Peace Talks Radio - podcast cover

Peace Talks Radio

Paul Inglesgoodradioshows.org
A monthly series on peacemaking and nonviolent conflict resolution. Stories that inform, inspire and improve the human condition.
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Episodes

White Supremacy/Extremism

On this edition of PEACE TALKS RADIO, Megan Kamerick interviews Layla Saad, the author of "Me and White Supremacy: Combat Racism, Change the World, and Become a Good Ancestor". Also, Sarah Holtz speaks with the Executive Director of Parents for Peace, Myrieme Churchill, to learn about the group’s vision and strategies in helping families deal with family members who become drawn to extremist and terrorist causes.

Jul 13, 202059 min

Conflicts Around Mental Illness

This Peace Talks Radio program discusses lessening the stigma around commonly named mental illnesses such as depression, schizophrenia, and psychosis, as well as how to support someone appearing to have a mental health challenge in public, for example, on the street, in a building, or on a bus. Or in our family or circle of friends. The program also looks at the conflict in mental health care over the diagnosis and treatment of the 450 mental disorders listed in the Diagnostic and Statistical Ma...

Jul 13, 202059 min

Profile in Peace: Jimmy Carter

On this program, we present part of our chat with Former President Jimmy Carter from 2002. Also, an extended conversation with Stu Eizenstat who was President Carter’s Chief Domestic Policy Adviser, and Executive Director of the White House Domestic Policy Staff during his presidency. In 2018, Eizenstat published the book JIMMY CARTER, THE WHITE HOUSE YEARS. Finally, you’ll also hear an excerpt from President Carter’s landmark 1979 Oval Office talk with the nation called “Crisis of Confidence.”...

Jul 13, 202059 min

Seeking Peace on Earth: A PEACE TALKS RADIO Special (2019)

Our annual compendium of highlights from the programs of one season of PEACE TALKS RADIO - the series on peacemaking and nonviolent conflict resolution. You'll hear excerpts from 2019 programs about Mediation training programs, refugee asylum efforts, Johnny Cash playing the Nixon White House in 1970, peacemaking in the LGBTQ community, Catholic peacemaking icons Dorothy Day and Oscar Romero, economic class conflict, town meeting conflict resolution, and more....

Feb 01, 202059 min

Resolving Conflict, "Town Meeting" Style

Long before the United States became a nation and implemented American democracy as we know it today, there were town meetings. Nearly 400 years later, the town meeting tradition has endured in New England, though with each passing decade, towns are seeing a steady decline in participation. On this episode of Peace Talks Radio, correspondent Sarah Holtz brings us a conversation about conflict resolution through the lens of town meeting. We'll hear from four individuals who actively participate i...

Feb 01, 202059 min

Facing Our Fears - What's Real & What's Imagined?

It's easy to be fearful in the world today. But how much of our fear is based on things that are not actual threats? Today, 3 takes. One says fear is unequally distributed in the U.S.- onto people of color. Another guest says, in general there's less to be afraid of than we're led to believe. And our other guest says, we're misdirecting our fear when it comes to the major threats to our national security. Guests are Janet Napolitano, Barry Glassner, and Reggie Jackson. Host, Megan Kamerick....

Feb 01, 202059 min

Addressing Economic Class Conflict

While some organizations and individuals believe there is multidimensional inequality in the U.S., this PEACE TALKS RADIO program is only about economic class conflict - not social, political, or cultural inequality. We talk with two good thinkers on the topic: Dr. Tina Wright, a sociologist, who teaches at LA Southwest College and Nick Hanauer, a self-described "proud and unapologetic capitalist" who's become a leading critic of income inequality and modern economic policy. He's also the host o...

Feb 01, 202059 min

Learning Lessons from History to Make Peace Today

At the Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial in Poland, a quote on the wall of one of the cell blocks reads, "Those who do not remember the past are condemned to repeat it." These words are attributed to George Santayana, and they help explain why the former death camp is still open for public viewing 74 years after it was shut down. Historical amnesia was a real danger after the Holocaust, and with so many other tragedies that have followed, it's still a threat today....

Feb 01, 202059 min

Reconciling A Sexual Assault & De-Escalating Street Conflict

We offer two stories this time. In Part One, a story of restorative justice and reconciliation between a woman, who was a victim of a non-consensual sexual assault during a casual date in college, and the man who assaulted her. We'll hear about an all-too-rare resolution where the perpetrator becomes inspired to make things more right by admitting his guilt first to his victim, then publicly and teaming up with the victim to share their story together to promote consent, and help reduce sexual a...

Jul 05, 201959 min

Catholic Peacemaking Icons

Despite the Catholic Church being mired in its sexual abuse scandal which has tarnished the faith's reputation globally, Catholic history also holds many courageous stories of people working for peace, social justice and economic equity. We’re going to spend some time on those stories on this program. Today Megan Kamerick talks with three guests. The episode leads off with Megan’s conversation with Kate Hennessy, the granddaughter of Dorothy Day, who co-founded the Catholic Worker movement. Then...

