Making Sense of the DSA

We talk with Dan La Botz about the state of the Democratic Socialists of America two years after the “Bernie Bump.” Dan La Botz is a prominent American labor union activist, academic, journalist, and author. He was a co-founder of Teamsters for a Democratic Union and has written extensively on worker rights in the United States and Mexico.

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Music by Podington Bear

Our email: acorrectionteam@acorrectionpodcast.com

To what extent does U.S. prosperity depend on exploitation?

We called Arthur MacEwan to find out the answer. Professor MacEwan taught at UMass Boston from 1975 to 2008 and is now professor emeritus in the Department of Economics. His range of courses included those on economic development, macroeconomics, the economics of education, Latin America, economic history and Marxist economics.

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Want to support this podcast? Go for it! Click the link above or donate here. Last month over 4,000 people listened to the podcast and lots of people are giving feedback. Thank you. Please don’t hesitate to let us know how we are doing and what topics you’d like us to cover in the future.

Music by Podington Bear

Our email: acorrectionteam@acorrectionpodcast.com

How the Swedes Do It

We talk with Monica Prasad about taxes in Sweden. Sweden has lower poverty rates, less inequality and higher mobility than the U.S. How do they do it? The answer is not what you expect. Monica Prasad is a professor of sociology and a faculty fellow in the Institute for Policy Research at Northwestern University, and is the author, most recently, of “Starving the Beast: Ronald Reagan and the Tax Cut Revolution.”

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The Causes and Implications of Regional Economic Disparities

We speak with Gerald Friedman about the growing economic gap between the poorer states in the U.S. and the wealthier coastal regions. Gerald Friedman is a professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst. Professor Friedman has research interests in the areas of economic history, specifically 19th- and 20th-century France and the US; political economies; and the economics of healthcare. He has drafted financing plans for single-payer healthcare systems, and has served on the editorial boards of several academic journals.

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Music by Podington Bear

Our email: acorrectionteam@acorrectionpodcast.com

Two events in NYC this week!

We speak with Garon Scott of the NYC DSA Racial Justice Working Group about two important events happening this week. On March 7th, the Elected Civilian Review Board Campaign will have a speaker at the police-accountability-focused Charter forum at City Council Chambers, and hopes to pack the chambers with at least 100 campaign supporters. On March 9th, the campaign against school suspensions will hold a public delivery of petition signatures on the steps of City Hall. Listen to the show for more details!

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Don’t forget to tell your friends about the show. Last month over 4,200 people listened to the podcast and lots of people are giving feedback. Thank you. Please don’t hesitate to let us know how we are doing and what topics you’d like us to cover in the future.

Music by Podington Bear

Our email: acorrectionteam@acorrectionpodcast.com

The Weaponization of Anti-Semitism

We speak with Dr. Stephen R. Shalom about the weaponization of anti-semitism against supporters of BDS and critics of Israel. Steve Shalom teaches political science at William Paterson University in New Jersey, where he is director of the Middle East Studies minor. He's a member of the editorial board of the journal New Politics and works with the northern NJ chapter of Jewish Voice for Peace. He has written extensively on U.S. foreign policy and on the Middle East.

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Don’t forget to tell your friends about the show. Last month over 4,200 people listened to the podcast and lots of people are giving feedback. Thank you. Please don’t hesitate to let us know how we are doing and what topics you’d like us to cover in the future.

Music by Podington Bear

Our email: acorrectionteam@acorrectionpodcast.com

Why the Democrats will win in 2020

We speak with Rachel Bitecofer on why the Democrats will win the 2020 election, whether Bernie is a good candidate, and the implications of a polarized America. Rachel Bitecofer (@RachelBitecofer), a political-science professor at the Wason Center for Public Policy at Christopher Newport University, in Virginia, is the author of “The Unprecedented 2016 Presidential Election.” Professor Bitecofer successfully predicted the outcome of the 2018 mid-term elections months before 538 and other experts. We were introduced to her work when we read David Leonhardt’s column here and you can find her most recent NYT Op-Ed here.

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Don’t forget to tell your friends about the show. Last month over 4,200 people listened to the podcast and lots of people are giving feedback. Thank you. Please don’t hesitate to let us know how we are doing and what topics you’d like us to cover in the future.

Music by Podington Bear

Our email: acorrectionteam@acorrectionpodcast.com

Operation Ajax

We speak with Bridey Heing about the CIA’s first coup. Bridey Heing is a writer and critic based in Washington, DC. Her writing on literature, culture, and politics has been published by The Economist, the Times Literary Supplement, and Pacific Standard, among others.

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Don’t forget to tell your friends about the show. Last month over 4,000 people listened to the podcast and lots of people are giving feedback. Thank you. Please don’t hesitate to let us know how we are doing and what topics you’d like us to cover in the future.

Music by Podington Bear

Our email: acorrectionteam@acorrectionpodcast.com

Something Rotten: Danish Social Democrats Find Common Ground With The Far-Right

We speak with Martin Bak Jørgensen about immigration in Denmark. Martin Bak Jørgensen is an associate professor at the Department of Culture and Global Studies at Aalborg University. He is coeditor of Solidarity without Borders: Gramscian Perspectives on Migration and Civil Society and coauthor of Solidarity and the ‘Refugee Crisis’ in Europe.

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Don’t forget to tell your friends about the show. Last month over 4,000 people listened to the podcast and lots of people are giving feedback. Thank you. Please don’t hesitate to let us know how we are doing and what topics you’d like us to cover in the future.

Music by Podington Bear

Our email: acorrectionteam@acorrectionpodcast.com

The Zapatistas: 25 Years of Revolution

We speak with Hilary Klein about the lessons of the Zapatista Revolution. HILARY KLEIN spent six years in Chiapas, Mexico, working with women’s projects in Zapatista communities. After she compiled a book of Zapatista women’s testimony to be circulated in their own villages, women in the Zapatista leadership suggested that Hilary compile a similar book for an outside audience. Hilary has been engaged in social justice and community organizing for twenty years. After spending five years at Make the Road New York, a membership organization that builds the power of immigrant and working-class communities, she joined the Center for Popular Democracy in May 2015.

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If you are a regular listener and have a little extra money please consider making a donation today at Patreon. If you don’t have much then don’t give. Either way tell your friends about the show. Last month over 4,000 people listened to the podcast and lots of people are giving feedback. Thank you. Please don’t hesitate to let us know how we are doing and what topics you’d like us to cover in the future.

Music by Podington Bear

Our email: acorrectionteam@acorrectionpodcast.com