Radio Active Magazine

KKFI 90.1 FM Kansas City Community Radio
Radio Active Magazine

A locally produced program where activist groups in the Kansas City area present interviews, commentary, editorials, and other thought provoking content on a weekly basis.

  1. 24 NOV

    Recovering from Religion per Darrel Ray

    Recovering from Religion1 founder Darrel Ray2 discusses his organization with Radio Active Magazine regular Spencer Graves. Ray was raised a fundamentalist Christian in Wichita, Kansas, by parents who eventually became missionaries. He taught Sunday school and preached in multiple Protestant congregations. In his twenties, he studied sociology, anthropology and psychology at different schools earning a Doctor of Education from Vanderbilt in 1978.2 He became agnostic by his early 30s and an atheist by 40.3 He published a book on Teaming Up in 1995 and another on The Performance Culture in 2001. In 2009 he published, The God Virus: How Religion Affects Our Lives and Culture and founded Recovering from Religion2 with headquarters in Kansas City. By 2012, they had over 100 chapters in different parts of the US. They also now have chapters in other countries including the UK, Australia, and South Africa. And they have a Spanish-language hot line.4 In 2012, he published Sex and God: How Religion Distorts Sexuality. He is now openly polyamourous.2 Copyright 2024 Darrel Ray and Spencer Graves, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC BY-SA) 4.0 international license. _______ 1. Wikipedia, "Recovering from Religion" (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recovering_from_Religion), accessed 2024-11-24. 2. Wikipedia, "Darrel Ray" (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darrel_Ray). 3. Darrel Ray (2009) The God Virus: How Religion Affects Our Lives and Culture (IPC Press, p. 15). 4. Recovering from Religion: Welcome (https://www.recoveringfromreligion.org/#rfr-welcome).

    29 min
  2. 8 NOV

    Thom Hartmann on The Hidden History of the American Dream

    Thom Hartmann discusses his new book, The Hidden History of the American Dream: The demise of the middle class -- and how to rescue our future, with Radio Active Magazine regular Spencer Graves. Hartmann is a New York Times bestselling author of over thirty-five books and a leading progressive talk radio show host for more than a twenty years. His Hidden History of the American Dream: The demise of the middle class -- and how to rescue our future appeared earlier this year. It's the tenth book he has published in the six years since 2019, in addition to at least 25 others published earlier. Hartman has had a varied career. Born in 1951, he campaigned with his father for Conservative Republican Barry Goldwater for President in 1964 at age 13. He was expelled from high school during tenth grade for starting a newspaper that protested against the Vietnam War. He later earned a GED and studied electrical engineering at  Lansing Community College and Michigan State. He founded his own electrical repair business before taking a job as an engineer with RCA. He also co-founded an herbal products company, a travel company and an advertising agency while also working as a DJ and news director for radio stations. In 2003 he started a talk radio show, which he has continued in various incarnations since while writing multiple books. In 2016 his talk show was carried by at least 80 radio stations, with at least one each in Africa and England. It is currently offered to the Pacifica Radio Network of over 200 community radio stations as a daily show in three one-hour segments plus a compressed one-hour version. More than half of his guests are Conservatives, who are treated with respect: Hartmann's goal is an informative discussion of issues, not like some Conservative talk show hosts to excel in insults. Hartman was a keynoter at this year's Grassroots Radio Conference in New Orleans in September. Before his (2024) Hidden History of the American Dream, his Hidden History series included: (2023) American democracy, (2022) big brother in America, (2022) neoliberalism, (2021) American healthcare, (2021) American oligarchy, (2020) Monopolies, (2020) war on voting, (2019) guns and the Second Amendment, ( 2019) Supreme Court. Copyright 2024 Thom Hartmann and Spencer Graves, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC BY-SA) 4.0 international license.

