Weekend Voices 6/07/08

Host: Ann Luther, Co-president, League of Women Voters of Maine

Producer: Marge May

Topic: Democracy Forum—Corporations and Democracy

What is a corporation, and how did it become the dominant form of business organization?
What is the history of the relationship between corporations and government?  Did corporations always have both economic and political power?   How did corporations come to have some of the same political rights as people? What do you see as the problems with that relationship?  Give some examples of how corporations have influenced public policy.  Is democracy as a system of government adversely impacted by the current relationship?  How would you change things?  Why would these changes work?  How would we get from where we are to where you would like to be?  Can a regulatory regime be sufficient?

Guests:

Robert A. G. Monks is a prominent Maine citizen with a long and illustrious career in business, law, and government service.  His most recent book is Corpocracy: How CEOs and the Business Roundtable Hijacked the World’s Greatest Wealth Machine — And How to Get It Back.  You can read more about his background at the web site for Lens Governance Advisors, which is the law firm Mr. Monks created to continue his work in holding corporate management accountable to ownership and in improving shareholder value through increasing shareholder involvement: www.lens-inc.com.
Ruth Caplan is the author of the 1990 book, Our Earth, Ourselves, and she is a founding co-chair of the Alliance for Democracy and current co-chair of the Alliance’s Corporate Globalization/Positive Alternatives campaign.  She has been working since the early-nineties, in collaboration with other writers and activists, on a plan for an alternative economic system that is socially equitable and environmentally sustainable.  You can read more about the Alliance for Democracy at their web site: www.thealliancefordemocracy.org.

Weekend Voices 5/31/08

Producer/Host: Jim Campbell

Executive Producer: Amy Browne

Topic: Report from the 2008 Computers Freedom Privacy Conference. This program featured presentations from the panel on Software Rights and Responsibilities.

What are the dangers of using software to determine eligibility for public health and other benefit programs?
What, if any, are the legal controls available to regulate the use of software agents?  What additional legal or technical steps might be taken?

Speakers: Samir Chopra, Brooklyn College;  Frank Pasquale, Seton Hall Law School;  Danielle Citron, Univ. of Maryland Law School;  James Grimmelmann, New York Law School

Voices 5/27/08

Executive Producer/Host: Amy Browne

Contributing Producers: Debbie Wildey, Larry Dansinger, Matt Murphy

Segment 1: A look at the upcoming 3rd annual Symposium on Post Traumatic StressDisorder—PTSD—The Hidden Costs of War.  About how many veterans are committing suicide?   Why should everyone in the community, no matter their politics,  care about and help those affected?  Who would benefit from learning more about PTSD and it’s treatments?  Guest: Dud Hendrick, Vietnam War Veteran and President, Maine Veterans for Peace Chapter 001 Producer: Debbie Wildey. FMI: dudhe@verizon.net

Segment 2: An episode of the WERU short feature Outside the Box produced by Larry Dansinger. Topic: What to eat? Outside the Box can be heard at it’s regular time, every Tuesday morning at 6:30a.m.

Segment 3: Matt Murphy interviews Judy Robbins in Blue Hill on Memorial Day weekend at the annual ritual of the placing of flags in memory of those who have died in the invasion and occupation of Iraq. FMI: robbins@downeast.net

Voices 5/20/08

Executive Producer/Host: Amy Browne

Contributing Producers: Jim Fisher, Magnus Johnstone

Segment 1:  Atlantis

What was Atlantis?  How does inspiration for writing a book come about?  What role does legend have in reality & history?

Guest: Arnold Greenberg,
374 – 5170

Producer: Magnus Johnstone

Segment 2: Friendship Cottage, Adult Care Service, Blue Hill

What is the mission of the Friendship Cottage? Who will you be serving? What is the Adult Caregiver Resource Center?

Guest: Anne Ossanna, Field Project Supervisor, Friendship Cottage, Washington Hancock Community Agency
Voice: 207-374-5852, Email: AOssanna@aol.com

Producer: Jim Fisher

Weekend Voices 5/17/08

Executive Producer/Host: Amy Browne

Contributing Producers: Carolyn Coe and Eric Olson

Topics:

Segment 1:
Mother’s Day– What are the origins of Mothers’ Day?– with residents from the Blue Hill peninsula and beyond
mothers, fathers, daughters

Segment 2: The Maine Migrant Health Program, in cooperation with PICA–Peace thru Interamerican Community Action—  is presently a traveling, multi-media exhibit called “Farmworkers Feed Us All”.  The exhibit features the work of  nationally-known photojournalist Earl Dotter and audio-documentary reporter Tennessee Watson, and documents the lives and experiences of Maine’s migrant farmworkers.   An opening was held at the PICA office last Thursday night.  WERU’s Eric Olson recorded the speakers at the event—which also served to honor Olivia Perez Zamora from Milbridge.  Olivia is a farmworker, student & Health Program intern,  and recipient of National Center for Migrant Health scholarship award.   Here are some excerpts.  Following the presentations interviews Olivia Perez Zamora

Voices 5/13/08

Producer/Host: Amy Browne

Topic:

The tiny Chagos islands are about as far from here as you can get—- in the middle of the Indian Ocean, and the rightful inhabitants are descendants of slaves and workers brought from Africa and India generations ago to work on coconut plantations.    So when the US and England decided to make them “go away” 40 years ago,  it’s pretty likely they didn’t expect to hear from them again.  You see the US wanted the largest of the islands, Diego Garcia, for a handy cold-war era military base, and England agreed to a long-term lease of the area, which they’d claimed as a colony, setting in motion a series of tragic events that might have been forgotten if not for the fortitude and persistence of the people.  This is a story that just might have a happy ending, and soon—- one in which a small group of people with dark skin and little money, with few resources at all except their powerful voices, may actually get justice in a battle that pits them against England and one of the largest US military bases on the planet.

Today we’re going to hear how their story has made it’s way to Mainers, and what some local folks are doing to help the Chagos people have their day in court.  We’re going to alternative between the voices of Dud Hendick of Maine Veterans for Peace,  and audio from the 2004 film “Stealing a Nation, a Special Report” by award-winning documentary maker (and former war correspondent) John Pilger.  Pilger’s film has a role in the Mainer’s plan to help the people of Chagos

FMI: www.letthemreturn.com;  Veteran’s for Peace c/0 Dud Hendrick, PO Box 10, Deer Isle, ME 04627, 207-348-2511, dudhe@verizon.net

Weekend Voices 20th Anniversary Special “Hear Again” 5/10/08

Executive Producer/Host: Jim Campbell

Topic: A selection of short Morning Maine features from the past 20 years, produced by several WERU volunteers
Some of the topics:  What are the best herbs to plant in the spring and what are their uses?  Is is really cheaper to grow your own vegetables?  How does gravity work?