This Is Hell!

Manufacturing Dissent since 1996

Episodes

Total: 517

Writer Chris Tomlinson on his book "Forget the Alamo: The Rise and Fall of an American Myth," co-wri

Writer Rohan Rice on his article "Hunger and food production in Nicaragua: how do we feed the people

Economist Robin Hahnel on his book "Democratic Economic Planning" from Routledge, and in a Moment of

Economist Robin Hahnel on the roots of the 2008 financial crisis, and reactions from the political e

Two archive interviews on Israel's occupation of Palestine and growing right-wing political movement

Writer Brian Justie on his article "The Nonmachinables" for Logic Magazine, and in a Moment of Truth

Journalist Cole Stangler on his article "U.S. Sanctions on Cuba and Venezuela Hamper the Global Figh

Historian Carol Anderson on her book "The Second: Race and Guns in a Fatally Unequal America" from

Historian Juan Cole on his articles "What does the election of hard liner Raisi in Iran mean for Mid

Sociologist Caitlin Schroering on her article "Inside the struggle for water sovereignty in Brazil"

Law scholar Madison Condon on her Boston Review article "Climate Change’s New Ally: Big Finance" for

Sociologist Max Ajl on his new book "A People’s Green New Deal" from Pluto Press. http://www.plutob

Writer Erica X Eisen on her article "The Other Nuremberg Trials, Seventy-Five Years On" for Boston R

Evolutionary epidemiologist Rob Wallace on pandemic politics, vaccines, variants, mask laws and the

Writer Jacqueline Keeler on her book "Standing Rock, the Bundy Movement, and the American Story of S

Journalist Mara Hvistendahl on her article "Oracle Boasted That Its Software Was Used Against U.S. P

Philosopher Rocío Zambrana on her book "Colonial Debts: The Case of Puerto Rico" from Duke Universit

Literary theorist Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht on his book "Crowds: The Stadium as a Ritual of Intensity" f

Anthropologist Sarah Ihmoud on her article "Sheikh Jarrah: The Question Before Us" for Jadaliyya, an

Sociologist Spencer Headworth on his book "Policing Welfare: Punitive Adversarialism in Public Assis