[Peace] AOTA/NFN suggested videos

Karen Aram karenaram at hotmail.com
Sat Sep 5 21:20:27 UTC 2020


J.B. 

Your videos are the best. And your critique of some are valuable. A couple of which, I’ve meant to comment on, as they captured my thoughts exactly. Just got caught up in other things.


> On Sep 5, 2020, at 13:27, J.B. Nicholson via Peace <peace at lists.chambana.net> wrote:
> 
> Here's the set of suggested videos I've sent to UPTV's Jason Liggett for running during the AOTA and NFN timeslots. As before, if anyone else has any other videos to run instead, I've indicated that your suggestions should be prioritized above mine.
> 
> Thanks.
> -J
> 
> 
> Courage Foundation
> 
> https://youtube.com/watch?v=BncaMgqr2gw -- (1h 2m) Noam Chomsky, Alice Walker, Daniel Ellsberg (co-chairs of AssangeDefense.org) discuss defending Julian Assange in a Courage Foundation talk moderated by Jimmy Dore.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Grayzone
> 
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jTWcVOHEQTo -- (32m 4s) Aaron Mate interviews Fred Weir from Christian Science Monitor about Alexi Navalny poisoning and how this should be interpreted in the context of the apparently ongoing baseless conspiracy theory known as "Russiagate".
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Intercept/Glenn Greenwald
> 
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=77zF_b3blpU -- (36m 22s) Glenn Greenwald on "Is the US Social Fabric Unraveling?" on the effect of the economic crisis worsened by (but not caused by) Coronavirus stay-at-home orders without Medicare for All or UBI. The companion article in The Intercept -- https://theintercept.com/2020/08/28/the-social-fabric-of-the-u-s-is-fraying-severely-if-not-unravelling/ -- says:
> 
>> [...] in terms of both the depth of the social and mental health crises they demonstrate and the pervasiveness of them. Perhaps the most illustrative study
>> was one released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention earlier this
>> month, based on an extensive mental health survey of Americans in late June.
>> One question posed by researchers was whether someone has “seriously considered suicide in the past 30 days”— not fleetingly considered it as a momentary fantasy nor thought about it ever in their lifetime, but seriously considered suicide at least once in the past 30 days. The results are staggering.
>> For Americans between 18-24 years old, 25.5 percent — just over 1 out of every 4 young Americans — said they had. For the much larger group of Americans ages 25-44, the percentage was somewhat lower but still extremely alarming: 16
>> percent. A total of 18.6 percent of Hispanic Americans and 15 percent of African
>> Americans said they had seriously considered suicide in the past month. The two
>> groups with the largest percentage who said yes: Americans with less than a high
>> school degree and unpaid caregivers, both of whom have 30 percent — or almost 1
>> out of every 3 — who answered in the affirmative. A full 10 percent of the U.S.
>> population generally had seriously contemplated suicide in the month of June.
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