American Anxiety

A Latino USA Roundtable

September 3, 2010

roundtable2 A Latino USA Roundtable

Americans of all political stripes are feeling a heightened sense of worry: where are we headed as a nation? What some of us see as great social achievements, others see as proof-positive of the decline of the country. There’s been a noticeable up-tick in the rhetoric of division and a crypto-nostalgia for an America “the way it used to be.”

We wanted to try to make some connections on this week’s program: between the rise in hate crimes and other vivid examples of intolerance that seem to populate the pages of our newspapers each week… and the way politics is being talked about in 2010. But we didn’t want a shouting match. So, we invited three thoughtful observers of politics and culture to join Maria for a free-wheeling discussion of the country, its direction, and its leadership — and the role of the media, community, and family in helping to shape the America we live in.

This is the extended version of their conversation which runs just over three-quarters of an hour. A shorter version, edited to meet the time constraints of our broadcast, aired on the radio program (and can be heard using the player in the top right corner of this page.)

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Right-click here to download an .mp3 of this segment.

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Maria reflects on the lessons of summer learned with her family.

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Right-click here to download an .mp3 of this segment.

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Katie Davis has some notes on this week’s news: including labor migration, the anniversary of Katrina and the population shifts five years after the storm, and the work of younger generation of Vietnamese-Americans in New Orleans.

Audio MP3

Nguyen

You can read Nguyen’s full story at New America Media.

Here’s a link to the poem A Thousand Saxophones by Lee Herrick.

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Audio MP3

Listen to this week’s half-hour program. Or, subscribe to the podcast.


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Kai Wright is an editor at ColorLines Magazine and the author of Drifting Toward Love: Black, Brown, Gay and Coming of Age on the Streets of New York. Follow him on Twitter at @kai_wright.


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Hamid Dabashi is the Hagop Kevorkian Professor of Iranian Studies and Comparative Literature at Columbia University in New York. He is also a prominent writer, speaker, and activist.


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Josefina Lopez is an author and playwright, best known as co-writer of the award-winning 2002 film “Real Women Have Curves”, based on her play of the same name. She’s also the author of a new play satirizing Arizona SB 1070. Follow her on Twitter @JosefinaLopez.


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“The End of White America?” by Hua Hsu
Restoring Honor @ glennbeck.com
“We’ve Seen This Movie Before” Stanley Fish @ NYTimes
Rinku Sen on “Illegal” @ Accidental American

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