The Race War Is Here episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 15, 2026 · 1H 16M

The Race War Is Here

from Disaffected · host disaffected

Episode 278, June 14, 2026   -A Sudanese foreigner tried to behead an Irish man out on the street in Belfast, kicking off days of night-time rioting and fires set by Irish men who have had enough. The UK government pumps third-worlders into the civilized west and then blames its own constituency for being “racist” about it. -Defense analyst and author Jack Buckby joins us for an insider’s view of the new “troubles” in the UK. Buckby has been warning for years that UK citizens would rise up violently, but no one listened. -This week Karmelo Anthony was convicted of murdering Austin Metcalf, and blacks across America went apeshit. The mask is fully off for the “black community.” It’s psychopathic. Everyone from ordinary people to Howard University professors are calling the victim and his family “racists,” and trying to make convicted murderer Karmelo Anthony into the victim. Do you understand yet how much millions of black Americans hate white people?See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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The Race War Is Here

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Prologue

Jun 19, 2026 ·4m

Chapter 1

Jun 19, 2026 ·25m

Chapter 2

Jun 19, 2026 ·27m

Chapter 3

Jun 19, 2026 ·29m

Chapter 4

Jun 19, 2026 ·39m

Chapter 5

Jun 19, 2026 ·27m

Talk Cinephilia to Me Juli Kearns "Talk Cinephilia to me" is a podcast about watching cinema--artistic, outsider, experimental and B movies--brought to you by author playwright, Juli Kearns, and her son, Aaron Dylan Kearns, an experimental filmmaker who, though he was raised on great cinema, loves tawdry horror. He knows things I don't about film. I know things he doesn't. Most importantly, we know enough to be very aware of what we don't know. We promise to be humble, somewhat meandering hosts because we're disaffected dyslexic leftists with opinions and our filters are busted.Check our website for episode notes and info!! Captives of the Flame by Samuel R. Delany (1942 - ) LibriVox Chip Delany's 2nd novel -- the first is The Jewels of Aptor (1962) -- published by Ace Books in 1963. Set in the 35th Century, the survivors of a nuclear war live on the coastline and an island in a kingdom ruled by a royal family in disrepair. A young victim -- the son of a wealthy merchant -- of their wrath becomes a working-class hero as he fights to get back his good name, aided by a disaffected member of the royal family. This was later rewritten as Out of The Dead City by Delany as part of the Towers Trilogy, an early masterpiece, IMO. (Introduction by BellonaTimes) War, Intervention and Development - for iPad/Mac/PC The Open University How can we prevent a country from returning to civil war? When and how should external parties intervene in serious conflicts? This album looks at the decade of violence and destruction that occurred in Sierra Leone in the 1990's. Now that peace has finally come about through the efforts of the international community, it's time to debate whether the root causes of war have been adequately addressed, and what lessons can be learned. 50% of Sierra Leoneans are under 15 and unskilled. Lack of education, poverty and unemployment are still rife and it's this lack of development that gives rise to conflict. Views from all sides are presented, including those of women, disaffected youth, members of the RUF and the new peace-keeping forces, to provide an in-depth analysis of the complexities of the aftermath of a civil war. In the academic perspective, Helen Yanocopulos, Senior Lecturer in International Politics and Development at The Open University provides insight into the educational val War, Intervention and Development - for iPod/iPhone The Open University How can we prevent a country from returning to civil war? When and how should external parties intervene in serious conflicts? This album looks at the decade of violence and destruction that occurred in Sierra Leone in the 1990's. Now that peace has finally come about through the efforts of the international community, it's time to debate whether the root causes of war have been adequately addressed, and what lessons can be learned. 50% of Sierra Leoneans are under 15 and unskilled. Lack of education, poverty and unemployment are still rife and it's this lack of development that gives rise to conflict. Views from all sides are presented, including those of women, disaffected youth, members of the RUF and the new peace-keeping forces, to provide an in-depth analysis of the complexities of the aftermath of a civil war. In the academic perspective, Helen Yanocopulos, Senior Lecturer in International Politics and Development at The Open University provides insight into the educational val

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This episode was published on June 15, 2026.

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Episode 278, June 14, 2026   -A Sudanese foreigner tried to behead an Irish man out on the street in Belfast, kicking off days of night-time rioting and fires set by Irish men who have had enough. The UK government pumps third-worlders into the...

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