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In This weeks show:

JULIA ARMSTRONG TALKS TO US ABOUT CHILDHOOD - HOW TO GET THROUGH IT - AND HOW TO AVOID PROBLEMS. GEORGE THOMAS MEDICINE MAN ANSWERS ANOTHER LISTENERS QUESTION

Visit www.vitalisnews.com and download the emagazine free.

 

 

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COUNTERSPIN

 

 

 NEW SHOW EVERY SATURDAY

This week on CounterSpin: When voters in the Bolivian state of Santa Cruz voted on May 4th to declare an autonomy, U.S. media largely reported it as a democratic expression of the differences between a wealthy, conservative Bolivian state, and the socialist central government of president Evo Morales. But was the Santa Cruz vote legitimate? We’ll talk with Ben Dangl, author of The Price of Fire: Resource Wars and Social Movements in Bolivia.Also on the show: Is John McCain an environmentalist? If you believe the press corps, he is. But our guest says that may say more about them than about the candidate. We’ll hear from Kate Sheppard, political reporter at Grist.org.

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 DAILY UNBIASED GLOBAL NEWS

  • West Beirut Controlled by Hizbullah
  • More Trouble in Burma
  • Humanitarian Crisis in Zimbabwe
  • Bush Threatens Farm Bill Veto
  • More Scrutiny for Federal Contractors?
  • West Beirut Controlled by Hizbullah

    Lebanon’s capital, Beirut, has been wracked by pitched gun-battles between pro-government and anti-government forces over the last three days. 11 people are confirmed dead and more than 20 people have been wounded. The fighting began on Wednesday when the Hizbullah-led opposition reacted to the US-backed government’s move to ban their military telecommunications network. Fierce battles continued today, but at airtime anti-government forces controlled all of west Beirut. The country has been without a president for 7 months, in what is the worst internal crisis since the end of the 1975-1990 civil war. FSRN’s Jackson Allers reports from Beirut.

    More Trouble in Burma

    Burma has announced that the aid workers, experts and information teams will not be allowed to enter the country. Reports has circulated that The United Nations suspended relief supplies to Burma on Friday, but a World Food Program spokesperson clarified in a statement that aid is still being delivered to the area. At the same time, many international aid workers and experts are stranded in Bangkok, including US transport aircrafts and helicopters nearly one week after the disastrous cyclone Nargis. FSRN’s Ronald Aung Naing has more.

    Humanitarian Crisis in Zimbabwe

    South African President Thabo Mbeki arrived in Zimbabwe Friday, where he is meeting with President Robert Mugabe. March 29 election results were delayed for one month; election officials say opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai, of the Movement for Democratic Change, garnered just 47.9 percent of the vote, compared to Mugabe’s 43.2 percent, which will mean a run off – results which Tsvangirai, disputes. Meanwhile, doctors are reporting a massive rise in post-election violence: groups of loyal Mugabe youth have taken to rural areas, where they have brutally beaten opposition members to death. At least 32 opposition members have been targeted and killed so far, and 40,000 farmers have been forced off their land since the election; while many in Zimbabwe are bracing for a possible economic and political collapse. FSRN Anchor Aura Bogado spoke with Grace Kwinjeh, founder and national executive member for the main opposition party the Movement for Democratic Change, and the chair-person of the Global Zimbabwe Forum, a network of Zimbabweans in the diaspora.

    Bush Threatens Farm Bill Veto

    The House and Senate have come to an agreement on the new Farm Bill after a year of negotiations – but the President says he’ll veto it, calling the bill “massive and bloated.” FSRN’s Tanya Snyder reports on what this bill does – what it doesn’t do – and whether it can survive a veto.

    More Scrutiny for Federal Contractors?

    Federal contractors across the US could soon be under tougher scrutiny. A bill to help the federal government keep track of fraudulent contractors is quickly moving through Congress. FSRN Correspondent Matt Laslo reports from Washington.

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      NEW SHOW EVERY SATURDAY

     From CHINA- Iran has ceased selling its oil for US dollars, accepting only Euros or Yen. The Iranian government has suspended talks with the US until US forces stop attacking Shiite forces in Iraq. A US report criticizing the oppression of religion and minorities in China was denounced by the Chinese government. Some Chinese youth suggest that youth exchange programs should be expanded to increase international understanding.

