United National Antiwar Coalition (UNAC) Conference, Stamford, CT March 25, 2012 Selected audio from plenary sessions and panel discussions
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"Updates on NDAA and Other Civil Liberty Erosions: Judge Orders Preliminary Injunction to Block NDAA Detention Provision," by Anna Manzo, May 17, 2012
"Angry and Fighting Back," by Reginald Johnson, May 17, 2012
"Lessons on Corporate Media's Role in Promoting U.S. War: Next Target Iran," by Scott Harris, April 30, 2012
"One Blue Sky Above Us": 40,000 Norwegians Respond to Breivik's Hate with Love for Children of the Rainbow," by Anna Manzo, April 27, 2012
UPDATED: "Part III: What the Trayvon Martin Case Reveals about Stand Your Ground and Concealed Weapons Laws," by Anna Manzo, April 13, 2012
MP3: Nathan Schneider (www.wagingnonviolence.org) has been reporting on the OWS movement from its first days in August, 2011. In this April 3, 2012 interview, Richard Hill asks him to assess the on-going debate in the movement between those espousing a strict adherence to non-violence principles and practices and those advocating a 'diversity of tactics', Interview conducted by Richard Hill, WPKN
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Posted March 23, 2011
Interview with Dr. Ira Helfand, past president and current board member of Physicians for Social Responsibility, conducted by Scott Harris
Workers at Japan's Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant complex, have been working around the clock to repair the failed safety systems of six nuclear reactors, damaged by a devastasting tsunami triggered by a 9.0 magnitude earthquake on March 11. Efforts were underway to reconnect all of the reactors to the electrical grid, to power cooling systems that can help reduce radioactive emissions into the environment. The number 3 reactor unit, powered by a mix of uranium and plutonium - or "Mox," is being monitored closely, as the fuel is volatile and plutonium is one of the most toxic substances known to man.
Radiation that has escaped from the plant has spread across Japan, and low levels have been detected over North America, with the radioactive plume expected to circumnavigate the globe. While hundreds of thousands of Japanese citizens have been evacuated from a 50-mile radius around the reactors, scientists were alarmed to find that food crops, milk and drinking water in a wide area have been contaminated by radioactivity. Officials say that water with increased radiation levels used to cool down the reactors at Fukushima has flowed into the nearby ocean, which may contaminate seafood.
President Obama initially reacted to the nuclear crisis in Japan by restating his support for nuclear power. His administration is seeking $54 billion in loan guarantees to revive the U.S. nuclear power industry which was stalled after the Three Mile Island nuclear accident in 1979. But the president has more recently asked the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, or NRC to review the safety of the nation’s 104 operating nuclear plants, of which 23 are of the same design as those at the Fukushima complex in Japan. Between The Lines' Scott Harris, spoke with Dr. Ira Helfand, past president and current board member of the group Physicians for Social Responsibility. He discusses the consequences of radiation exposure for human health, and explains why he is opposed to an expansion of nuclear power in the U.S.
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