Against the Grain – December 21, 2011
Ian Seda-Irizarry analyzes the strengths and limitations of worker cooperatives in the context of capitalist competition and market imperatives.
12:00 PM Pacific Time: Mondays - Wednesdays
Acclaimed program of ideas, in-depth analysis, and commentary on a variety of matters—political, economic, social, and cultural—important to progressive and radical thinking and activism. Against the Grain is co-produced and co-hosted by Sasha Lilley and C. S. Soong.
Ian Seda-Irizarry analyzes the strengths and limitations of worker cooperatives in the context of capitalist competition and market imperatives.
In 2007, Christopher Hitchens, who died last week, debated Chris Hedges about religion at a KPFA event moderated by Sasha Lilley, titled “Is God Great?”
Acclaimed author and New Left Review editor Tariq Ali assesses the people’s uprisings in the Arab world and their impact on the Palestinian struggle.
Historian Iain Boal talks about the history of struggles to reclaim public space and the commons–from the Diggers to occupiers in Athens–as activists attempt to shut down the West Coast ports.
Philosopher of science Sandra Harding calls into question Western exceptionalism and triumphalism in the areas of science and technology.
Former farm worker Frank Bardacke, author of “Trampling Out the Vintage: César Chávez and the Two Souls of the United Farm Workers,” speaks with Sasha Lilley about the rise and fall of the UFW, and the militancy of laborers who had a sense of their own power. The United Farm Workers Was More Than Cesar … Continued
In “River of Shadows,” Rebecca Solnit combines a biography of the groundbreaking photographer Eadweard Muybridge with a larger story about the advent of modern technology and the radical transformations it wrought on human consciousness and whole societies.
Sean Burns talks about the late labor historian and folklorist Archie Green, who was shaped by work and militant struggle on San Francisco’s docks.