WHAT WE GON DO?
Leah Barros and Jazmin Hicks are going to take you through a healing session to relieve stress, reconnect and restore balance as we recuperate from one of the most stressful periods in modern history. They will also provide information on wellness practices and how to build capacity in your life for your own healing and emotional and spiritual vitality.
info_outline What to Do About White People?WHAT WE GON DO?
We invited Aja Davis and Molly Ola Pinney, co-founders of the Facebook group White People. Doing Something. The interracial couple began the group to engage white people in productive conversations around race and engagement after the George Floyd murder, and it has grown into a very robust group of 40,000 doing daily actions around engaging white people in difficult conversations and giving them the tools to create change in their communities. They discuss their philosophy with host Tre Borden in this wee
info_outline The Power of Trans PeopleWHAT WE GON DO?
Trans people are some of the strongest, most generous, most hilarious and aware people there are, and I think it is a fitting time to give them the floor to explain how they are interpreting the world right now. Qween Amor, Omega Chuckii, and Ebony Harper represent the best of activism, indomitability, humor and the knowledge of real shit that allows people to take care of themselves and others. This is the best episode we have produced, and I encourage you to listen to the ENTIRE EPISODE and get your life
info_outline Learning the Power of Resilience from Our EldersWHAT WE GON DO?
Featured Guests: Bill Borden - US Air Force Pilot and Vietnam Veteran, Tre’s Dad Dr. Marsha Hirano - Nakanishi - Retired Vice Chancellor for CSU System, Second generation Japanese-American. 2020 has tested us to the breaking point. Many of us have suffered greatly as a result of the pandemic, and for people of color that suffering has compounded an already cumbersome daily reality that comes with living in a society built upon racism and exploitation. The upcoming election offers some comfort, but also comes with the knowledge that even if the election results in a new president, there is...
info_outline The Future of the American WomanWHAT WE GON DO?
The death of RBG is the tragic culmination of an administration that has overseen a reign of disrespect, misogyny and policies aiming to pull back many of the protections and rights guaranteeing women’s autonomy in this country.
info_outline Avoiding a Climate ApocalypseWHAT WE GON DO?
A silver lining of this catastrophe is that what was once considered an abstract theory that only scientists understood or cared about is something is now extremely tangible, and this provides a moment for dramatic action especially when we consider the potential economic opportunities that would come with a green revolution to fight climate change. It is also a time to reexamine the systems we use to dispense relief so that communities are able to handle the immense resources necessary for fundamental cha
info_outline Policing the PoliceWHAT WE GON DO?
On the heels of the disappointing (and expected) miscarriage of justice for Breonna Taylor, and our ongoing racial justice movement, calls to defund the police and acknowledge the white supremacy inherent in law enforcement are deafening and deserved.
info_outline Our Immigration CrisisWHAT WE GON DO?
As we take calls to Defund Police and ICE and reform our needlessly punitive and racist criminal justice system it is also clear how much these movements overlap with immigration and asylum reform.
info_outline On View: Racism at the MuseumWHAT WE GON DO?
Taylor Brandon, Founder of No Neutral Alliance; Curator/Artist Jova Lynne Johnson, Founder of MoCAD Resistance; and Curator Faith McKinnie, Founder of Black Artists Fund, speak to host Tre Borden about their experiences fighting intransigent museums. They discuss what it takes to build movements that can hold the museum to account while also providing space to empower BIPOC artists and communities.
info_outline The Crisis in LebanonWHAT WE GON DO?
On August 4, 2020 a neglected hoard of highly explosive sodium nitrate exploded in the port of Beirut. In an instant over 100 people died with thousands more injured with tens of thousands of people displaced and a central city destroyed.
info_outlineGuests:
Poliana Geha - Beirut Based Consultant and Activist
Natalie Samarjian - Beiruti Diasporan and Human Rights Activist
On August 4, 2020 a neglected hoard of highly explosive sodium nitrate exploded in the port of Beirut. In an instant over 100 people died with thousands more injured with tens of thousands of people displaced and a central city destroyed. This tragedy is all the more infuriating and devastating because it was a preventable one, and it typifies the incompetence, corruption and lack of credibility that characterizes the Lebanese state. The explosion also adds new horror to the already crippling economic crisis gripping the country and the intense public health crisis resulting from COVID-19.
As the country reels and calls for new government grow deafening, it is important to note the role Lebanon plays in the region as a key home of refugees (a third of the overall population) and a society where many different sects, religions and ethnicities exist peacefully. Rebuilding Lebanon will take many resources not least of which is the people of Lebanon themselves many of whom are asking themselves whether it makes sense to participate in the country’s reconstruction or to start anew somewhere else.
To outline the crisis and take us through some visions for the present and future we invited Beiruti resident and activist Poliana Geha as well as Los Angeles based Beiruti diasporan Natalie Samarjian. They step us through how Lebanon arrived at its present predicament before the explosion, the chaos and devastation that it wrought, and what a path forward may look like for a new Lebanon. Please listen to find out how you can be part of Lebanon’s renewal, and how the struggles facing this important nation reflect many of the battles being waged in America and elsewhere.