115 episodes

Rattling the Bars, hosted by former Black Panther and political prisoner Marshall “Eddie” Conway, puts the voices of the people most harmed by our system of mass incarceration at the center of our reporting on the fight to end it.

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/rattling-the-bars--4799829/support.

Rattling The Bars The Real News Network

    • News

Rattling the Bars, hosted by former Black Panther and political prisoner Marshall “Eddie” Conway, puts the voices of the people most harmed by our system of mass incarceration at the center of our reporting on the fight to end it.

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/rattling-the-bars--4799829/support.

    The prison system isn't 'broken'—it's designed to traumatize Black people en masse

    The prison system isn't 'broken'—it's designed to traumatize Black people en masse

    The lived reality of the racist prison system can get lost in the swirl of facts and figures surrounding mass incarceration. Frigid cells in winters and sweltering conditions in summers; the volatility and capriciousness of hostile guards and correctional staff; food barely fit for human consumption; isolation from one's community and deprivation from the routines and small freedoms that made up one's identity prior to incarceration. The trauma of such an experience is undeniable, and extends far beyond prison walls—from overpoliced communities subjected to the constant presence of police surveillance and terror, to the families and relationships put under the strain of separation. Dr. Da'Mond Holt returns to Rattling the Bars for the final installment of a two-part interview, this time speaking with host Mansa Musa and his friend Lonnell Sligh, about their respective experiences behind bars, and the implications of the prison system as a deliberate system of mass trauma affecting Black and other working class communities of color.

    Studio Production: David Hebden
    Post-Production: Cameron Granadino

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    The Real News is an independent, viewer-supported, radical media network. Help us expand our in-depth analysis and coverage from Baltimore to Bangladesh by subscribing and becoming a member today!

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    • 35 min
    Leonard Peltier and the history of the American Indian Movement w/Rachel Thunder

    Leonard Peltier and the history of the American Indian Movement w/Rachel Thunder

    In 1977, American Indian Movement member Leonard Peltier was convicted of the murder of two FBI agents, and has remained a political prisoner of the US ever since. Peltier's conviction has long been contested by activists and legal experts. Despite the recantation of three key witnesses, his case has never been brought back to trial. Peltier has been eligible for parole since 1992, and the federal government has ignored calls to free him for more than 30 years. Rachel Dionne Thunder joins Rattling the Bars to discuss Peltier's case and the radical vision of the American Indian Movement which the federal government has sought to repress through Peltier's incarceration.

    Studio Production: David Hebden
    Post-Production: Cameron Granadino

    Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrmm_7RDZJeQzq2-wvmjueg/join

    The Real News is an independent, viewer-supported, radical media network. Help us continue producing Rattling the Bars by following us and making a small donation:

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    • 35 min
    The American Indian Movement and Leonard Peltier w/Ward Churchill

    The American Indian Movement and Leonard Peltier w/Ward Churchill

    Despite now spending 47 years behind bars for a crime he did not commit, Leonard Peltier continues to be denied parole by the federal government of the United States. Why has the US so obstinately refused to free Peltier, despite decades of international outcry? The answer lies in the threat posed by what Peltier represents—the demands of the Indigenous liberation movement for sovereignty and justice after centuries of US settler colonialism. Historian Ward Churchill joins Rattling the Bars for a discussion on Leonard Peltier, the American Indian Movement, COINTELPRO, and more.

    Studio Production: David Hebden
    Post-Production: Cameron Granadino

    Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrmm_7RDZJeQzq2-wvmjueg/join

    The Real News is an independent, viewer-supported, radical media network. Help us expand our in-depth analysis and coverage from Baltimore to Bangladesh by subscribing and becoming a member today!

    Donate: https://therealnews.com/donate-yt
    Sign up for our newsletter: https://therealnews.com/nl-yt

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    • 36 min
    The reality of Black historical trauma makes healing a form of justice

    The reality of Black historical trauma makes healing a form of justice

    The oppression of Black people is more than just a historical or political question. The accumulated harms of centuries of slavery, segregation, mass incarceration, and racism in all forms have a psychological and medical effect, in addition to political and economic ones. Trauma, after all, describes the physical injury of the brain as a result of harmful experiences. At the scale of communities and generations, such trauma can be passed down and reproduced for decades, and even centuries. In the first of a two-part conversation, traumatologist Dr. Da'Mond Holt explains the medical reality of Black historical trauma, and what kinds of interventions and solutions are required to promote healing as a form of justice.

    Studio Production: David Hebden, Cameron Granadino
    Post-Production: Cameron Granadino

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    • 27 min
    'Help us to get better': Maryland is failing women released from prison

    'Help us to get better': Maryland is failing women released from prison

    Critics of the prison industrial complex have long noted the system's failure to properly rehabilitate those who are locked away in its bowels. Christina Merryman and Ameena Deramous return to Rattling the Bars for the second part of a two-part interview on the reality facing prisoners in Maryland's only women's correctional facility.

    Click here to listen to Part 1

    Studio Production: David Hebden
    Post-Production: Cameron Granadino

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    • 37 min
    The 'Women's Cut'—Maryland's only women's prison

    The 'Women's Cut'—Maryland's only women's prison

    For decades, prisoners' rights advocates have called on the State of Maryland to address its flagrant discrimination against prisoners housed in the state's sole women's prison. As The Real News has previously reported, conditions in the Maryland Correctional Institute for Women are akin to "torture," and the lack of resources and services dedicated to incarcerated women amounts to state-sanctioned, gender-based discrimination. Christina Merryman and Ameena Deramous, both former inmates in the MCIW—or the "Women's Cut"—join Rattling the Bars, explaining the conditions faced by incarcerated women in Maryland, and what advocates inside and outside the prison walls are doing to fight for justice, in the first half of this two-part panel.

    Click here to listen to Part 2

    Studio Production: David Hebden
    Post-Production: Cameron Granadino

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    • 30 min

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