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Democracy Now!

Democracy Now!
A daily TV/radio news program, hosted by Amy Goodman and Juan Gonzalez, airing on over 1,000 stations, pioneering the largest community media collaboration in the United States.
Democracy Now!
  • U.S. Secret Drug War in Honduras: Botched DEA Raid Leaves 2 Pregnant Women, 2 Men Dead
    The U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency has confirmed its agents were on board a U.S.-owned helicopter with Honduran police officers when four people were shot and killed on a boat earlier this week. Two of the victims were said to be pregnant women. The deadly incident has highlighted the centrality of Honduras in the U.S.-backed drug war. Honduras is the hub for the U.S. military operations in Latin America, hosting at least three U.S. bases. We speak to Dana Frank, a Professor of History at the University of California, Santa Cruz. [Includes rush transcript]
  • All-White Jury Acquits Houston Ex-Police Officer in Videotaped Beating of Black Teen Chad Holley
    Hundreds of people rallied in Houston on Thursday to protest the acquittal of a former police officer in the videotaped beating of an African-American teenager. On Wednesday, the officer, Andrew Bloomberg, was found not guilty by an all-white jury in the beating and stomping of 15-year-old burglary suspect Chad Holley. Video taken of the March 2010 incident shows Holley being stopped by a police vehicle. After Holley falls to the ground, he is clearly seen surrendering and putting his hands behind his head. But instead of placing him in handcuffs, Bloomberg and six fellow officers proceed to attack Holley with stomps and kicks. "It seems we have become jaded, willing to accept in too many instances, young black people being grossly mistreated," says NAACP President Ben Jealous. [Includes rush transcript]
  • "The Worst Racial Profiling Program in the Country": NAACP President on NYPD Stop-and-Frisk Program
    A federal judge has granted class action status to a lawsuit opposing the New York City Police Department’s controversial stop-and-frisk program, opening the door to legal recourse for hundreds of thousands of people targeted by police. The judge’s ruling cited the city’s "deeply troubling apathy" toward the constitutional rights of New Yorkers. A recent study by the New York Civil Liberties Union found the NYPD program is racially skewed and largely ineffective, with blacks and Latinos making up 87 percent of people stopped last year. We speak to Benjamin Jealous, president of the NAACP. [Includes rush transcript]
  • Ben Jealous: "Heartbreaking" Trayvon Tapes Capture Experience of Millions Racially Profiled in U.S.
    Benjamin Jealous, the president and CEO of the NAACP, joins us to react to the new audio recordings and documents released in the investigation of Trayvon Martin's killing. The evidence indicates a fight occurred between Martin and his alleged killed George Zimmerman, but police determined the deadly encounter was "ultimately avoidable" if Zimmerman had not pursued Martin. An autopsy also shows Martin died from a single gunshot wound to the chest fired from "intermediate range." Reacting to a recording of Martin's girlfriend recounting her phone call with Martin moments before his death, Jealous says: "It's heartbreaking to listen to his childhood girlfriend talk about the experience of listening to him be hunted on the street just before he was killed. It dramatizes for people the experience of millions of young people across this country every year when they are racially profiled, whether it's by community watch volunteers or by cops." [Includes rush transcript]
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(01/28/2012) Feather Woman Of The Jungle by Amos Tutuola
Blogs - Book Blogs
(01/28/2012) Feather Woman Of The Jungle by Amos Tutuola. London. 1962. Faber & Faber. keywords: Literature Black Africa Nigeria. Jacket design by Alan Howard. .

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FROM THE PUBLISHER - Four years (since THE BRAVE AFRICAN HUNTRESS) is a long time to wait for a new book by the inimitable Amos Tutuola, whose reputation is now almost worldwide. But his new book was worth waiting for. Every night the people of the Yoruba village gathered in the moonlight to hear the adventures and the wisdom of their 76-year-old chief. For ten memorable nights he entertained them; his stories began from the time when he was only 15, very clever and fast enough, the senior son of a very old man, and just beginning to experience the hair-raising difficulties, hardships, punishments, risks, etc., of the adventures which were to lead him to great wealths. He told them about the Jungle Witch with her small and big birds, her ostrich, her images and her whips; the dump lady; the bush of quietness; the Savage Men; the town of famine and the town of the water people; the Goddess of Diamonds on the mountain reached by sea; and how the Goddess took his wife back from him; the visit to Ife Town and Ede Town; the hairy giant and the hairy giantess; the mad man, the gold and the happy ending. And every night his people celebrated what he had told them in palm-wine, song and dance before they went back to their houses, dying to hear more. Warmly recommended, with or without palm-wine.

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