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Needs No Introduction
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A series of speeches and lectures from the finest minds of our time. Stay tuned for Ralph Nader unleashed and uncut in Canada, available on the rpn November 1.
[a rabble podcast network (rpn) show]
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| Date Added |
18-Mar-2006 |
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rabble.ca - Needs No Introduction Episodes - | "Back to Work!": Voices against prorogation | On January 23rd, Canadians gathered in cities across the country to protest Stephen Harper's prorogation of Parliament. This week, we bring you voices from the rallies in Ottawa, Whitehorse and Toronto.Speakers:Elizabeth MayChris Guinchard in OttawaJennifer Ellis in WhitehorseSingers in WhitehorseJack LaytonTwo Clowns in OttawaJonathan Allen, Organizer in TorontoLouise Pritchard in OttawaLarry Gray in WhitehorseAngus in WhitehorseMichael IgnatieffTrevor Strong of the Arrogant WormsMaude Barlow
"Canadians Against Proroguing Parliament" on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/#/group.php?gid=260348091419&ref=ts | Get at Short URL | Download "Back to Work!": Voices against prorogation | Play in Popup.
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| Blue Summit: Seven reasons water will stay public | This week we're bringing you more from the Blue Summit on water issues.
Steven Shrybman practices international trade and public interest law in Ottawa, and he's on the Board of Directors of the Council of Canadians. He frequently speaks and has written extensively on the impact of international trade law on various aspects of Canadian policy. He has also been involved in drafting and promoting conventions on cultural diversity and access to water as a human right. In his presentation on the "next ten years" of public water on November 29th, Shrybman gave his audience seven convincing reasons why it isn't necessarily all doom and gloom ahead. | Get at Short URL | Download Blue Summit: Seven reasons water will stay public | Play in Popup.
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| Blue Summit: Water is a human right | Over a weekend at the end of November, more than 300 participants came together in Ottawa for the Blue Summit. The event -- organized by the Council of Canadians and CUPE -- marked the 10th anniversary of "Water Watch", and highlighted Canada's place in the growing dilemma over freshwater preservation and ownership.
Council of Canadians chairperson Maude Barlow is the loudest voice of the water justice movement. As part of a panel discussion at the summit, moderator Morna Ballantyne asked her how governments are responding to the demand that water be recognized as a universal right. Following Barlow's response, additional opinions and plans of action were offered by other delegates. | Get at Short URL | Download Blue Summit: Water is a human right | Play in Popup.
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| An evening with Flora Igoki Terah | On September 7th, 2007, Kenyan parliamentary candidate Flora Igoki Terah was abducted and tortured by a group of men. The attack took place with the intention of silencing her election bid against a minister in President Mwai Kibaki's government, and was carried out with impunity. Terah's physical recovery took weeks and resulted in the loss of her place in the December election, but the hardest blow came the following year when her 19-year-old only son was murdered, his death brushed aside by the authorities. read more | Get at Short URL | Download An evening with Flora Igoki Terah | Play in Popup.
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| Jim Sinclair at the Yukon NDP Leadership Convention | On September 26th, the Yukon NDP Leadership Convention was held in Whitehorse. The event's special guest-speaker was Jim Sinclair - President of the BC Federation of Labour, which represents 500,000 workers throughout the province. For more than 25 years, Jim Sinclair has been an articulate member of the labour movement. After working for the Nelson Daily News, he became part of the fishing industry and, in the 1990s, was elected second Vice President of the United Fisherman and Allied Workers' Union/Canadian Auto Workers' Union - a position he held for eight years. He was elected President of the BC Federation of Labour in 1999, and since then has also come to sit on the Board of Directors for Working Enterprises Ltd., the Working Opportunity Fund, and BC Citizens for Public Power. | Get at Short URL | Download Jim Sinclair at the Yukon NDP Leadership Convention | Play in Popup.
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| A feature interview with Gloria Mills | For the past 30 years, Gloria Mills has been a driving force in the trade union movement. After moving from Trinidad to Britain in her late teens, she became a regional organiser for the National Union of Public Employees in London in 1985, beginning her life's work as a campaigner for workers' rights. In 2005, Mills was appointed president of the Trade Union Congress - the first black woman to hold the position. During her year-long term, she became a prominent advocate of diversity issues and equal opportunities in the workplace. Today, she is national secretary for Unision, the biggest trade union in the UK, and is honoured as a Commander of the Order of the British Empire.read more | Get at Short URL | Download A feature interview with Gloria Mills | Play in Popup.
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| Van Jones at Hollyhock (archive) | This is the second in a three-part series of talks from the Social Change Institute, held at Hollyhock on Cortes Island in early May. This time out, Van Jones, an environmentalist, social justice advocate and social entrepreneur who Judy Rebick believes might become a greater leader than Martin Luther King. Van Jones, 37, is the founder and National Executive Director of the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights. Headquartered in Oakland, CA, EBC is a national organization that challenges human rights abuses in the U.S. criminal justice system. | Get at Short URL | Download Van Jones at Hollyhock (archive) | Play in Popup.
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| Seeding Change: Linking Youth for Food Sovereignty in Honduras and Canada | "Seeding Change: Linking Youth for Food Sovereignty in Honduras and Canada" took place on July 2nd in Ottawa. The event was hosted by USC Canada, which has been working to improve food security in Honduras since 1998. Three young organic farmers - two from Ottawa and one from Honduras - shared photos of their experiences and, with the help of an intimate audience, discussed the challenges and benefits of regaining control over what we eat and where it comes from.Speakers:Sergio Ramirez, ecology student and coordinator of a youth agricultural research team (CIAL) in HondurasDavid Burnford, co-founder of the Riverglen Biodynamic Farm in OttawaGeoff Cross, facilitator of the OPIRG community garden at the University of Ottawaread more | Get at Short URL | Download Seeding Change: Linking Youth for Food Sovereignty in Honduras and Canada | Play in Popup.
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