Skip to main content

tv   Democracy Now  LINKTV  January 18, 2013 4:00pm-5:00pm PST

4:00 pm
of the entire" which is a film based on juan's book. he is a journalist extraordinary. he has been on "democracy now!" from the beginning, almost 17 years ago. the film explores how u.s. intervention in latin america and the caribbean forced millions of people to leave their homes to migrate to the united states. we will play an excerpt of a conversation that i had with juan as well as the film's co- director. i want to encourage you to call in as we go to clips of the film in the interview because the faster you call in, the more of the interview we can play. the number to call, at the bottom of your screen drought the show, 866-359-4334. 866-359-4334.
4:01 pm
if you would like to get a copy of this remarkable film that is opening all over the country in march, call in right now and pledged $100. "harvested in higher" is yours. if you pledge $100, you can also get the book of juan gonzalez, which the film is booked on. at holiday time, just a few weeks ago, the curators of the smithsonian recommended reading his book, which is required reading in classrooms across the country. it is an amazing book, "harvest of the entire." if you want to get both, what an incredible educational resource. the book and dvd are yours for contribution of $150. think about that as he watched recall in. let us know you are there. link tv alive and democracy now on the tv.
4:02 pm
866-359-4334. we turn to a clip of the new film opening around the country, "harvest of the entire." >> we're all proud to be an american today. >> once again, the streets of our country were taken over today by people who don't belong here. >> the, the culture of criminality. >> that put a strain on our social security, education, health care. >> an ever teach in school the huge latino presence is a direct result of our government's actions in central america over many decades free of the thousands upon thousands of puerto rican zwerg recruited to work here in the united states free of the >> the feeling was we could easily -- easily over the government and make it easier for other american businesses to operate in central america. >> from the very beginning, the
4:03 pm
west depended for its labor on mexicans. >> are you a communist? the history. >> i had never seen anything like el salvador. i was more threatened their than vietnam read what was going on there was the slaughter of the innocent. >> when you finance and train a gain of butchers and they begin wholesale killing, the people don't emigrate, they fully. >> the instability we have contributed to, creating some kind of chaos in disarray that leads to more immigration, i believe in the idea of amnesty for those who have put down roots, even though they may have entered illegally. >> the reality is, america is
4:04 pm
changing. by the end of the century, a majority of the people trace their origins not to europe, but to latin america. >> we all have the same potential. >> america has always been a nation in the process of change is in immigrant nation. >> an excerpt of "harvest of empire" premiering this week based on the book "harvest of empire: history of latinos in america" by the award winning journalist and "democracy now!" co-host juan gonzález. he is author of three other books including "news for all the people." he is founder and past president of the national association of hispanic journalists. we're very pleased that he is with us here in the new york studio, not in his usual guest chair -- not in his usual host chair, but as a guest along with
4:05 pm
the film's co-director. we welcome you both. >> this is a different perspective. you wrote this book years ago and it came out again updated. now it is aa film. >> the producers came to me several years ago. they've been working on this film for about seven years now. they came to me several years ago that they really were excited about the perspective that my book was putting out. my book came out in 1999 initially. i think it is used in about 200 college courses around as a introductory survey. they said they wanted to make it into a film. i said, are you sure? my book is kind of a history and delves -- it is complicated because it goes into every one of the different latino groups in the country, how they came
4:06 pm
here, what drove them here. they said they thought they had a way to do it. >> eduardo, the way? >> it was difficult because it was a seven-year journey from the first time we met with juan about the book and today. i really would not be sitting here with you if it wasn't for the hard work and sacrifice and the producer of the film. with her, we felt in 2005 that the kind of language that was being used to describe immigrants, specifically latino immigrants in the media, was unacceptable. the every night you would hear a very derogatory terms being used to describe us. both of us think latino immigrants, we knew the real story. we had read the real story in book and felt compelled
4:07 pm
