of 2022?
    • What does North Korea want?
    • How seriously we take Mobile, Alabama
    • Is what North Korea doing... normal?
    • Why it might be even scarier BECAUSE we all know North Korea couldn't win in a war
    • Might makes right in the Nuclear Club and why they didn't really have to go to all that trouble to get a meeting with Trump
    • Japan's right wing wants to amend the constitution to allow for a military. We talk about why that doesn't matter.
    • What the public thinks about remilitarizing
    • A comparison of the robustness of the democracies of the US and Japan
    • Ok, Japan, you can have a military. NOW WHAT?
    • How the current social, political, and economic situation in Japan constrains attempts to remilitarize
    • Can Japan make up for a lack of boots on the ground with technology?
    • The importance of the presence of America
    • Nuclear weapons, pacing ourselves as we end civilization
    • Is war good for the economy? If it was in America, why wouldn't it be good for Japan?
    • Financial priorities. War or social security?
    • Who does the JSDF try to recruit and how?
    • What is modern Japanese security policy most concerned with?
    • What will life in Japan look like in 30 years and how can we heed the warnings evidenced in Tom's book.
    • How Japan might be ahead of the curve
    • Why Tom thinks characterizing Japan as unwelcoming to foreigners is unfair to large swaths of Japan, and who in Japan isn't being represented by the government's choices


    As always, we highly recommend this week's extras, in which you can find:

    • EVERYTHING YOU EVER WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT YASUKUNI JINJA: WHAT'S UP WITH THAT PLACE
    • What the Japanese government SHOULD be paying attention to in terms of keeping its population secure
    • The role of religion in Japan's past militarism, and what it means that politics is currently divorced from religion
    • How the fallout from Japan's imperialism and World War II taught Japan and its neighbors in East Asia very different lessons about the effects of militarism

    Get access to the extras by supporting the podcast for less than $1 an episode. Become a member at http://buymeacoffee.com

    Have something you'd like to say? Send us a fax at japanbyrivercruise.com

    or Tweet to us at @jbrcpod


    Social Media Links:

    Tom Le: Twitter | Tom's Research | Japan's Aging Peace


    Ollie Horn: Twitter | Instagram

    Bobby Judo: Twitter | Instagram | YouTube

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    War and Memory: Culture (SE3 EP6)

    War and Memory: Culture (SE3 EP6)

    In the final installment of our series on war and memory, Joe speaks with Essex University historian Lucy Noakes and Chicago-based artist Michael Rakowitz on the creation of cultural memories around armed conflict. They cover a wide array of topics, including the Churchillian turn of British World War II narratives and how the words monument and demonstrate are linked by their roots in Latin. Their discussion beautifully encapsulates a number of topics covered across the series and explores more radical ways of remembering - or remembering better.

    Lucy Noakes is a social and cultural historian with specific interests in war, memory and gender.  She is co-editor of the book British Cultural Memory and the Second World War, sits on the Academic Advisory Board of the Imperial War Museum's Second World War Galleries redevelopment project, and is a series editor for the Social History Society book series New Directions in Social and Cultural History.

    Michael Rakowitz is an Iraqi-American artist working at the intersection of problem-solving and troublemaking. His anti-war statue April is the Cruellest Month formed part of the Turney Contemporary for the English coast series in 2021. Michael is also Professor of Art Theory and Practice at Northwestern University.

    As always, the show was presented by our very own Joe Glenton. If you'd like to learn more about Joe's new book Veteranhood (as mentioned in the podcast by Michael) then head over to his publisher Repeater.

    ForcesWatch is a small organisation funded by grants and donations. All contributions - no matter the size - can make a huge difference. If you want to support our work then please follow the link below.

