Land Theft and The Struggle For Dignity For African Ancestors
In the second segment, Sean and Jacquie are joined by Carlos Ron, Venezuela's Vice-minister of Foreign Affairs for North America and the President of the Simón Bolívar Institute to discuss the recent anniversary of the attempt to overthrow Venezuela's government in 2002 and how a popular uprising of Venezuelan people defeated the coup, the role of the mainstream corporate media played in the attempted coup and how popular communication played a role in overturning the coup, and what popular communication and the connections between grassroots political communities and the political institutions in Venezuela have done to defend the Bolivarian revolution.
In the third segment, Sean and Jacquie discuss a clip from Mumia Abu-Jamal highlighting the US history of undermining democracy around the world, the mythology of “spreading and defending democracy” that the US employs to justify intervention around the world, and US support for dictatorships that serve its interests.
Later in the show, Sean and Jacquie are joined by Dr. Marsha Coleman-Adebayo, president of the Bethesda African Cemetery Coalition and Ari Gutman, organizer with the Bethesda African Cemetery Coalition to discuss recent developments in the struggle to honor African ancestors at the Bethesda African Cemetery in Bethesda, Maryland and so-called progressive County Executive Marc Elrich's intimidation of activists working to honor ancestors, how the struggle to honor ancestors is fundamentally about land and the theft of land from Black people both in the past and in the present, and the hidden government departments that are critical for the movement of capital in communities all over the country.
In the second segment, Sean and Jacquie are joined by Carlos Ron, Venezuela's Vice-minister of Foreign Affairs for North America and the President of the Simón Bolívar Institute to discuss the recent anniversary of the attempt to overthrow Venezuela's government in 2002 and how a popular uprising of Venezuelan people defeated the coup, the role of the mainstream corporate media played in the attempted coup and how popular communication played a role in overturning the coup, and what popular communication and the connections between grassroots political communities and the political institutions in Venezuela have done to defend the Bolivarian revolution.
In the third segment, Sean and Jacquie discuss a clip from Mumia Abu-Jamal highlighting the US history of undermining democracy around the world, the mythology of “spreading and defending democracy” that the US employs to justify intervention around the world, and US support for dictatorships that serve its interests.
Later in the show, Sean and Jacquie are joined by Dr. Marsha Coleman-Adebayo, president of the Bethesda African Cemetery Coalition and Ari Gutman, organizer with the Bethesda African Cemetery Coalition to discuss recent developments in the struggle to honor African ancestors at the Bethesda African Cemetery in Bethesda, Maryland and so-called progressive County Executive Marc Elrich's intimidation of activists working to honor ancestors, how the struggle to honor ancestors is fundamentally about land and the theft of land from Black people both in the past and in the present, and the hidden government departments that are critical for the movement of capital in communities all over the country.