Episodes

Wednesday Dec 27, 2017
Leid Stories—The Biggest Lesson of This Tumultuous Year—12.27.17
Wednesday Dec 27, 2017
Wednesday Dec 27, 2017
As a tumultuous 2017 nears its end and a new year soon begins, Leid Stories encourages all to undertake a recap—not the standard chronological review of the “big stories” of the year, but a sober reckoning of how, individually and collectively, we have been changed by them.

Tuesday Dec 26, 2017
Tuesday Dec 26, 2017
It’s the first day of Kwanzaa, a weeklong period (Dec. 26-Jan.1) of education, reflection and celebration of African-derived core principles the pan-African world is encouraged to observe in the spirit of collective struggle and progress.
Forged in the crucible of mass social, political, economic, and even moral oppression in the United States in the 1960s, Kwanzaa was designed as a comprehensive system of correctives. But many Americans do not know what the Kwanzaa is all about.
Dr. Maulana Karenga, a major figure in the U.S. black-nationalist movement in the ’60s and ’70s and now author, scholar and chair of the Africana Studies Department at California State University, Long Beach, created Kwanzaa. In this panoramic address (2008) to the Philadelphia chapter of the National Association of Kawaida Organizations Karenga explains the meaning, purpose, principles and practices of the now-global celebration of Kwanzaa.

Thursday Dec 21, 2017
Leid Stories—Trump’s Big Con; Minding Our Own Business—12.21.17
Thursday Dec 21, 2017
Thursday Dec 21, 2017
Knowing the president’s penchant for lying and gratuitous overstatements about his business acumen and success (which is also lying), we should be very skeptical about his “Christmas gift” of a $1.5-trillion budget that will cause a rising tide of prosperity that will lift all boats. The rosy picture he paints doesn’t square with reality. Rather, it’s another of his tall tales, told to distract and buy time before the economic tsunami hits, says Leid Stories.
In a related commentary, Leid Stories repeats its warning that we all should mind our own business, preparing ourselves for the economic calamities that are much closer than we think.

Wednesday Dec 20, 2017
Wednesday Dec 20, 2017
In her first act as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley in January warned member-states of the international body that the Trump administration will be “taking names” of all countries ever daring to vote against it. The former governor of South Carolina this week repeated the threat in a letter to representatives of several member-states, ahead of a controversial vote tomorrow on the U.S.’s unilateral decision to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and relocate the U.S. embassy there. Leid Stories notes that Haley and Trump both seem to believe that thuggery is diplomacy.
When the House votes again today on new changes to the massive tax-overhaul plan, President Donald Trump and the Republican leadership will claim a stunning victory. The tax overhaul, the centerpiece of the Republicans’ $1.5-trillion budget, was long overdue, they say, and will greatly energize the economy, bringing across-the-board benefits. But Trump’s triumph is not sitting well with a wide swath of experts. Josh Bivens, director of research at the Washington-based Economic Policy Institute, is one of them. The tax-overhaul and budget bill, he says, are “nothing short of wholesale looting.”
![Leid Stories—Budget Process Points Up Limitations of the Two-Party System; [Re-]Organize Now!—12.19.17](https://pbcdn1.podbean.com/imglogo/image-logo/547423/Utrice-Leid-Album-Art_300x300.jpg)
Tuesday Dec 19, 2017
Tuesday Dec 19, 2017
Turns out that Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.), a Trump critic who had vowed to vote against the Republicans’ spending bill because its estimated cost of $1.5 trillion is unconscionable, likes it now. Fellow Republicans discovered that a tax-deduction measure that could benefit Corker—and Trump—personally as real estate moguls found its way into the budget package sent to the House for a final vote yesterday. Corker says he doesn’t know how the provision got included in the Senate bill.
Leid Stories amplifies yesterday’s commentary (about the opaque, undemocratic and corrupt nature of the budget process), contending that it also points up the limitations of the two-party system.
In light of current political realities, says Leid Stories, it is time to [re-]organize.