    From NETHERLANDS- First a press review on the attitudes of young Dutch people concerning war and world hunger. Some European nations have banned youth from purchasing a few violent video games- the European Commission wants to set standards and have them adopted by member states. An interview with Misha Glenny, author of McMafia, who says that organized crime is a greater threat than terrorism, and that marijuana should be legalized.

    From CUBA- Nobel Peace prize winner Nelson Mandela is flagged on US terrorist watch lists. A top US psychiatric researcher points out that there are more deaths from the suicides of soldiers sent to Iraq and Afghanistan than there are combat deaths. The Pentagon has resurrected the 4th fleet to patrol the waters of Latin America and the Caribbean, to confront the rise of left-wing politics in the regions.

    From RUSSIA- A commentary on US troop maneuvers in the Arctic region, which may portend a battle for the oil resources of the Arctic shelf claimed by Russia, Canada, and the US. A commentary on the 5th anniversary of George Bush’s “Mission Accomplished” speech aboard an aircraft carrier.

    “There is no flag large enough to cover the shame of killing innocent people.”

    Howard Zinn

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    news for the soul

     

     NEWS SHOW EVERY FRIDAY

    Devrah Laval (the Magic Doorway) returns to News for the Soul to discuss the concept of being ‘real’ on the spiritual path…

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    Spiritual

    NEW SHOW EVERY WEDNESDAY

     

    Psychic development

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    MIKE ADAMS

    NEW SHOW EVERY TUESDAY

     

    The Racist Cancer Industry, Blacks and Chemical Enslavement

    In this shocking and highly controversial podcast, the Health Ranger reveals the racist nature of modern medicine and the cancer industry in particular, exposing how Big Pharma exploits the bodies of black men and women to make more profits while keeping them enslaved in a system of chemical dependence and intentional health illiteracy.

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    Radio ecoshock

     

    NEW SHOW EVERY THURSDAY

    A new survey by worldpublicopinion.org shows that the majority of people in the world think oil is running out. They want their governments to find new energy supplies. Americans agree we have passed Peak Oil - but they are the only public to feel their government is operating on the wrong assumptions.

    One big bad assumption: biofuels are the way to energy independence. We investigate news reports from all over the world, connecting biofuels to the new world food crisis. Even U.S. sources say the Bush biofuel plan is a disaster. And it just makes global warming worse! Breaking climate news: the Jetstream moving toward the poles, CO2 is way up, and methane escaping. For the past 10 years, methane, one of the worst greenhouse gases (25 times stronger than CO2) has been relatively stable, for reasons we don’t understand. But this year it’s gone way up. Scientists suspect industrialization in Asia, and melting of the Arctic permafrost, may be the major causes. Bad, bad news.

    I spend some time trying to cope with just one week’s worth of new developments - in science, and in the real world.

    In just one example, did you know the U.S. Air Force is proposing a massive program to combat climate change? Lots of news.

    From the UK: we interview off-grid living expert Nick Rosen. Whole groups of people are voluntarily unplugging from the matrix: off electricity, making their own. Nick has published a book on surviving off-grid. We discuss the various reasons why people leave, and the scene in the UK. Can you live if the power goes out? For a month?

    American housing crisis, storms, or fire: living in your car. Investigation into the new phenomenon of the “mobile homeless” or “half-homeless” growing in America. Uncounted in official statistics.

    Includes clips from a video feature by Californiaconnected.org on how Santa Barbara is allowing people living in cars to park in empty lots overnight - legally. We also hear from the comedian of the homeless Darrell Bedford. Some of Katrina victims are still living in their cars. But a surprising amount of car and van people actually work. A new study shows that this is the first year that a person working minimum wage cannot afford a one bedroom apartment anywhere in the country.

    Uncle Al gives solid tips for living in a car - in case it happens to you. Impossible? What if your job disappears, or a relationship ends suddenly? Terrorist attack? Fire in your home, or the whole region? Hurricanes? (all hotels will be full). Maybe it’s worthwhile knowing what it really takes to survive in a car.

    Plus Medea Benjamin on Code Pink anti-war. This is a sample from an excellent series of activist radio interviews done by Sue Supriano. Check out her site at suesupriano.com for lots of free downloads. The radio show is called “Steppin’ Out of Babylon.”

