On today's 'BradCast':\xa0 A three-judge panel on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals appears poised to deny Donald Trump's desperate bid to block release of his White House documents related to the U.S. Capitol attack that he incited on January 6, which have been subpoenaed by the bipartisan U.S. House Select Committee. Trump's former Chief of Staff, Mark Meadows, is reportedly cooperating with the Select Committee, but it remains an open question as to whether, and how much, Meadows will actually share. The Select Committee is considering a criminal contempt referral for low-level Justice Department Trump lackey Jeffrey Clark, who pushed a scheme to lie to state legislatures and\xa0 falsely claim that the DOJ had found evidence of fraud in the 2020 election. The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) has ruled that retail giant Amazon illegally interfered with a unionization vote at its warehouse in Bessemer, AL, earlier this year and ordered a re-vote. Labor historian, author and Distinguished Professor at UC Santa Barbara, Dr. NELSON LICHTENSTEIN, explains the history of unionization re-votes, the odds of labor winning (given nearly 100 percent turnover of workers at the warehouse since the previous vote), and notes that while Amazon was found to have committed multiple violations of labor laws, most of their egregious actions to intimidate workers are legal under current federal law. Nelson also discusses the 'Great Resignation' (the wave of strikes and worker walk-outs around the country), the Protect the Right to Organize (PRO) Act in Congress, President Biden's record on labor rights so far, and much more. Plus Desi Doyen has our latest 'Green News Report.'