Pretty Heady Stuff

Pretty Heady Stuff

This podcast features interviews with a variety of theorists, artists and activists from across the globe. It's guided by the search for radical solutions to crises that are inherent to colonial capitalism. To this end, I hope to keep facilitating conversations that bring together perspectives on the liberatory and transformative power of care, in particular.

  1. قبل يوم واحد

    Alyssa Battistoni takes apart the hostile system that incentivizes taking selfishly from nature

    Alyssa Battistoni is an assistant professor of political science at Barnard College. She is the coauthor of A Planet to Win: Why We Need a Green New Deal and the recent Free Gifts: Capitalism and the Politics of Nature. Alyssa knows why you feel helpless to stop the end of nature. In Free Gifts, she looks at the history of environmental degradation under capitalism and explains how an economic system that expropriates from the natural world has normalized an unapologetically exploitative relationship to the Earth. Her work gives us essential tools and strategies for regaining the freedom to respect nature, built from her sense that we don't actually want to dominate it, but instead that something is putting pressure on us in our everyday lives and compelling that domination. In the end, she contends, we don't need individual responsibility, we need collective power to preserve the systems that sustain us, and end the systems that don't. We need the power to restructure the system that is leading us down the path to environmental collapse. Battistoni writes that "capitalism limits our ability to treat nonhuman nature as something other than a free gift. It constrains our ability, individually and collectively, to make genuine decisions about how to value and relate to the nonhuman world, and to take responsibility for those decisions." What she calls the "structure of market rule" compromises "our ability to take responsibility for the world we have made." This is because ultimately "markets are indifferent to our purposes, seeing only prices" that "detach intentions from consequences." We talk about these ideas, and about the consequences of the now-normative "absorption" theory of pollution, which commodifies our ability, as living beings, to suck in and survive all of the poisons produced under capitalism. In the end, it's a hopeful conversation, though; one that bangs the drum for winning back the planet.

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  2. ٤ فبراير

    James Adomian goads us to laugh our way through the absolute absurdity of our moment

    James Adomian is a brilliant stand-up comedian, voice actor, writer and impressionist known for his work on Comedy Bang! Bang!, Last Comic Standing, and his many hilarious podcast appearances. He's also one of the funniest people in the world. Renowned for his impressions of figures like Bernie Sanders, David Attenborough, Elon Musk and Mike Lindell, Adomian's recent comedy special Path of Most Resistance showcases a remarkable range of talents, including the ability to skewer some of the central political absurdities of our time. There's a tendency to see comedy as political in a sort of surreptitious way: sneaking it past people by making them laugh. ‪@JamesAdomianXOXO‬ is a good example of this, but in our conversation he discusses the different strategies comedians take today to commit to what's historically been called "gallows humour." Do artists build trust with their audiences so that they can bring them to the gallows, or is it better to find a tactic that puts them immediately off-balance: bombarding them with the obvious perils that populate the world?In the places where Path of Most Resistance dives into these lived realities, Adomian can bring you through that peril using a dizzying array of characters. One of the things he explains is that comedy has been hamstrung by the paucity of opportunities to do real sketch comedy. The centrality of Saturday Night Live means that the sketch work that exists in its orbit really stays in the shadows, unless it buys into the lowest common denominator logics of "the algorithm."This is where James is at his most vociferous: eviscerating the "brute force" dumbing down of audiences today that are being made more vacuous by a highly resourced right populism and dog whistle politics of division and discrimination thriving on social media. One of the most fun interviews I've ever done. Hope you enjoy! Watch Path of Most Resistance on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pJ5DFrdOyig

    ٥٩ من الدقائق
  3. ٢٠ يناير

    Harsha Walia reframes ICE fascism and American aggression in an era of border brutality

