
Latest School Shooting Reveals Opportunism of Democratic Party
In the second segment, Sean and Jacquie are joined by independent journalist, writer and researcher Denis Rogatyuk to discuss the US rolling back some sanctions on Venezuela in an attempt to free up some of its oil supply for US consumption, why this move also serves US geopolitical interests as it pursues another cold war against Russia, why this matters for the US regime change effort in Venezuela, and how the geopolitical shift caused by the ongoing war in Ukraine provides an opportunity for Latin America to gain some breathing room from American regime change efforts.
In the third segment, Sean and Jacquie are joined by Dr. Tamanisha John, professor at Clark Atlanta University and Caribbean regional analyst to discuss the New York Times recent slate of articles documenting the history of Haiti's exploitation at the hands of France and the United States and the many problems that Haitians and others have with the Times' reporting, the Times' decoupling of the history of exploitation and how that continues to affect Haiti today, what's left out in the discussion of the “double debt” that Haiti had to pay to France and US financial interests, and the continued ways that Europe , the US, and the capitalist system continues to deny Haiti its sovereignty.
Later in the show, Sean and Jacquie are joined by Kristine Hendrix, President to the University City School Board, Junior Bayard Rustin Fellow with the Fellowship for Reconciliation and contributor to the Truth-Telling Project and "We Stay Woke" podcast to discuss the mass shooting at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, which comes on the heels of the racist terror attack in Buffalo, New York, and what these ongoing crisies mean for organizing, how the Democrats will almost certainly use these issues as part of their campaigns because they have nothing to offer to voters, and the opportunist actions taken by politicians like Robert O'Rourke in a gambit to win votes off of pain and grief.
In the second segment, Sean and Jacquie are joined by independent journalist, writer and researcher Denis Rogatyuk to discuss the US rolling back some sanctions on Venezuela in an attempt to free up some of its oil supply for US consumption, why this move also serves US geopolitical interests as it pursues another cold war against Russia, why this matters for the US regime change effort in Venezuela, and how the geopolitical shift caused by the ongoing war in Ukraine provides an opportunity for Latin America to gain some breathing room from American regime change efforts.
In the third segment, Sean and Jacquie are joined by Dr. Tamanisha John, professor at Clark Atlanta University and Caribbean regional analyst to discuss the New York Times recent slate of articles documenting the history of Haiti's exploitation at the hands of France and the United States and the many problems that Haitians and others have with the Times' reporting, the Times' decoupling of the history of exploitation and how that continues to affect Haiti today, what's left out in the discussion of the “double debt” that Haiti had to pay to France and US financial interests, and the continued ways that Europe , the US, and the capitalist system continues to deny Haiti its sovereignty.
Later in the show, Sean and Jacquie are joined by Kristine Hendrix, President to the University City School Board, Junior Bayard Rustin Fellow with the Fellowship for Reconciliation and contributor to the Truth-Telling Project and "We Stay Woke" podcast to discuss the mass shooting at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, which comes on the heels of the racist terror attack in Buffalo, New York, and what these ongoing crisies mean for organizing, how the Democrats will almost certainly use these issues as part of their campaigns because they have nothing to offer to voters, and the opportunist actions taken by politicians like Robert O'Rourke in a gambit to win votes off of pain and grief.