to take action. we felt our fellow citizens need to know why latinos had come to the united states, the real reasons, the root causes of immigration. and just about all of the cases when you look at history, you see clearly that our different ways of migration are connected to actions the in the states took in our countries. in different times for different reasons, but it is very consistent throughout history, this connection between our foreign policy and immigration. >> the first of the democratic convention in charlotte, a bus pulled up in front of the gates. the undocubus. scores of people got out chanting, "no papers, no fear." 10 people got arrested in the pouring rain as police poured in immigration is one of the key
4:08 pm
issues of the election year, yet you don't have presidential candidates to have a vastly different approach to it. >> it is true that i think it is the increasingly become an issue, and the heartland of america, especially in the south. for instance in north carolina, there's been a huge increase in the latino population of north carolina, but most people don't understand how those latinos got there. it is a largely guatemalan migration, and its large the people who were recruited in the 1980's and 1990's to come and work in the textile mills of north carolina, because part of what i try to show in the book is the enormous connection between the needs of capital of american expanding industries in the u.s. and this recruitment of labor. what happened basically is in the 1980's, more salvadorans and guatemalans were flocking to the
4:09 pm
united states as a result of the civil wars and their country and repression in their country. they came here to the u.s. and there were industries that were needed for cheap labor. you have the meat packing industry in the midwest that began recruiting many mexicans to come to dodge city and come to des moines and the meat center of the country, and you had the poultry industry in arkansas and he had the textile industry in north carolina a. they usually went by nationalities. yet a large what mollah population that developed in north carolina. that is part of what i try to show in the book. to a large measure, the film captures this process of migration, the push of the repression that occurs in the countries in descending countries, and the poll of american businesses seeking cheap labor. >> i want to play kick -- clip
4:10 pm
that talks about the history of u.s. involvement in the dominican republic, where many of the immigrants here in new york city health from. the clip prominently features the dominican born pulitzer prize-winning author junot diaz. >> the american nations cannot, must not, and will not permit the establishment of another communist government in the western hemisphere. >> i am here because the united states invaded my country in 1965, in illegal invasion, completely trumped up excuse to invade the dominican republic and crush our democratic hopes. we've lived the consequences of that illegal invasion politically, economically, and in the bodies of the people who were wounded, the bodies of the people who were killed. we've been living it for over 40
4:11 pm
years. >> there have been two major u.s. occupations of the dominican republic. the first was in 1916. the u.s. army train a new dominican national guard. it handpicked a former railway security officer to lead that guard. and he then uses the power of the military to seize control of the government. >> he was like the most terrific imagination of this terrifying dictator. he would disappear dominican and american citizens and kill them with impunity. >> he basically ruled the dominican republic for 30 years with absolute, total control. he routinely kidnap and assault to the wives, even of his
4:12 pm
supporters. and throughout his career, made it extremely easy for american companies to do business in the dominican republic but was a savage, savage dictator. eventually, even the united states government cannot stomach's methods of operations of the cia joined with disgruntled military officers to back his assassination. >> for the first time in 30 years, the people of the dominican republic are breeding the sweet air of liberty and the streets are jammed in celebration -- are breathing the sweet air of liberty in the streets are jammed in celebration. ♪ ♪ >> in 1963, you have the election of juan bosch, a
4:13 pm
liberal, a social democrat who attempted to institute new social reforms. but the bosch government did not last very long. only a few months into his term in office, there was a military coup. that military to in turn spurred a popular insurrection that led to the u.s. invasion of the dominican republic in 1965. when the rebels finally agreed to lay down their arms, the u.s. government scheduled new elections, but it also allowed the right hand man of tru jillo,joaquin balaguer, to run in this elections for president. he won that election. the problem was that there was enormous repression against the bosch forces, killing on an almost daily basis.