Jun 05, 201959 min

Peacemaking in LGBTQ Communities

This time on PEACE TALKS RADIO, a three-part program about peacemaking in LGBTQ communities. Coming out can lead to a sense of personal peace that many people spend their whole lives seeking. But coming out can sometimes bring about conflict with family, friends, and the larger society in which we live. On this month’s episode of Peace Talks Radio, correspondent Sarah Holtz speaks with three individuals who came out about their sexual orientation and gender identity and found their own personal ...

May 05, 201959 min

Johnny Cash and Richard Nixon / plus Ndaba Mandela

This time on Peace Talks Radio, a conversation with Sara Dosa, who co-directed the Netflix film "Tricky Dick and The Man in Black." In the late 1960's and early 1970's, the divisions in the United States over the Vietnam War and the civil rights movement brought the youth of America in conflict with longstanding social and political norms. The Richard Nixon administration sought to ingratiate itself to both the youth culture and the Deep South by trying to recruit the favor of music star Johnny ...

Apr 05, 201959 min

A Peace Choir and a Peace Elder

This time on Peace Talks Radio, a two-part program. In Part One, we'll meet the founders of the New Mexico Peace Choir, which was formed in 2015 to promote peace and joy and also raise awareness of important issues like the environment. It has grown into a movement and last year represented the United States last at the World Peace Choir conference in Vienna. Members were also part of a world premiere work, The Great War symphony, in November 2018 at Carnegie Hall in New York commemorating the h...

Mar 06, 201959 min

Immigration Compassion and A Call for Responsible Leaders

This time on Peace Talks Radio, a two-part program. Part one is a focus on outreach efforts that intend to bring some peace and safety to immigrants whose futures have become tangled up in the United States’ evolving immigration stance. First we’ll hear the story of Jose Torres who, in the fall of 2017, became the first person in New Orleans to take sanctuary in a church to avoid deportation. Jose is a community leader with the Congress of Day Laborers, a group of immigrant workers and families ...

Feb 06, 201959 min

Learning Mediation

Twenty-one people including PEACE TALKS RADIO host, Suzanne Kryder, took a 40-hour mediation course in Albuqueruqe, NM to improve their communication skills and to someday mediate professionally. Suzanne talks with Anne Lightsey, a professional mediator and the course instructor, about what each of us can do during conflict to make peace rather than simply conclude the other person is wrong. She also talks with four course participants about both their unique motivation to take the course and wh...

Jan 31, 201959 min

Seeking Peace on Earth: A PEACE TALKS RADIO Special (2018)

PEACE TALKS RADIO, the radio series and podcast on peacemaking and nonviolent conflict resolution strategies offers up another compilation show based on a single season of its programs. You’ll hear compelling excerpts from programs released in 2018. Included are conversations about reducing sexual assault by understanding consent, promoting the development of empathy in young people, improving empathy among health care workers, techniques for healing trauma and more....

Jan 31, 201959 min

Grappling with the Violence of Whiteness

In public discussions of racial violence, the focus is often on people of color and the way they experience racism. In this episode of Peace Talks Radio, our guests turn the lens on Whiteness, asking how the notion of Whiteness came to be, how it has shaped American history and how it perpetuates injustice in interpersonal interactions and systems in American society today. We talk with John Biewen, audio director at the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University, who produced the 2017 se...

Dec 05, 201859 min

More From "Playing For Change": The Peace Through Music Project

Back in 2010, Peace Talks Radio did a program of an especially creative joining of music and peace. An outfit called Playing For Change was flying around the globe to record an eclectic collection of musicians playing together on some popular songs to promote the power of music to bring us together. In fact the Playing for Change motto was Peace Through Music. In the years since the first big Playing For Change video ("Stand By Me"), and that early report by us here at Peace Talks Radio, Playing...

Dec 05, 201859 min

Finding Peace, Sustaining Peace

How do we find peace and how do we make peace last? It's easy to become cynical and lose hope when faced with conflicts that seem intractable and have lasted for so long. But there are people working on solutions, even reaching across divides that seemed insurmountable in the past. On this edition of Peace Talks Radio, we talk with Noga Harpaz, an Israeli, and Raed al-Hadar, a Palestinian, who are part of “Combatants for Peace”. The group is committed to nonviolence and was launched in 2006 by f...

Dec 05, 201859 min

Empathy and Peace Behavior

What are the pros and cons of empathy? Does having empathy lead to peace-inspired action for you, your community, and the world? We'll speak with several experts about empathy and how it impacts our behavior such as relationships with others. Our guests include Courtney Custer at Albuquerque's Southwest Family Guidance Center. She'll explain the "Roots of Empathy" program in which babies successfully teach empathy in the classroom. Also, Eric Butler who iss a national Restorative Justice educato...