    Code Pink, founded by women mad about the wars, and wasted military spending, has become one of the largest international war movements. These ladies want the U.S. to close the 800 military bases, in over 100 countries. They want that money spent on restoring crumbling schools - and hey, maybe even a working health care system, like every other developed country in the world!

    Just Google “Code Pink” and you’ll find outfits all over the U.S. - and in many countries like Italy and the Philippines, where local people want the U.S. to pack up and go home. Medea says when she travels, people all over the world ask her: how can America borrow money to fight these useless wars, and yet they can’t provide for their own citizens. Think New Orleans for example, or the need for alternative energy. Nope - billions, even trillions, for the war machine.

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    Classical Music

     

     

     NEW CONCERT EVERY MONDAY

    Music is often written in celebration-of an emotion, an event, a rite of passage-and today we’ll listen to pieces written to celebrate these occasions. When you talk about Italian vocal music, you are almost always dealing with love. The first song in the set, “Me voglio fa’ ‘na casa” by Donizetti, captures the free spirit of a sailor’s love. The poetry, written in the Neopolitan dialect, adds a folk sensibility to this as well as the next song, “A’ Vucchella” by Tosti. In the last song in the set, “Musica Proibita” by Stanislao Gastaldon, we get perhaps the lustiest declarations, in words so provocative that a mother forbids her young daughter to sing them! After that, a celebration of a very different sort. Mozart wrote this Divertimento in D Major for horns and strings, in part, to mark the graduation of his friend Sigmund Robinig from law school, according to the All Music Guide. The work’s substantial instrumentation-with bass in addition to cello-and its larger-than-average proportions for a divertimento make it a particularly satisfying sample of Mozart’s work in this genre.

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    old time radio

    Another classic from mercury theatre

    New shows available on 1st week each month, visit the archive centre for more free downloads

    AROUND THE WORLD IN 80 DAYS

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    PSYCHEDELIC SALON

     

     NEW SHOW EVERY MONDAY

      
     “You either believe in nothing whatsoever than chance, or you’re going to believe in a biological intelligence which knows that she’s doing.”

     

    “The point here is, if you’re going to feel ’synced’ you’ve got to be in a place where there are people who share your reality.”

    “The way evolution works is this, evolution never tries to change grown ups. . . . Look in the dictionary for the word ‘adult’. You’ll find the word ‘adult’ is the past participle of the word ‘to grow’.”

    “We didn’t grow from the apes. We refused to become apes.”

     

     

    Conspiracy

     John Hoyte, a former pilot talks to mike on The Health Central Show about aero toxic fumes aboard commercial airline.

    You also watch here excerpts from the Docuflic welcome aboard toxic airlines.

     

    Download the audio here.

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    St Joan

    Battle Montage.

    HOW CAN I …..HOW CAN I……. HOW CAN I WIN WTIH SO FEW PEOPLE, SUCH LOYAL BUT HELPLES PEOPLE……

    I’VE BEEN BETRAYED, BY THE KING AND HIS COURT…………………………..

    AND SO I FIGHT THIS FINAL BATTLE, THIS BATTLE CAN’T BE WON!

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    Music at the Gardner

    The Unknowns

     

    Classical music definitely has its stars, and Beethoven is arguably the biggest. But classical music has its lesser-knowns, too. In this program we’ll listen to two composers who may not have achieved Beethoven’s fame, but who have nonetheless earned a lasting place in the chamber music repertory. Sometimes writing for an instrument that doesn’t have a big repertoire can earn a non-celebrity composer a permanent place on the recital stage. Such is the case with Tournier’s Sonatine. A harpist married to another harpist, Tourier knew the instrument well and had a major hand in developing new techniques and expanding its repertoire. The Arensky Trio is one of this little-known Russian composer’s most-performed works. The New Grove dictionary calls it one of his best, too, and notes the influence of Mendelssohn’s own piano trio, as well as the work’s elegiac third movement, written in homage to the cellist Davidov.

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    OLD TIME RADIO

    aNOTHER CLASSIC FROM OLD TIME RADIO.

    CAPTAIN COURAGE

     

    IN THIS EPISODE……..OFF TO THE INDIES

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