Tuesday Dec 19, 2017
Tuesday Dec 19, 2017
On Friday evening, a delirious President Donald Trump and a coterie of Republican leaders delivered tidings of great joy (Trump announced it was a “Christmas gift” to the nation): There is, at last, a budget, and all that’s needed now is a final vote in both houses of Congress to put the new budget into effect. That process begins today, and with Republicans controlling all branches of government, it is unlikely that the Democrats will succeed in making significant changes to the $1.5-trillion budget.
Leid Stories says that the budget process, being exceedingly undemocratic, opaque and corrupt, must be scrapped.
Gov. Ricardo Rosseló of Puerto Rico, conceding that “official” counts of deaths due to Hurricane Maria are extremely inaccurate, today ordered a review of every death attributed to the Category 4 storm that devastated the island three months ago. Independent media analyses found that more than 1,000 people died in addition to the 64 officially listed.
Meanwhile, Refugees International, which recently toured the U.S. territory, has issued a report decrying the woeful conditions under which Puerto Ricans are living.
The Trump administration seems not to care that Puerto Ricans—fellow Americans—are refugees in their own country.

Friday Dec 15, 2017
Friday Dec 15, 2017
The FBI yesterday released from its electronic “vault” a trove of files related to Bill and Hillary Clinton and others who played key roles in the Clintons’ political and business endeavors.
Charles Ortel, a retired Wall Street banker turned financial investigator who has been probing the Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton Foundation for two years, reveals damaging information the latest FBI files contain.
A county coroner in Kentucky yesterday ruled that State Rep. Dan Johnson, found Wednesday night on the side of a road with a gunshot wound to the head, died by “probable suicide.” Johnson, also a pastor of a local church, died two days after the Kentucky Center for Investigative Reporting published a story alleging that he sexually abused a 17-year-old friend of his daughter after a New Year’s party in 2012. The young woman reported the alleged incident to the police. It was investigated, but was closed with no charges filed against Johnson.
Leid Stories asks: Was Dan Johnson a victim of #MeToo fervor?

Thursday Dec 14, 2017
Thursday Dec 14, 2017
Roy Moore, who lost the U.S. Senate race in Alabama to Democrat Doug Jones in a special election Tuesday, says he’s not conceding until the vote is fully tallied to include military and write-in ballots. With 99 percent of the votes counted, those votes (an estimated 20,000) won’t be enough to put Moore over the top, even if they all went to him, officials said. Besides, under Alabama law, the difference between the final votes in an election must be smaller than 0.5 percent to trigger an automatic recount.
African Americans delivered victory for Jones. But as Leid Stories asked yesterday: Of what benefit will that be to them?
The late Kwame Turé, presciently addressing University of Chicago students in 1989, stresses that strategy and purpose should inform political action. If not, we will only be enabling our own oppression.

Wednesday Dec 13, 2017
Wednesday Dec 13, 2017
Investigative reporter, author, educator and activist Paul DeRienzo has been reporting on Leid Stories about the scary state of nuclear programs and facilities in the United States.
He now turns his attention toward Europe’s missteps with malfunctioning nuclear systems and the devastating challenges and consequences they are having way beyond their borders.
Black voters in Alabama yesterday helped deliver a stunning victory for Democrat Doug Jones in a special election to fill the U.S. Senate seat Jeff Sessions held before joining the Trump administration as U.S. attorney general. With a higher turnout than when President Obama ran in 2008 and 2012, their bloc votes helped the longshot Jones triumph over the Trump-endorsed Roy Moore in one of the nastiest political contests in recent memory. Moore, though, has not conceded; he says he may challenge the results.
Leid Stories takes a preliminary look at the race in terms of the potentiality of Black political power in the Age of Trump.

Tuesday Dec 12, 2017
Tuesday Dec 12, 2017
Akayed Ullah, a 27-year-old Bangladeshi immigrant living in Brooklyn, allegedly intended to be a suicide bomber, targeting the heavily trafficked Port Authority bus terminal in New York City. But a pipe bomb he strapped to his body apparently malfunctioned and instead seriously wounded him and injured five others, police said. Ullah’s attempted attack follows that of Oct. 31 by Uzbekistani immigrant Sayfullo Saipov, who used a rented truck to kill eight people and injured 12 others on a bike path in Lower Manhattan.
Leid Stories had said after the Oct. 31 attack that calling these and other such acts “terrorism” is a deliberate effort by the government to deny that they really are acts of warfare.
Several members of Congress, following the hallowed tradition of laying very low on controversial issues until they sense a groundswell, are “calling” on President Donald Trump to resign. As if he’ll grant their requests. As if that’s how it gets done.
Yet when their colleague, Rep. Al Green (D-Texas), last week awaited a resolution vote on articles of impeachment that he formally introduced against Trump on Oct.11, he found himself a very lonely man. It was a crushing 364-58, with many of those “calling” for Trump’s resignation not among those approving.

