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Explore " right-wing" with insightful episodes like "Understanding Populism During COVID-19", "Super Suga Special! (w/Jake Adelstein and Derek Wessman)", "What Exactly is the "Radical Right"?", "Welcome to Right Rising" and "20200223 Snapshots #8 Jesus' Manifesto (Part I)" from podcasts like ""Right Rising", "Japan By River Cruise", "Right Rising", "Right Rising" and "Northern Community's Podcast"" and more!
Episodes (69)
Super Suga Special! (w/Jake Adelstein and Derek Wessman)
Former pumpkin farmer Jake Adelstein and amateur firefighter Derek Wessman fill us in on everything you ever wanted to know about Japan's new Prime Minister, but he didn't allow you to ask.
For real though, Derek worked as an aide to a member of the Japanese diet, and Jake is Jake, so they were perfect for walking us through all of the stuff that Bobby and Ollie should really have already been at least somewhat aware of.
Topics discussed on this episode range from:
- Prime Minister Abe's resignation
- Jake's "two minute" summary of Japanese politics since the 50s
- The connections Jake sees between the Liberal Democratic Party and the Yakuza
- What the LDP wants
- What Derek thinks about the idea of a return to Japanese Imperial Glory
- Why Jake thinks Abe failed to accomplish his goals
- The reasons that Abe is resigning NOW
- The effect of the Emperor's abdication on Abe's momentum
- Derek's sympathy for conservative political donors
- Summaries of the Kake Gakuen and Moritomo Gakuen scandals, Sakura wo Miru-kai scandal, and other scandals
- The ways in which Japanese politicians avoid consequences for their involvement in scandals
- SONTAKU as the Japanese version of plausible deniability
- If we accept that the LDP is nefarious and corrupt, WHY do Japanese people vote LDP?
- How Prime Ministers are selected and politicians are elected in Japan
- Abe's approval rating track record with the public, and his reputation within the LDP
- How Derek thinks the LDP maintains their power by wielding funding
- The New Prime Minister Suga Yoshihide: Who he is and what he's done
- How Jake credits Suga with destroying Japan's freedom of the press with a "candy and whip" strategy
- A quick minute of mocking Foreign Affairs Minister Motegi Toshimitsu
- The veracity of the coverage of Suga as a simple farm boy
- What Derek thinks about the way the media covers Japanese politicians
- How we ALL HATE people who make Sugar jokes out of Suga's name
- How Suga helped contribute to the sontaku trend
- How Derek thinks Japan traded a problem with bureaucratic red tape and immobility for a very different problem
- Derek's expectations for Suga as a reformer
- What Abe and Suga as his successors platform of reform ACTUALLY consists of
- What happened to Womenomics? What did Abe do for gender equality, and why we don't expect better from Suga.
- What it takes to run for office, and how the conditions effectively prevent average people from holding office?
- How Japanese TV would rather debate who invented the hand job than discuss the above point.
- How Jake plans to get more involved with the props on production of Tokyo Vice.
- Ollie's recent TV pitch failures, and other reasons to be depressed
- Derek explains party loyalty in the Diet, and the consequences of that
- What Jake and Derek expect from Suga's tenure as Prime Minister
- What's up with Koizumi Shinjiro
- Jake's take on the worst case scenario for Suga's Japan, which is pretty god awful, but also maybe inevitable?
- Political rumblings around the consumption tax
- Derek's twitter call out of the totally off base summary of the situation by CNN's Will Ripley
- How that illustrates huge problems with international reporting about Japan
- What some foreigners think about how balanced Jake's takes are
- Derek and Jakes overall takeaways on Suga
- Suga's unflattering nicknames
- An indication of how Japanese Derek and Jake have become
- Everyone's predictions for the length of Suga's stint as Prime Minister
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Content Links:
Jake's Daily Beast Article:
Japan’s Ruthless New PM Is a Control Freak Who Muzzled the Press
DONATE TO:
Black Lives Matter
Official George Floyd Memorial Fund
NAACP Legal Defense Fund
Runnymede Trust
Stephen Lawrence Charitable Trust
Social Media Links:
Derek Wessman: Twitter
Jake Adelstein: Twitter | Homepage
Ollie Horn: Twitter | Instagram
Bobby Judo: Twitter | Instagram | YouTube
Other things to click on
Some are affiliate links because we're sell-outs
- We record remotely using Squadcast and the podcast is hosted on Transistor.
- Bobby uses the Samson Go Mic and Ollie uses the AT2005USB mic
What Exactly is the "Radical Right"?
Welcome to Right Rising
20200223 Snapshots #8 Jesus' Manifesto (Part I)
One minute the crowds love Jesus, and the next they are trying to push Jesus off a cliff. What on earth was going on? What did Jesus say to get His hometown neighbours ready to commit murder? It is all core to Jesus' Manifesto. A message by David Toscano
Kristof Dhont of University of Kent on intergroup contact research and research careers
More positive contact [with an outgroup] reduces prejudice. No matter how you measure it, no matter how you set up your study design, once there’s a positive contact situation, you lower prejudice towards the outgroup... These effects tend to be stronger among those higher on social dominance orientation and those higher on right-wing authoritarianism, which makes intergroup contact quite a good and efficient strategy to reduce prejudice among those who seem to be initially prejudiced towards outgroups.
- Kristof Dhont
Recent psychological research on intergroup contact and human-animal relations has implications for effective animal advocacy strategy. But what are the most action-relevant findings? And how can researchers maximize their positive impact for animals?
Kristof is a Senior Lecturer in Psychology at the University of Kent. He founded and directs a research group focused on the “Study of Human Intergroup and Animal Relations at Kent.” He recently edited the book Why We Love and Exploit Animals and organises the Animal Advocacy Conference: Insights from the Social Sciences.
Topics discussed in the episode:
- Kristof’s most action-relevant work for animal advocates and the audience of his work (1:29)
- Finding the balance between academic rigor and making work accessible to advocates (6:15)
- SHARKLab and the academic field of human-animal relations (13:28)
- Connections between right-wing authoritarianism, social dominance orientation, and animal exploitation (26:02)
- “Vegetarianism threat,” its correlates, and its causes (41:12)
- The pros and cons of advocacy focusing on children (55:38)
- Research on human intergroup interactions and what this suggests about farmed animal advocacy (58:08)
- The importance of intergroup contact (including between humans and animals) being experienced as positive, in order to improve attitudes towards outgroups (1:12:32)
- The “secondary transfer effect” of intergroup contact, where reducing prejudice towards one outgroup also reduces prejudice towards other outgroups (1:14:52)
- How research careers and training in academia compare to research careers in nonprofits and more independent skills development (1:18:05)
- Advice on PhD applications and on research careers (1:31:16)
- The interaction between researchers in the academic sphere and the “effective animal advocacy” sphere (1:47:55)
Resources discussed in the episode are available at https://www.sentienceinstitute.org/podcast
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