4:14 pm
so the u.s. then began allowing large numbers of dominican former rebels to come to the united states as a way, again, but using migration as a safety valve. thousands of dominicans started coming to new york city. >> an excerpt of "harvest of empire." junot diaz talks about coming to this country shortly after the u.s. then began allowing large numbers of dominican former rebels to migrate here. >> well, they said, we're coming to the u.n. states. and whatever that meant. i thought we were just going up the road is a mystical place. when i finally saw a map in kindergarten of how far we have traveled, i remember being not only astonished, but literally terrified. my father was a standard kind of
4:15 pm
crazy latino military guide would check his children's hands and issues in their clothes and their hair before we left that house. we had to tie our shoes a certain way. i lived in what i call the little dictatorship of our house. when i immigrated to new jersey, it was a very crazy time. i emigrated in 1974, a few months before the fall of saigon. this was not a place that was very welcoming. i found myself facing a tremendous amount of racism and bigotry, not just from white americans, but from black americans and from latinos i think if every immigrant child in this country was allowed to tell the real emotional truth of their experience here, people in the united states would discover that we act to make immigration a more horrific experience than it needs to be. and i feel that, as the country,
4:16 pm
we're in a dream where there are no mistakes, there is no evil, we are always good, we heard no one. you know, you cannot grow if you admit no mistakes. >> to lead to a prize-winning german and american writer to not be as in "harvest of empire." >> interestingly >junot appears on the front page of the new york times book review this week with his new book. the dominican republic really is one of the many examples of salvador, guatemala and cuba as well in terms of the effect of the american foreign policy on immigration. i think that is the key issue i have in my book and the film tries to provide with new examples. my examples are older. they have been able to get quite a few prominent latinos as well as ordinary people with enormous changes that people don't know much about.
4:17 pm
but i think the dominican republic really come in terms of this idea not just of u.s. butrvention in the 1960's, going back earlier in the 20th century, that the u.s. has always really dictated a lot of what goes on in the dominican republic. and i think that the -- once again, whether it was the sugar companies earlier on and more recently, the maquilas and the sweat shops of the caribbean basin, the have always had an enormous impact on the standard of living in these countries, as well as the push that forces people to look somehow or other to survive by coming to the united states. >> eduardo lopez, you have remarkable footage that has never been seen before in this country throughout. in a moment, we're going to el salvador to talk about what drove a lot of the migration here.
4:18 pm
where did you get it? >> many, many sources. there's a lot of footage that has never been seen, that hasn't been seen in decades. again, this is a testament to the team that created this. our editor, catherine shields, is amazing. and so is our co-director, peter getzels. i have to say about the dominican republic, i'd like to make a point that one of the main reasons we made this film is to be personified by junot diaz, who is contributing as one of our great american writers. his whole life was changed dramatically by our invasion of the dominican republic in 1965 with 23,000 marines. something that most americans know nothing about because all of this history is never taught in our schools and colleges. so for latinos, whose life is turned upside down by our own
4:19 pm
government actions and latin america that many times we are unaware of, what happens is there is this tremendous disconnect. i believe this is one of the reasons why some to the big rhetoric about immigrants takes hold in our country because we don't know. so here is junot diaz whose life is completely changed because of our actions, yet all of us as american citizens, no nothing of what we did in the dominican republic. i think that is one of the key parts of this dilma. >> the significance of the invasion of 1965? >> i think that sent a message throughout latin america and that timeframe with the united states coming out of the kennedy era, the alliance for progress era, that the united states now was the enemy of change because, obviously, juan bosch was not a revolutionary by any stretch of the imagination. he was a liberal democrat who
4:20 pm
wanted to have land reform and wanted to have basic changes in the lives of the dominican people. so when the u.s. government basically pack the coup against him, isn't the message throughout latin america that the -- is sent a message throughout latin america that our government was going to be the enemy of real social change in the region. and that lasted really until the 1990's. until the new era that has developed and latin america social progress of governments being elected to power, getting rid of all dictatorships, old rule by the popular -- military, and giving the popular will a chance to bring more progressive leaders to power. but that really was from the 1960's to the 1990's, you have throughout latin america, the role of these dictators and military leaders that were largely backed by the united states. >> i want to go to a part of the film that deals with the assassination of archbishop
4:21 pm
oscar romero on march 24, 1980, in el salvador. this clip features the voices of sister pat murray, former u.s. ambassador to el salvador robert white, and sister terry alexander, mary nell missionary. >> his assassination -- in church -- stunned the entire nation. >> as the crowd started to grow, they realized that this was going to be a very difficult time. and we could see all the party is that were on the roofs. all of the sudden, there was a shot fired. then the bomb went off. the everybody just scattered. then the korea opened fire --
4:22 pm
guardia opened fire. oh, lord. important that the world know that we stood behind him. [applause] >> for the first time, some had faced down the salvadoran military and said, "you people are killing the people you are sworn to protect." >> father paul schindler had received a telephone call saying this former had seen the bodies of four women, very definitely american.
