
Elections in Italy, Referendums in Ukraine, First Amendment & Big Tech
Wyatt Reed, Sputnik Radio correspondent, joins the show to talk about support for referendums in Donetsk, Luhanks, and parts of Ukraine.
Denis Rogatyuk, international director of the El Ciudadano media platform, breaks down the UN General Assembly speeches of three new Latin American leaders: Chile's Gabriel Boric, Colombia's Gustavo Petro, and Honduras' Xiomara Castro.
Journalist Kevin Gosztola, who writes for Shadowproof.com and co-hosts the podcast Unauthorized Disclosure, discusses new polls showing support for Julian Assange, the way rumors infect news reporting, the Havana Syndrome saga, the lengths US hospitals will go to overcharge patients , and the results of California's Proposition 22.
Chris Garaffa, technologist and cohost of the CovertAction Bulletin podcast, discusses the likelihood that the Supreme Court will have to weigh in on whether states can regulate the content of social media websites, and what implications such a decision might have. They also break down Europe's nascent movement against facial recognition technology.
Wyatt Reed, Sputnik Radio correspondent, joins the show to talk about support for referendums in Donetsk, Luhanks, and parts of Ukraine.
Denis Rogatyuk, international director of the El Ciudadano media platform, breaks down the UN General Assembly speeches of three new Latin American leaders: Chile's Gabriel Boric, Colombia's Gustavo Petro, and Honduras' Xiomara Castro.
Journalist Kevin Gosztola, who writes for Shadowproof.com and co-hosts the podcast Unauthorized Disclosure, discusses new polls showing support for Julian Assange, the way rumors infect news reporting, the Havana Syndrome saga, the lengths US hospitals will go to overcharge patients , and the results of California's Proposition 22.
Chris Garaffa, technologist and cohost of the CovertAction Bulletin podcast, discusses the likelihood that the Supreme Court will have to weigh in on whether states can regulate the content of social media websites, and what implications such a decision might have. They also break down Europe's nascent movement against facial recognition technology.