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Soldiers at the Door
Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace:
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Democracy and Elections:
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DrugReporter:
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Environment:
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ForeignPolicy:
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Health and Wellness:
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Hurricane Katrina:
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Immigration:
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Media and Technology:
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Movie Mix:
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Reproductive Justice and Gender:
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Rights and Liberties:
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Sex and Relationships:
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War on Iraq:
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Ma'ad Fayad
Water:
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On March 27, Democracy Now! host Amy Goodman interviewed hip-hop artist Michael Franti on the national listener-sponsored radio show Democracy Now. What follows is a rush transcript of that interview:
For nearly a decade, hip-hop artist and activist Michael Franti has been a leading progressive voice in music. He grew out of the Bay Area music and political scene of the 90s. In 1986 he founded the drum and bass duo the Beatniks, paving the way for his next musical endeavor, the Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy. His most recent musical project is the musical collective Spearhead, begun in 1994. Franti has used his music to push social boundaries, speaks out against sexual violence, encourages his community to prevent the spread of HIV and has been very vocal in his opposition to war. And now it may be the reason why the government is looking at him and his group Spearhead.
Amy Goodman: It's good to have you with us. Can you talk about what's been happening as you've been touring the country with songs like "Bomb da World"?
Michael Franti: Well, we've been touring for the last year and a half performing that song and everywhere we go it gets standing ovations, people begin to cry. People are just very grateful to hear any voice out there right now who are speaking in support of peace and human rights.
What's happened as you've been on this tour?
Well, what's happened most recently is that we performed at a rally on March 15 in San Francisco and the next day on the 16th -- that rally was out here -- and on the 16th on the East Coast, a band member of mine who prefers to go unnamed, his mother received a visit from two plainclothes men from the military -- and this band member of mine has a sibling who is in the Gulf.
And they came in and talked to her and said, You have a child who's in the Gulf and you have a child who's in this band Spearhead who's part of the "resistance"(in their words).
They had pictures of us performing the day before at the rally, they had pictures of us performing at some of our annual concerts that we put on that are in support of peace and human rights. They had his flight records for the past several months, they had the names of everybody who works in my office, our management office, Guerilla Management. They had his checking account records. They asked his mother a lot of questions about where he was, what he was doing in this place, why he was going here. They confiscated his sibling's CD collection that they had brought over to listen to while they were in the Gulf, and basically were intimidating -- told her which members of the press she could talk to and which members of the press she should not speak to.
And basically what this signals to me is that -- I don't feel like we're being particularly singled out or under any investigation for any activity because all the activity that we do is very much above board and all the events where photos were taken out were all public things we were at. But what it does signal to me is that there's a lot of us who are now making a blip on the radar, you know, whether we're organizers at rallies, whether we're musicians, whether we're people who are speaking out, authors, writers, actors. And we're beginning to make little blips on the radar. They're starting to pay attention and collect information about what's going on. You know, more important to me or more important than me you know, being a part of that is the fact that our civil rights are being eroded across the board for every person.
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Ban the Cluster Bomb Rights and Liberties: More than 100 countries have agreed to stop using them. Guess which one hasn't. By Brian Cook, In These Times. December 4, 2008. |
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