DS #126: Hold the Line episode artwork

EPISODE · Jul 23, 2025 · 56 MIN

DS #126: Hold the Line

from Didactic SynCast · host Eric S. Piotrowski

As Maria Ressa says, we must hold the line. We should not surrender in advance to authoritarianism in Brazil, South Korea, The Philippines, or the USA. Today — exactly one year after my last episode — I turned on the mic and spoke from the heart about Trump, Musk, DOGE, Grover Norquist, the Department of Education, Israeli war crimes in Gaza, AI, and more. Plus a tiny glimpse of one of the best female MCs in the world today. Enjoy! Want to do something about the horrors of the world? Why not write a letter for Amnesty International? ___________ Current Events Trump and the angry white guys who voted for him [Pew Research: Voting patterns in the 2024 election] Donald Trump and Steve Bannon need angry young men. They’re using Gamergate culture to get them Economics Drowning public schools in the bathtub to promote GOP ideology Education ACLU: Trump's Department of Education Attack Explained In Engaged Buddhism, Peace Begins with You Killer Robots MIT: Explained: Generative AI’s environmental impact Hip-Hop Sa-Roc feat. Black Thought: “The Black Renaissance” Quote of the Show Salah Ta’mari is (or was; I can’t find info on him now; this is from a 1992 book) a writer and former member of the Palestine resistance movement. He wrote in his Journey into Hades: Diary of a Palestinian in an Israeli Prison: [At the end, after hallucinating a conversation with his mother] "One million giants stood up in me and began fighting their way to the surface again, with determination, fury, and force. No way to make me give up. I was stronger, I would fight back, I would rise to the challenge." End US arms sales to Israel!

As Maria Ressa says, we must hold the line. We should not surrender in advance to authoritarianism in Brazil, South Korea, The Philippines, or the USA. Today — exactly one year after my last episode — I turned on the mic and spoke from the heart about Trump, Musk, DOGE, Grover Norquist, the Department of Education, Israeli war crimes in Gaza, AI, and more. Plus a tiny glimpse of one of the best female MCs in the world today. Enjoy! Want to do something about the horrors of the world? Why not write a letter for Amnesty International? ___________ Current Events Trump and the angry white guys who voted for him [Pew Research: Voting patterns in the 2024 election] Donald Trump and Steve Bannon need angry young men. They’re using Gamergate culture to get them Economics Drowning public schools in the bathtub to promote GOP ideology Education ACLU: Trump's Department of Education Attack Explained In Engaged Buddhism, Peace Begins with You Killer Robots MIT: Explained: Generative AI’s environmental impact Hip-Hop Sa-Roc feat. Black Thought: “The Black Renaissance” Quote of the Show Salah Ta’mari is (or was; I can’t find info on him now; this is from a 1992 book) a writer and former member of the Palestine resistance movement. He wrote in his Journey into Hades: Diary of a Palestinian in an Israeli Prison: [At the end, after hallucinating a conversation with his mother] "One million giants stood up in me and began fighting their way to the surface again, with determination, fury, and force. No way to make me give up. I was stronger, I would fight back, I would rise to the challenge." End US arms sales to Israel!

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DS #126: Hold the Line

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Sovereign Nations Sovereign Nations Welcome to The Causes of Things, a podcast from Sovereign Nations. The 1st century BC poet Virgil stated, “Blessed is he who understands the hidden causes of things.” This statement is as brilliant today as it was 2,000 years ago.Primarily narrated by Michael O'Fallon, The Causes of Things is didactic in nature featuring a collection of teaching series & lectures, some of which are recorded specifically for this podcast, and some that are from public lectures. The show will offer discussion and information concerning a variety of complex ideas: The philosophical presuppositions behind the ideas that are aggressively shaping our world, the answers to those challenging ideas, and the necessary historical, hierarchical structure of the world as represented through the lens of Judeo Christian belief. Fable of the Bees by Bernard Mandeville Loyal Books Bernard Mandeville's didactic poem praising the virtues that personal vices bestow on society as a whole, along with several treatises and dialogues explaining and defending it. Mandeville's theories were influential in the development of both the moral philosophy of the Scottish Enlightenment and the methodology of modern economics. - Summary by Matthew Muñoz SCDP ECHO Podcast Emory Serious Communicable Diseases Program The Emory University School of Medicine Serious Communicable Diseases Program (SCDP) hosts live, monthly, ECHO sessions for medical and public health professionals responding to special pathogens and other infectious diseases. This forum allows attendees to learn from infectious disease experts, ask questions, and share evolving best practices around infectious disease management. The recordings of the live ECHO sessions are available here as a podcast, and generally include a situation report, didactic presentation, case presentation, and live Q&A discussion. Please Note:Unless otherwise stated, the opinions expressed in the program reflect those of the panelists and not necessarily those of their respective organizations, including (but not limited to), Emory University, Children's Healthcare of Atlanta, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response. Sowing and Reaping by Frances E. W. Harper (1825 - 1911) LibriVox This novel is subtitled A Temperance Story, which identifies explicitly the focus of the work. Frances Harper is a Christian moralist and uses her writings for didactic purposes. Here she contrast two couples, one, Belle and Paul, who do not drink and whose lives are happier and more productive, and the other, Jeanette and Charles, who lives are destroyed by the demon rum. (N.B. There are some missing portions of the text)

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This episode was published on July 23, 2025.

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As Maria Ressa says, we must hold the line. We should not surrender in advance to authoritarianism in Brazil, South Korea, The Philippines, or the USA. Today — exactly one year after my last episode — I turned on the mic and spoke from the heart...

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