4:23 pm
he began reading a description of the four women. and as he read each one, i could say, "that was jean. that's jean. that's dorothy. that's ita." three of us knelt down there to pray. and i guess my prayer was, like more had said once before, "how long, oh god, how long must this continue to happen?" >> that was sister terry alexander. juan gonzalez? >> the footage they have been able to capture their is really amazing. the actual footage not only of the military shooting down the people at bishop romero's
4:24 pm
funeral, but then actually of the nuns of the church, women being dragged up, they're dead bodies. i have really been amazed at in each of these countries, whether it's guatemala, the footage of the actual coup actualarbenz in 1954, and this incredible footage that's never been seen in the united states rigoberta menchu was interviewed in the film, and she talks about the killing of her father in the spanish embassy when the guatemalan government burn down the embassy that was full of dissidents who had taken refuge there, including her father. and they've actually unable to catch -- find images in the archives of guatemala of that day and the people being burned and the crowds outside of the spanish embassy that day. >> eduardo lópez, the nobel
4:25 pm
peace prize winner? >> we were very happy that she participated, because i think she really communicate something that, again, as americans, we were never told. in the story of guatemala, it's amazing that we had a time when in the united states we had one brother who was head of the cia and another brother who was the secretary of state. and because they had received complaints from one company, the united fruit company, they decided that in order to help this company, they're going to take out a democratically elected government. >> allen dulles and john foster dulles. >> exactly. our actions in 1954 in guatemala taking down the arbwenz government unleashed decades of civil war in that country that ended up killing more than 200,000 people. and rigoberta menchu is the person who must perform a fis the struggle of the mayan people drought that time.
4:26 pm
-- who personifies the struggle of the mayan people throughout that time. this is another reason why we just felt really compelled to make this film and to work through the seven years in order to bring this to fruition. >> juan gonzalez, the comments of ann coulter;s , as when she said, "i think so our rights are for blacks. what have we done to the immigrants? we all black people something. we have a legacy of slavery. immigrants have an even been in this country." >> she neglects to deal with the reality in of u.s.-mexican history. the entire southwest of the u.s. was taken from mexico and the mexican-american war of 1846. there were mexicans living on the land when the u.s. to get over in the tree of guadalupe hidalgo. you know, some mexicans often
4:27 pm
say the original -- the descendants of those original settlers, "we didn't cross the border, the border crossed us." she neglects to deal with the reality of the puerto rican existence in the u.s. there are nearly 5 million, 44 6 million puerto rican -- u.s. citizens of puerto rican descent in the u.s. and another 4 million, roughly, on the island of puerto rico. and the puerto rican is never went anywhere. they were just captured as a prize of war in the spanish- american war and 1898 by the united states and declared citizens by congress against the objections -- the unanimous objection of the house of delegates of puerto rico, which in 1917 rejected citizenship, voted unanimously against u.s. citizenship. and yet it was imposed on the puerto rican is by the united states congress. so that when an coulter says,
4:28 pm
you know, what have we done to the immigrants? mexicans and puerto ricans are the two largest groups of latinos in the united states. and that's no accident. is a direct result of the history of the united states with these two countries. >> explain your title, "harvest of empire." >> well, the harvest of the empire, as i explained in both the book and in the movie, starting at the end of world war ii, really, the people of the third world started coming to the west. they came precisely to those countries that had once been there colonial masters, so that in france, they don't know to do about all the algerians and the traditions and the moroccans. in england, they don't know what to do about all the indians and the pakistan's and the jamaicans. in the united states, they don't
4:29 pm
know what to do about all the latin americans. those were precisely the former colonies of those in pyres. with the ending of world war ii and with the independence movements that developed throughout asia and africa and latin america, the peoples of those former colonial countries are coming to the metropolis, and they're changing, transforming the very composition of this nation's. and so that, for us, the u.s., it's not even -- were not dealing with this immigration "problem" alone. england has an immigration problem. france and germany have immigration problems. it is the harvest of the empire's that made those countries so wealthy. the capital came, but now the people are coming as well. >> the last clip we played was of archbishop romero, march 24, 1980.
