
Solidarity Is Crucial In Colombia’s Struggle To Chart A New Path
In the second segment, Sean and Jacquie are joined by Dr. Robert Hockett, Edward Cornell Professor of Law at Cornell University and Senior Counsel for Westwood Capital to discuss the Biden administration’s recently unveiled plan to combat inflation, how the administration’s seemingly endless funding for war has impacted the productive capacities of the US and how that has contributed to inflation, the flawed understanding of the causes of inflation to stem from rising wages and not the price gouging from corporations, and the huge risk of an artificial recession that the Federal Reserve’s current strategy of raising interest rates poses to poor and working people.
In the third segment, Sean and Jacquie are joined by Simon Tesfamariam, executive director of the New Africa Institute to discuss the US threatening Eritrea and Ethiopia with a legal designation of genocide in respose to the war with the TPLF in the region, why such a designation is a part of the US campaign to force Ethiopia and Eritrea to submit to its imperialist whims and weaken their national sovereignty, and the information warfare being waged to suppress organizing against US meddling in the Horn of Africa and to supress a skewed narrative of the war.
Later in the show, Sean and Jacquie are joined by Dr. Charisse Burden-Stelly, assistant professor of Africana Studies and Political Science at Carleton College, Visiting Scholar with the Race and Capitalism Project at the University of Chicago, and co-editor of the upcoming book, “Organize, Fight, Win: Black Communist Women’s Political Writing” to discuss an on-the-ground report from Colombia after its recent first round of elections, what a win by progressive candidate Gustavo Petro would mean for Colombia, why Colombia’s role as Latin America’s Israel in the imperialist ambitions of the US necessitates an international solidarity with poor, working, and oppressed people in Colombia, and how the US propaganda machine is exported throughout the world through cultural imperialism.
In the second segment, Sean and Jacquie are joined by Dr. Robert Hockett, Edward Cornell Professor of Law at Cornell University and Senior Counsel for Westwood Capital to discuss the Biden administration’s recently unveiled plan to combat inflation, how the administration’s seemingly endless funding for war has impacted the productive capacities of the US and how that has contributed to inflation, the flawed understanding of the causes of inflation to stem from rising wages and not the price gouging from corporations, and the huge risk of an artificial recession that the Federal Reserve’s current strategy of raising interest rates poses to poor and working people.
In the third segment, Sean and Jacquie are joined by Simon Tesfamariam, executive director of the New Africa Institute to discuss the US threatening Eritrea and Ethiopia with a legal designation of genocide in respose to the war with the TPLF in the region, why such a designation is a part of the US campaign to force Ethiopia and Eritrea to submit to its imperialist whims and weaken their national sovereignty, and the information warfare being waged to suppress organizing against US meddling in the Horn of Africa and to supress a skewed narrative of the war.
Later in the show, Sean and Jacquie are joined by Dr. Charisse Burden-Stelly, assistant professor of Africana Studies and Political Science at Carleton College, Visiting Scholar with the Race and Capitalism Project at the University of Chicago, and co-editor of the upcoming book, “Organize, Fight, Win: Black Communist Women’s Political Writing” to discuss an on-the-ground report from Colombia after its recent first round of elections, what a win by progressive candidate Gustavo Petro would mean for Colombia, why Colombia’s role as Latin America’s Israel in the imperialist ambitions of the US necessitates an international solidarity with poor, working, and oppressed people in Colombia, and how the US propaganda machine is exported throughout the world through cultural imperialism.