Podcasts
People often only think of racism as overt comments or actions which we experience and see. Obviously this is only a small subsection of racism in North America. I think we are all aware that silent and hidden racism exists all around us, from the Korean owner of an embroidery store asking me to watch every black youth who walked in, nudging me and implying they were not to be trusted (I did catch a Korean kid trying to steal a hat, but never had any issue with anyone else), to subtle remarks which point out supposedly understood “truths” about certain people. However real systemic racism exists in Government policies, laws, economic rules, and more insidiously, through housing and zoning laws and systems within education that actively target Black people and their communities. These podcasts deal with those very real, and very present forms of Systemic Racism.
For most of these podcasts, click on the title for a link to the online version.
Shots Fired: Radio Lab
An episode made in the aftermath of Ferguson and other incidents of police injustice against Black victims, it really highlights the problems in the Police Force and what can be done to actually help stop racist police policies.
Description: “A couple years ago, Ben Montgomery, reporter at the Tampa Bay Times, started emailing every police station in Florida.
He was asking for any documents created - from 2009 to 2014 - when an officer discharged his weapon in the line of duty. He ended up with a six foot tall stack of reports, pictures, and press clippings cataloging the death or injury of 828 people by Florida police.
Jad and Robert talk to Ben about what he found, crunch some numbers, and then our reporter Matt Kielty takes a couple files off Ben's desk and brings us the stories inside them - from a network of grief to a Daytona police chief.
And next week, we bring you another, very different story of a police encounter gone wrong.”
House Rules: This American Life
This American Life looks at the very real systemic racism which is continued to be supported and propagated by housing acts and the legal code in the United States.
Description: “Where you live is important. It can dictate quality of schools and hospitals, as well as things like cancer rates, unemployment, or whether the city repairs roads in your neighborhood. On this week's show, stories about destiny by address.”
The Miseducation of Larry P: Radiolab
A sobering look at how even initial rules and laws designed to protect ethnic minorities, like Black Americans, can be perverted and used to victimize them.
Description: “Are some ideas so dangerous we shouldn’t even talk about them? That question brought Radiolab’s senior editor, Pat Walters, to a subject that at first he thought was long gone: the measuring of human intelligence with IQ tests. Turns out, the tests are all around us. In the workplace. The criminal justice system. Even the NFL. And they’re massive in schools. More than a million US children are IQ tested every year.
We begin Radiolab Presents: “G” with a sentence that stopped us all in our tracks: In the state of California, it is off-limits to administer an IQ test to a child if he or she is Black. That’s because of a little-known case called Larry P v Riles that in the 1970s … put the IQ test itself on trial. With the help of reporter Lee Romney, we investigate how that lawsuit came to be, where IQ tests came from, and what happened to one little boy who got caught in the crossfire.”