38 min

Dirty Mongoose – 01×09 Relevant Source Podcast

    • News

We dissect a JFK file titled Operation Mongoose, TSA Plans to track Americans through face recognition, House backs 700 billion dollar defense bill, Puerto Rico still doesn’t have power, a person can have two stands of DNA, and there’s thousands of areas that have poisonous water with levels even worse than Flint.

Hosted by Antwand Howard and Francisco Pierre-Louis



Timestamps:


(00:20) JFK Files Expose CIA Plot To Bomb Miami


(04:25) TSA Plans to Use Face Recognition to Track Americans Through Airports


(10:25) House backs $700 billion defense policy bill, funding uncertain


(15:09) 7 weeks after Hurricane Maria, San Juan is still without power, mayor says


(19:30) It’s possible for a person to have two different sets of DNA


(26:40) Widespread contamination threatens children’s health, and could triple household water bills

Articles used in the episode:


JFK Files Expose CIA Plot To Bomb Miami. Source: New Miami Times


TSA Plans to Use Face Recognition to Track Americans Through Airports. Source: Electronic Frontier Foundation


House backs $700 billion defense policy bill, funding uncertain. Source: Reuters


7 weeks after Hurricane Maria, San Juan is still without power, mayor says. Source: ABC News


It’s possible for a person to have two different sets of DNA. Source: Science Alert


Widespread contamination threatens children’s health, and could triple household water bills. Source: Project Censored

Image Credit: Spy Camera by peterbwiberg under a Creative Commons CC0 License.

Music Credit:


Nadir by Einstein in a Patent Office

This episode is sponsored by Blubrry. Blubrry is an great service where you can start your own podcast in a matter of minutes. You can get your first month free by typing rspod on checkout.

Follow the show on: Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and Steemit

Listen to the show: iTunes, Stitcher, Google Play and Tunein

Become a patron here.

We dissect a JFK file titled Operation Mongoose, TSA Plans to track Americans through face recognition, House backs 700 billion dollar defense bill, Puerto Rico still doesn’t have power, a person can have two stands of DNA, and there’s thousands of areas that have poisonous water with levels even worse than Flint.

Hosted by Antwand Howard and Francisco Pierre-Louis



Timestamps:


(00:20) JFK Files Expose CIA Plot To Bomb Miami


(04:25) TSA Plans to Use Face Recognition to Track Americans Through Airports


(10:25) House backs $700 billion defense policy bill, funding uncertain


(15:09) 7 weeks after Hurricane Maria, San Juan is still without power, mayor says


(19:30) It’s possible for a person to have two different sets of DNA


(26:40) Widespread contamination threatens children’s health, and could triple household water bills

Articles used in the episode:


JFK Files Expose CIA Plot To Bomb Miami. Source: New Miami Times


TSA Plans to Use Face Recognition to Track Americans Through Airports. Source: Electronic Frontier Foundation


House backs $700 billion defense policy bill, funding uncertain. Source: Reuters


7 weeks after Hurricane Maria, San Juan is still without power, mayor says. Source: ABC News


It’s possible for a person to have two different sets of DNA. Source: Science Alert


Widespread contamination threatens children’s health, and could triple household water bills. Source: Project Censored

Image Credit: Spy Camera by peterbwiberg under a Creative Commons CC0 License.

Music Credit:


Nadir by Einstein in a Patent Office

This episode is sponsored by Blubrry. Blubrry is an great service where you can start your own podcast in a matter of minutes. You can get your first month free by typing rspod on checkout.

Follow the show on: Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and Steemit

Listen to the show: iTunes, Stitcher, Google Play and Tunein

Become a patron here.

38 min

Top Podcasts In News

Candace
Candace Owens
The Intelligence from The Economist
The Economist
Legally Speaking
570 WKBN (WKBNAM)
Fox News Hourly Update
Fox News Radio
Global News Podcast
BBC World Service
NPR News Now
NPR