4:30 pm
yourself are from el salvador, an immigrant here in the united states. >> this is one of the reasons why we produced this film and why we feel so strongly about it. as one points out in his book and in the film, el salvador is maybe the latest and one of the clearest examples of this direct connection between our foreign policy and immigration. in the census of 1980, there were less than 100,000 salvadorans listed. just 32 years later, we're poised to become the third largest latino population in the united states. you have to remember el salvador is the smallest country in all of the americas. and yet how is it inly 32 years, we are about to become the third largest in population in the u.s.? if all the rhetoric about immigration was true, and it's this poverty or a dysfunctional
4:31 pm
government, if that were really the cause of immigration, you would have had people coming from el salvador forever. but that's not the case. people started coming in 1980 because of the war, and specifically because of our own country's actions in the war. in the film, we talk about the school of the americas and how most of the human rights abuses and the massacres, including the killing of the nuns and the murder of archbishop romero, was really done by people trained at the school of the americas by our own country. this is a clear example of how this connection continues to exist. it's not something that just happen 150 years ago. it continues to happen. >> of course, get the latest presidential link, this remarkable story surrounding bain, how mitt romney helped found bain capital with investments from central american links -- central
4:32 pm
american elites linked to the death squads in el salvador. this is something we reported on in discussed on "democracy now!" after initially struggling to find investors, romney traveled to miami in 1983 to win pledges of $9 million, 40% of bain's start up money. some investors had extensive ties to death squads responsible for a vast majority of the deaths in salvador in the 1980's. the investors include the salaverria family, whom the former u.s. ambassador to el salvador, robert white, a previously accused of directly funding the salvadoran paramilitaries. bain executive harry strunk and rights romney pushed aside his own misgivings about the investors to accept their backing. he writes -- these latin american friends have loyally rolled over investments in succeeding funds, actively participated in bain capital's may investor meetings, and are still today one of the largest investor groups in bain capital. i want to get your comment.
4:33 pm
>> i think of governor romney had ever bothered to meet one of the torture victims of the death squads or one of the family members of the people who were brutally killed during that time, maybe he would have thought twice about accepting the blood money. to me, it is really unacceptable when you look at the -- i believe it was around $9 million that he accepted that the investment money. but where this money came from and the people who give it to him is something that he really should have looked at much more closely, because it is related to the most terrible atrocities. as ambassador robert white says in our film, when you are a group of uniformed butchers, the people don't emigrate, they flee. and to me, it is unbelievable that now governor romney talks about immigrants with derogatory terms like "illegals," and that
4:34 pm
he profited from the funding that actually caused so much of the emigration to the united states from el salvador. >> in fact, mitt romney talks about people should self support. juan gonzalez? >> i think ross central america, in salvador, in nicaragua and honduras -- there's always been a very small indeed that has benefited from being a comprador group, basically facilitating the exploitation of their own countries by american businesses, largely. and i think that the -- the romney was so closely tied to some of the salvadoran compradors is really astounding in terms of his stance on immigration. and in the film, the action have one of the most powerful portions of the film is the testimony of one of the salvadoran torture victims, who became an immigrant or a refugee
4:35 pm
here in the united states free of the she talks in vivid terms about the kinds of tortures that she went through -- in the united states. she talks in vivid terms about the kinds of tortures that she went through and somehow managed to survive. romney got his start in bain through this investment, by some of the salvadorian believes, is really telling in itself. >> i want to get your comment on the current presidential candidates talking about immigration. in an appearance on the spanish- language network univision last thursday, president obama faced tough questions over his immigration policies, including his failure to fulfill a campaign promise to enact comprehensive immigration reform during his first year in office. of a mccall the lack of immigration reform the biggest failure of his presidency but attempted to shift blame for the failure to republicans. >> when we talk about immigration reform in the first year, that's before the economy
