3.5 million Americans in Puerto Rico are in dire crisis. The island territory is mired in debt and facing imminent default. Media coverage has blamed the last twenty years – when tax breaks were rolled back and loans extended. But this week’s guests say the root of Puerto Rico’s problems go deeper than that – to US colonial rule. If colonialism’s at least in part the culprit here, it’s pretty ironic that the solutions on offer from Congress seem so colonial as well.
This week, journalist Ed Morales and activist Charles Khan talk about the roots of the problem, and how a colonial approach to a colonial problem just might not do it. Later in the show, we visit with the Urban Bush Women at their Summer Leadership Institute, a training program for artists and organizers held every year in New Orleans. Founded in 1984 by choreographer Jawole Willa Jo Zollar, Urban Bush Women seeks to bring the untold and under-told histories and stories of disenfranchised people to light through dance. All that and a few words from Laura on Yale University’s outrageous aversion to paying taxes.
Charles Khan is the Organizing Director at the Strong Economy For All Coalition, a Coalition of Labor Unions and Community groups fighting for economic equality, equal funding of public schools, and corporate accountability in New York State. He is also a leader of the HedgeClippers – an activist group taking on the Hedge Funds.
Ed Morales is a journalist who has investigated New York City electoral politics, police brutality, street gangs, grassroots activists, and the Latino arts and music scene. He is also the author of “Living in Spanglish and The Latin Beat: From Rumba to Rock.” He also co-directed a documentary called “Whose Barrio?” and is currently an adjunct professor at Columbia University’s Center for the Study of Ethnicity and Race.