    Support the show

    The Critical Race Theory Controversy

    The Critical Race Theory Controversy

    This year we’ve witnessed an outcry against critical race theory, but what is really fueling this resistance? Luis and I studied critical race theory together. I went on to teach it in undergrad classes and Luis brings it into his current work with K-12 educators. We discuss why critical thought feels threatening and connect it to militarism, Obama’s presidency, and inaccurate assumptions that racism is a problem of our nation’s past. Our conversation addresses two central questions: What is knowledge? Whose voices and perspectives are legitimated? 

    I encourage you to check out this episode on Crenshaw’s Intersectionality Matters for a deeper discussion of the origins of critical race theory.
    Bargaining for the common good
    Luis on Squeezin' Lemons

    War and Memory: Moral Injury & Trauma (SE3 EP4)

    War and Memory: Moral Injury & Trauma (SE3 EP4)

    In the fourth installment of our series on war and memory we speak with ex-British Army mental health clinician Christian Hughes on the traumatic impacts of conflict.  He gives a detailed breakdown of PTSD, critiques the condition's framing as a 'heroes injury' only experienced by those on the front-line, and introduces us to the notion of moral injury.

    In a wide-ranging discussion, Christian also explains that combat isn't the only element of an armed forces career with psychological impacts - arguing that military training conditions soldiers to respond to traumatic events in ways that are counter-productive to their mental wellbeing.  

    Christian K Hughes is a psychotherapist who served in the British Army as a mental health clinician. He also worked as a Senior NHS Clinician in a Complex Treatment Team and has a special interest in PTSD, trauma and moral injury.  You can find out more about his work here.

    If you've experienced, or are experiencing, any of the issues discussed in this podcast you can get specialist help from the NHS. Follow this link to find out more.

    ForcesWatch is a small organisation funded by grants and donations. All contributions - no matter the size - can make a huge difference. If you want to support our work then please follow the link below. 

    Support the show

    War and Memory: Pathologising Critique (SE3 EP3)

    War and Memory: Pathologising Critique (SE3 EP3)

    In the third installment of our series on war and memory we speak with American academic and Vietnam veteran Jerry Lembcke on how resistance to the conflict in South East Asia was framed during the 1960s and 70s. The discussion focuses on two key positions in Jerry's work: stab in the back theory and the pathologising of dissent through the coining of post-traumatic stress disorder. He unpacks how in the former, mysogny was used to paint anti-war activists as weak and effeminate against the strength and heroic resolve of the troops; whilst in the latter, the critical voices of veterans returning from the conflict were explained as the product of mental health rather than a form of resistance to the war.

     Jerry Lembcke is  Associate Professor Emeritus at Holy Cross College in Worcester, Massachusetts and the author of eight books, including The Spitting Image: Myth, Memory, and the Legacy of Vietnam, CNN’s Tailwind: Inside Vietnam’s Last Great Myth, and Hanoi Jane: War, Sex, and Fantasies of Betrayal. His opinion pieces have appeared in the New York Times, Boston Globe, San Francisco Chronicle, and The Chronicle of Higher Education. He has been a guest on several NPR programs including On the Media.  You can find out more on Jerry's amazing work here.

    Music by Esion Noise.

    We would also like to thank Jacob over at Liverpool Podcast Studios.

    ForcesWatch is a small organisation funded by grants and donations. All contributions - no matter the size - can make a huge difference. If you want to support our work then please click the link below or follow us on Twitter

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    Our Feelings on Minor Feelings (repost from Vulgar Geniuses)

    Our Feelings on Minor Feelings (repost from Vulgar Geniuses)

    The Vulgar Geniuses and I share our thoughts on Cathy Park Hong's book, Minor Feelings: An Asian American Reckoning, originally posted on their podcast, "The Vulgar Geniuses Book Club Podcast." We discuss cross-racial solidarity and race relations with Hong's mention of Malcolm X and Richard Pryor, and we explore Hong's commentary on the Asian immigrant experience. I emphasize a running theme of how racism, capitalism, and militarism were spread with imperialism. 
    https://www.vulgargeniuses.com/