    29 min
  3. 22 OCT

    Project 2025 per Professor Brooks

    University of Kansas Professor Karl Brooks discusses what he has been telling his students about Project 2025. He discusses this with Radio Active Magazine regulars Spencer Graves and Craig Lubow. Brooks is an attorney with a PhD in history. He served three terms in the Idaho state senate and taught environmental history at the University of Kansas for a decade during which time he wrote two books on (2006) Public Power, Private Dams: The Hells Canyon High Dam Controversy (Weyerhaeuser Environmental Books), (2009) Before Earth Day: The Origins of American Environmental Law, 1945-1970 (University Press of Kansas), and edited a third, (2009) The Environmental Legacy of Harry S. Truman (Truman Legacy Series 5). In 2010 he was appointed the Administrator for Region 7 of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), responsible for Missouri, Iowa, Nebraska, and Kansas including native American jurisdictions in those states. In 2015, he became the national operations manager for the EPA. He later became deputy director of the Administrative Office of the Courts in New Mexico. Then he served two years as senior staff executive for the multi-county judicial district based in Taos before rejoining the faculty at KU. Project 2025 is a political initiative published online in 2022 by the conservative think tank The Heritage Foundation as Mandate for Leadership: The Conservative Promise. Kevin Roberts, President of The Heritage Foundation, introduced that book by noting that the Heritage Foundation had published an earlier Mandate for Leadership in January 1981, the same month that Ronald Reagan was inaugurated as President, and "By the end of that year, more than 60 percent of its recommendations had become policy—and Reagan was on his way to ending stagflation, reviving American confidence and prosperity, and winning the Cold War." The Heritage Foundation has published new editions during 8 of the 11 presidential elections since 1981, with the current version being the ninth. They skipped 1992, 2008 and 2012. In 2018, The Heritage Foundation claimed that the Trump administration had embraced 64%, almost 2/3rds, of the 334 proposed policies in the seventh edition of their Mandate for Leadership. Other experts on US history and politics do not agree that Reagan ended stagflation, revived American confidence and prosperity, and won the Cold War. For example, Matthews claimed that Paul Volker, appointed to chair the Federal Reserve in 1979 by President Carter, had pushed the US into recession1 by 1980 and contributed to Reagan's victory that November. And Ohio State professor John Mueller insists that the Cold War was NOT won by President Reagan but rather by the non-interventionist policies of President Carter, which encouraged the Soviet Union to try to support economic basket cases like Nicaragua and Mozambique and to invade Afghanistan, where they essentially bled to death.2 Copyright 2024 Karl Brooks, Spencer Graves, Craig Lubow, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC BY-SA) 4.0 international license _______ 1. Dylan Matthews, "How the Fed ended the last great American inflation — and how much it hurt", Vox.com, 2022-07-13 (https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/2022/7/13/23188455/inflation-paul-volcker-shock-recession-1970s, accessed 2024-10-22). 2. John Mueller (2021) The Stupidity of War: American Foreign Policy and the Case for Complacency (Cambridge U. Pr.)

    29 min
  4. 8 OCT

    Missouri Prop A per Missouri Jobs with Justice

    Kay Mills and Ray Thomas with Missouri Jobs with Justice discuss Missouri Proposition A of 2024, the Minimum Wage and Earned Paid Sick Time Initiative, with Karl Brooks and Radio Active Magazine regular Spencer Graves. Mills is the political director  for Missouri Jobs with Justice. Thomas is a a member of IBEW Local 124 and a leading campaigner for Missouri Jobs with Justice. Ms. Mills holds a BA in political science from Washington University in St. Louis and has campaigned on many issues over the years, including expanding access to health care and implementing clean power standards as well as increasing the minimum wage. During the interview, Ms. Mills says, "an interesting scary statistic is that a construction worker without paid sick days is 21% more likely to experience an occupational injury than one with paid sick days." That's according to a "Fact Sheet" saying that, "Paid Sick Days Improve Public Health" published November 2023 by the National Partnership for Women and Families. Also, paid sick leave would reduce the transmission of infectious diseases, making it easier to control epidemics and making the population healthier generally. This is supported by research summarized in Graves and Samuelson (2022) "Externalities, public goods, and infectious diseases", Real-World Economics Review, 99: 25-56. Copyright 2024 Kay Mills, Ray Thomas, Karl Brooks, and Spencer Graves, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC BY-SA) 4.0 international license.

    29 min

About

A locally produced program where activist groups in the Kansas City area present interviews, commentary, editorials, and other thought provoking content on a weekly basis.

To listen to explicit episodes, sign in.

Stay up to date with this show

Sign in or sign up to follow shows, save episodes and get the latest updates.

Select a country or region

Africa, Middle East, and India

Asia Pacific

Europe

Latin America and the Caribbean

The United States and Canada