Archive for the ‘Podcasts’ Category

Right-click and select “save as” to download: Punkonomics2014-5-14

We’re very excited to be back on the airwaves in Central Florida!

We had with us on the phone: Ben Smith from Belmont University (Alabama), and in the studio: Chris Garlock (Rollins Economics alumnus and Crummer MBA), and Shaheen Alhumaydhi (Rollins student)

And of course the usual clowns Beni Balak (me, aka the doctor) and Jesse (aka Mr Catnip)

Some links to INDEPENDENT media:

We will continue to follow the unfolding crisis…

After a long time off the air with only blogging and social net to vent our outrage and banter, we’ve finally launched ourselves on YouTube!

… yeah, we know, we’re considering calling these long segments: 2 Fat Old Guys and a Dog lol

We did what we used to do on the radio/podcasts and chewed on some current ugly fat for over an hour (no station manager to shut us up).

AUDIO (right click Punkonomics2014-2-23 and “save as” to download):

Topic: The Post-Occupy/Post-Arab Spring Co-opting of Media and Social Media for the Ends of Destroying Democracy and Promoting the Interests of the Upper Class/1%

This is based on a recent blog post: We are STILL being PLAYED! Venezuela and Ukraine in context
__________________________
Collection of links:

Former interviewee participates in a very balanced discussion about current events in Venezuela.

Punkonomics is proud to remind everybody that we were one of the first to interview George at some length on Venezuela and we’re very happy his voice has become so prominent :)

Here’s the interview podcast from 2013-7-8

http://traffic.libsyn.com/blackagendareport/20130108_bd_legalize_it.mp3

Description:

A Black Agenda Radio Commentary by BAR managing editor Bruce A. Dixon

What if policymakers wanted to make marijuana safe for taxation and corporate profit, but needed to make sure legalization didn’t produce new jobs and economic opportunities for poor and working class communities, or make them lay off any cops and judges, or have to close any prisons or jails? Well, the model in place in Colorado today would be a good start.

Is the End of Marijuana Prohibition the End of the War On Drugs? Probably Not.

A Black Agenda Radio Commentary by BAR managing editor Bruce A. Dixon

The forty years of so-called “war on drugs” has been the rhetorical excuse for a nationwide policy of punitive overpolicing in black and brown communities. Although black and white rates of drug use have been virtually identical, law enforcement strategies focused police resources almost exclusively upon communities of color. Prosecutors and judges did their bit as well, charging and convicting whites significantly less often, and to less severe sentences than blacks.

The forty years war on drugs has been the front door of what can only be described as the prison state, in which African Americans are 13% of the population but more than 40% of the prisoners, and the chief interactions of government with young black males is policing, the courts and imprisonment. Given all that, the beginning of the end of marijuana prohibition, first in Colorado and soon to be followed by other states ought to be great good news. But not necessarily.

Ask yourself, what would it look like if policymakers wanted to end the prohibition of marijuana, but not necessarily the the war on drugs. What if they desired to lock down the potential economic opportunities opened up by legalizing weed to themselves and their class, to a handful of their wealthy and well-connected friends and campaign contributors? What if they wanted to make the legal marijuana market safe for predatory agribusiness, which would like to claim lucrative patents on all the genetic varieties of marijuana which can be legally grown, <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/13/genetically-modified-seed-patent-report_n_2678837.html&#8221; target=”_blank”>as they already try to do with other crops?

If they wanted to do those things, the system in place in Colorado today would be a good start. In Denver today, low income property owners can’t just plant pot in the back yard or on the roof in hopes of making one mortgage payment a year out of twelve, it doesn’t work that way. Ordinary households are limited to <a href="http://www.denverpost.com/homegarden/ci_24782729/growing-your-own-marijuana-colorado-legal-doesnt-mean&#8221; target=”_blank”>3 plants per adult, and for reference only the female plants are good for smoking, and prohibited from selling the weed or the seed. To participate in the marijuana economy as anything but a consumer requires background checks, hefty license fees, a minimum of hundreds of thousands to invest, and the right connections. All this currently drives the price of legal weed in Colorado to over $600 per ounce, including a 25% state tax, roughly double the reported street price of illegal weed.

So to enable the state to collect that tax money, and the bankers, growers and investors to collect their profits from marijuana taxed by the state and regulated in the corporate interest, <a href="http://thegrio.com/2014/01/06/breaking-black-why-colorados-weed-laws-may-backfire-for-black-americans/&#8221; target=”_blank”>cops and judges and jailers in near future, in Colorado and in your state as well, figure to be just as busy as they always have been the last forty years, doing pretty much what they’ve always done… conducting a war on illegal drugs, chiefly in the poorer and blacker sections of town, with predictable results.

The end of marijuana prohibition is not designed to create jobs in our communities, nor is it intended to shrink the prison state. Our ruling class simply does not allow economic growth that they can’t monopolize, and the modern prison state has never been about protecting the public from drugs or crime. Prisons and our lifelong persecution of former prisoners serve to single out, brand and stigmatize the economic losers in modern capitalist society, so that those hanging on from paycheck to paycheck can have someone to look down upon and so that they might imagine that this vast edifice of inequality is, if not just, inevitable.

For Black Agenda Radio, I’m Bruce Dixon. Find us on the web at <a href="http://www.blackagendareport.com.

“>http://www.blackagendareport.com/”>www.blackagendareport.com.

Bruce A. Dixon is the managing editor at Black Agenda Report and the co-chair of the Georgia Green Party. He lives and works in Marietta GA and can be reached through this site’s contact page or at bruce.dixon(at)blackagendareport.com.

This content comes from:
Black Agenda Radio Commentaries

URL:
http://blackagendareport.libsyn.com/rss

The Singer Beni Balak lives in Florida, the guitar player Shahar Ben Barak lives in Washington State, & the bass player Eyal Linur still lives in Israel. The band is collaborating these days on the internet. The new drummer is Elad Yitshaki, Ron Yanai plays Keyboards & produces, & Eran Schefer helped with engineering.

Original Hebrew lyrics by Eyal Linur and I (Beni Balak) translated them:

>>>TO KILL’EM ALL<<<

Let me tell you a tale about this angry old hound,

who decided one day to simply bite off the hand,

that for so many years had been feeding him shit,

it’s the day that the pigs are put into the pit!!

.

Even sheep on the farm understand on their own:

The fat pigs, are in charge of our world and out home.

But every pig, has it’s day and that day has arrived,

Cause the dogs are all here and no pig will survive!

.

To kill ‘em all — before they’re too big!

To kill ‘em all — in the day of the pigs

To kill ‘em all — before they’re too big!

To kill ‘em all

.

If you’re feeling sexy, when you’re stressed and wild.

Let it out of you, Act it out outside.

What a macho man, hot with righteous rage.

Go and kill ‘em all, So it won’t be me!

.

You can try, you can run, you can call the police.

You can hide, you can hold up a white flag — oh please!

You can scream out for help, from your private militia,

it’s too late, the mad dogs; we are already with ya!

.

You can crawl on your knees to the basement and hide.

You can cry, make some calls, offer deals on the side.

Take a pick or a shovel, get ready to dig,

It’s the day of the dogs and the night of the pigs!