    Harsha Walia is a South Asian activist and writer based in Vancouver, unceded Coast Salish Territories. Author of the essential Border and Rule: Global Migration, Capitalism, and the Rise of Racist Nationalism, Walia has been involved in community-based grassroots migrant justice, feminist, anti-racist, Indigenous solidarity, anti-capitalist, Palestinian liberation, and anti-imperialist movements, including No One is Illegal and Women’s Memorial March Committee. The poet and theorist Gloria Anzaldúa once wrote that “The world is not a safe place to live in. We shiver in separate cells in enclosed cities, shoulders hunched, barely keeping the panic below the surface of the skin, daily drinking shock along with our morning coffee, fearing the torches being set to our buildings, the attacks in the streets. Shutting down.” In this discussion, Walia and I talk about working to shut down the structural forces that are trying to force us to shut down, to drink shock and resist panic.We look at the fascistic violence happening in the United States, the Trump administration’s blood-soaked invasion of Venezuela, and the ongoing push, in Canada, for a border enforcement regime that aligns more closely with the United States’ crackdown on immigration. What, if anything, does the spectre of securitized borders mean in the context of rising eco-fascism and global resource wars? Canada claims to be a climate leader and yet remains a place for rapacious extraction; we profess to being a bastion of multiculturalism and humanitarian values, but wage war on Indigenous communities and perceived others. Walia helps us understand the links between systems of border reinforcement and the monopolization of violence by police. Under capitalism, this sort of fascistic slide is central to the consolidation of moneyed power. It facilitates oligarchic rule. And the accelerating annihilation of democracy should not come as a surprise in this context. If twelve people can possess the wealth of four billion, then democracy will not be allowed to live. If eighteen trillion dollars can be hoarded by a small group of elites, then democracy will be destroyed in order for that system to continue. But we can’t let it, because the possibility of self-determination and the social good are literally at stake. This is why Walia proposes the idea of becoming ungovernable: becoming capable of democracy in the direct sense of disrupting, building support structures for disruptors and generating the momentum needed to take power and protect all people. According to Walia, the infrastructure that the left requires to contest fascism will need to be developed outside the digital realm that you are currently reading this in. If solidarity is to become a serious threat to the status quo, it cannot be reduced to a sentence shared in the comment thread. A shift could send shockwaves, but we’ll need to reanimate the democratic muscles that seem to have atrophied over the course of neoliberalism’s deranged ascent.#leftpolitics #anticapitalism #anticolonialism #ice #fuckice #antitrump #antizionism #antifascism #socialism #venezuela #handsoffvenezuela #monroedoctrine #maduroarrested #nooneisillegal

    ٣٨ من الدقائق
  4. ٢٣‏/١٢‏/٢٠٢٥

    Rana Zaman struggles for universal human rights and peace globally. Why is she being attacked?

    In the wake of October 7, two political modalities have emerged: one is an imperialist one that seeks to forcefully normalize the retaliatory genocidal violence Israel has inflicted on Palestine, the other is an anticolonial one that refuses the racial domination of people rendered disposable by the imperial machine. A primary effect of the so-called "Palestine exception" -- where one can protest, petition and pressure government to stand up to monstrous violations of human rights, so long as they do not try to hold Israel accountable for its crimes against humanity -- is that people like Rana, who speak the truth about what is happening, are blamed, blacklisted and denigrated. In this conversation, Zaman and I discuss the ostracism and silencing she has repeatedly experienced, with the most recent attacks coming as a result of the YMCA in Halifax awarding her a Peace Medal, only to rescind it days later in the face of a targeted pro-Israel smear campaign. This is not the first time that Rana has faced backlash for resisting the destruction of Palestinian life. It must, however, be the last. The cowardice and complicity of YMCA Canada is an embarrassment for an organization that claims to be intent on "igniting the potential in people and strengthening our evolving communities." Shrinking away from the risks of confronting injustice has earned YMCA a place on the list of organizations that supporters of Palestinian liberation are encouraged to boycott. Stand in support of Rana Zaman, a crusader for human rights in spite of censorship, state-sponsored violence and Zionist propaganda. Resist the manufacturing of amnesia. Fight for a free Palestine.

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  5. ١٤‏/١١‏/٢٠٢٥

    Nora Loreto and Alex Khasnabish argue for saving the university from itself

    Many academic workers are striking for better labour protections, including CUPE 3916 in Nova Scotia, but where are the connections forming between different labour movements? Can we forge deeper solidarity in this moment of crisis? Do we blow up the system or try to repair it?Nora Loreto, host of the podcast Sandy and Nora Talk Politics and author of many books on politics, and Alex Khasnabish, Professor of Anthropology at Mount Saint Vincent University, help us understand why the university is such an "important social location," what its histories are, and how those histories are brought to bear on the present composition of the institution.Since universities are systematically underfunded and neoliberal austerity has further starved its labour force, these places of knowledge creation and learning have been turned into a reflection of the broader gig economy. Instructors who have to work within that system are left feeling wholly devalued, while the managerial class that operates the university are left with few levers they can pull to make change. In this context, what sort of alternative vision for the university as a site of engagement is possible? Why can't universities rehabilitate themselves and seek more community connections? Alex, Nora and I unpack these and other questions here.#university #labour #strike #collectivebargaining #unions #education #equity #leftpolitics #policyalternatives

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حول

This podcast features interviews with a variety of theorists, artists and activists from across the globe. It's guided by the search for radical solutions to crises that are inherent to colonial capitalism. To this end, I hope to keep facilitating conversations that bring together perspectives on the liberatory and transformative power of care, in particular.