• LTAR International Women Day Is Every Day

  • May 21 2024
  • Length: 56 mins
  • Podcast

LTAR International Women Day Is Every Day

  • Summary

  • Let’s Talk About Race (LTAR), is an intergenerational, roundtable discussion of independent national journalists featuring rigorous conversations and analysis of news coverage and the role race plays in politics, government, economy, education, and health. LTAR currently airs on KBOO Community Radio in Portland, OR, and on Pacifica Radio Network
    LTAR brings independent journalists from all over the country from New Jersey to Texas and Pennsylvania with a home base in Portland, Oregon. The hosts bring their own flavor, journalistic perspectives, and integrity.
    The roundtable line-up features: LaNita Duke, an award-winning audio and video producer who has written, directed, and produced political news and commentary for Grassroots NW and KBOO Radio for over 20 years. Dianne Johnson, a journalist from Texas co-host/musicologist on From the Grassroots, a political news audio magazine. Althea Billings, current News Director at KBOO Community Radio. Rev. Cecil Prescod is a talk show host discussing local, national, and international issues ranging from poverty in Portland, OR to politics in Africa. Nia Gray, host and blogger of The Faith Report in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. And Mary Li provides an in-depth analysis.

    And as we celebrate international women day -LTAR revisits the issues impacting women.
    From the end of Affirmative Action , lack of family resources for child care and the challenges facing reproductive rights
    However, at the same time, we celebrate women who stood up and fought and continue to fight for progressive causes:
    Starting with Oregon State Sen. Avel Gordly A Portland native, Gordly became the first African-American woman elected to the Oregon State Senate in 1996, serving until 2009.
    Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm: the first African-American woman elected to Congress. Chisholm was a founding member of the Congressional Black Caucus and the first African American to make a serious bid for the Presidency of the United States of America.

    Mary Li did a shout-out to Yuri Kochiyama

    Yuri Kochiyama was a Japanese American political and civil rights activist. During World War II, the U.S. government forcibly removed her and her family to an incarceration site for Japanese Americans. For fifty years, Kochiyama spoke out about oppressive institutions and injustice in the United States. Her activism supported the liberation and empowerment of African Americans, Asian Americans, and Puerto Ricans. She also advocated for nuclear disarmament, reparations for Japanese American incarcerates, and the release of prisoners whom she regarded as prisoners of conscience.

    Althea Billings shares with us that the struggle for Women's Reproductive rights never ends with A Women's Rights vs the Supreme Court's Might

    Previously On-Dyning to own the Liberals or voting against your own needs
    Hope is a Thing with Feathers- Senator Mallory McMorrow

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