AmericasDemocrat.org Netcast - August 16, 2015

Published: Aug. 16, 2015, 1:41 p.m.

Fifty years after the Watts riot, we talk about race and power, with anthropologist Richard Perry and community organizing expert Aaron Schutz. In addition, Bill Press interview Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz.

 

Fifty years after the Watts riots, we talk today about race as a cultural, not a genetic, artifact and about the history of community organizing to achieve power. Anthropologist Richard Perry tells us there is an upsurge in discredited theories that genes determine how we act. And professor Aaron Schutz reminds us how both President Obama and Hillary Clinton were disciples of the father of community organizing, Saul Alinsky. And Bill Press interviews Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz about the Iran nuclear deal.

 

 

Richard Perry

Anthropologist Richard Perry won’t even use the word “race” without quotation marks because it is not a biologically valid category. We are who we are, he says, because of what we have learned.

https://jhupbooks.press.jhu.edu/content/killer-apes-naked-apes-and-just-plain-nasty-people

 

Aaron Schutz

Professor Aaron Schutz explains the history of community organizing, from its founding father Saul Alinsky through Barack Obama, whom he suggests wanted people to be engaged but then got annoyed when they did.

http://www.vanderbilt.edu/university-press/book/9780826520425

 

Ernest Moniz

Bill Press and his guest, Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz.

 

Jim Hightower

You, too, can be part of Scott Walker's inner circle