Dec 05, 201859 min

Songwriting To Heal Soldiers' Trauma

On her 2018 album project, "Rifles & Rosary Beads", singer/songwriter Mary Gauthier shares the stories of American veterans by writing the songs with them. Gauthier collaborated with the nonprofit "Songwriting With: Soldiers" to co-write the album's 11 tracks with veterans and their families. Paul Ingles hosts.

Dec 05, 201859 min

Peacemaking in Hip Hop Music

When some talk about music that promotes peacemaking, hip hop and rap often get left out of the conversation. Some critics speculate about that genre’s negative influence - from hypersexual music videos to glamorizing guns and drugs. A recent Washington Post headline quotes jazz musician Wynton Marsalis calling popular hip hop “more damaging than a statue of Robert E. Lee.” In this episode of Peace Talks Radio, Hannah Colton explores peacemaking in hip hop culture and history with one documentar...

Aug 08, 201859 min

Fostering Empathy and Compassion in Medicine

The evolution of medical discoveries and advanced technologies have brought wonderful cures and increased longevity. But what have we lost? How often have you been a patient, or an advocate for a loved one in the hospital, and faced doctors who seem curt or who aren't fully present and listening? Today on Peace Talks Radio, we'll talk about empathy and compassion in medicine. There's an increasing recognition that compassionate care not only improves patient outcomes, but also helps doctors avoi...

Aug 08, 201859 min

Humane Policing

Conversation with both Darron Spencer, a former Colorado Sheriff's deputy and author of the book "Humane Policing" and Albuquerque Police officer Simon Drobik who participated in a 13-hour effort to stop a troubled man from jumping off a highway overpass into traffic. Both men discuss infusing more empathy toward the public and suspects in police work.

Aug 08, 201859 min

Healing Trauma

Trauma can make a person feel unsafe in their own body. At that point, the enemy that was living outside is now living inside. This time on Peace Talks Radio, we'll talk about how trauma can hurt not only the survivor who experiences it, but sometimes also the people and society interacting with the survivor. There are many traumas such as childhood and adult abuse, car accidents, surgeries, and war. There are also many ways to nonviolently heal the internal and external conflicts that arise due...

Aug 08, 201859 min

The Best of 2013-2017

At the end of 2017 PEACE TALKS RADIO completed its 15th season. This program includes highlights from the 5 seasons that bridged the series from 10 to 15 years on the air. Listeners will hear excerpts from programs in those seasons that touched on conflict scenarios that are still challenges for us today, including gun violence, political polarization, and moderating police use of force, as well as hearing inspiring words and analysis of peace greats like Nelson Mandela and Martin Luther King, J...

Aug 08, 201859 min

Seeking Peace on Earth: A Peace Talks Radio Special (2017)

Our annual compendium of highlights from a season of PEACE TALKS RADIO, the series on peacemaking and nonviolent conflict resolution. This time listeners will hear highlights from programs about handling political stress, understanding and challenging hate speech, over population as a threat to peace, how to find peace jobs, an author's visits to former U.S. military incursions, a CIA analyst's turn toward peace work, raising girls through challenges, and more....

Feb 21, 201859 min

Steering Our Youngsters Away From Sexual Misconduct

Peace Talks Radio host Paul Ingles talks with two therapists - Kathryn Stamoulis, from Hunter College in New York City and Jennifer Weeks, director of Sexual Addiction Treatment Services in Pennsylvania about how to talk to youngsters about sexual harassment and unwanted sexual behavior. The conversation aims at setting a framework early on, so when our young people are adults, there may be less of the kind of sexual abuse, intimidation, insensitive advances that made news dramatically in 2017. ...

Jan 31, 201859 min

Massasoit's Peace Pact With The Pilgrims

Massasoit was the leader of the Wampanoag Confederacy when English settlers landed at Plymouth Rock in 1620. He and his people kept the Pilgrims from starving in the early years of their settlement, attended the first Thanksgiving and forged a peace treaty with the English that lasted 40 years until his death. We'll talk with American Indian scholars Darius Coombs and Bob Charlesbois who'll fill in the details of this Native American leader's attempt to make peace for his people and with the new...

Nov 24, 201759 min

Population Growth and Peace

Could we be trying to increase peace through speech or action, but forget about the planet’s ability to handle population growth? Most contemporary estimates for the carrying capacity of the Earth are between 4 and 16 billion people. Depending on which estimate is used, human overpopulation may or may not have already occurred. The United Nations estimates the world human population is over 7 billion today. We discuss the impact of population on peace and what people can do about it. Guests incl...

Oct 27, 201759 min
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