4:36 pm
was on the verge of collapse. lehman brothers had collapsed. the stock market was collapsing. and so my first priority was making sure we prevented us from going into a great depression. and i think everybody remembers where we were four years ago. what i confess i did not expect, and so i'm happy to take responsibility for being naive here, is that republicans who had previously supported comprehensive immigration reform -- my opponent in 2008 who had been a champion of it and who attended these meetings -- suddenly would walk away. >> president obama's comments come as his administration faces scrutiny for deporting and detaining a record number of undocumented people. nearly 400,000 immigrants were deported during the last fiscal year. republican presidential nominee mitt romney also fielded questions about immigration during a wednesday appearance on univision. romney attacked obama is
4:37 pm
deferred action policy that allows some young undocumented people to remain in the country temporarily, saying a more permanent solution was needed. romney was accused during the appearance of avoiding specific details about a possible permanent solution and asked to respond with a yes or no on whether he would deport undocumented youth. >> were not going to round up people around the country and deport them. i said during my primary campaign, time and again, were not won a round of 12 million people, that includes kids and parents, and have everyone deported. we need to provide a long-term solution. i've described the fact i would be in support of a program that said that people who served in our military to be permanent residents of the united states. unlike the president, when i am president, i will do what i promised. i will put in place an immigration reform plan that solves this issue. >> that was republican presidential mitt romney speaking during an interview on univision last week. he got much louder applause than
4:38 pm
president obama did, juan gonzalez. >> yes he did, because as some of the reports came out afterwards, he actually trucked in supporters. the original agreement was that romney would be given tickets to disperse young republicans on the university of miami campus, but they apparently could not find enough students on the campus to fill the theater, so they insisted on busing supporters from outside the university, who were a lot more rowdy, i think, than the students would have been. you know, i think that one of the things that i think it's important to understand about the current immigration debate in the country, as i mentioned in the film, the last "amnesty" or attempt a comprehensive immigration reform in this country came under the most conservative president and our lifetime, which was ronald reagan. it was reagan who approved the or signed into law the simpson
4:39 pm
readying a bill that provided the opportunity for about 3 million people who were then in the country, undocumented, to legalize their status. we are talking about 11 the following people that are undocumented in the united states. and i think that the extreme -- the most extreme right of the republican party understands that if 11 million to 12 laypeople are able to legalize their status and become voters, it will change the political landscape of america for decades to come. they understand it could spell doom of the republican party for a generation to come. and that's why i think there are struggling so much against it, just as they did back in 1986 with the first comprehensive immigration reform. so i think there is a political
4:40 pm
reason for this the vehement opposition to basically adjusting the status for folks that really, for the most part, are not criminals. they're hard-working people. there were forced to, by a variety of reasons, leave their countries. they're contributing to the prosperity of the united states, so that -- and especially the dreamers, the young folks. so i think that is what is at stake here, is that not only a humanitarian gesture to the people that are here, but also the political repercussions that will come about as a result. >> that is juan gonzalez and and what are lópez, co-producer of juan gonzalez's film, "harvest of empire." the film, we're offering you for a contribution of $100. the book, a contribution of $100. the book is the basis of the film opening in theaters across
4:41 pm
the country in march, together, $150. what an incredible gold mine of information and inspiration. we ask you to call 866-359-4334. i am amy goodman, host of "democracy now!" the coasting with juan gonzalez promised 17 years. please, call in right now. support link tv. link tv is on dish network and direct tv as well. together around the country, we broadcast "democracy now!" monday through friday, 11:00 every morning, eastern standard time, 6:00 in the evening eastern standard time. we ask you to call to ensure this collaboration continues. 866-359-4334. ellen, thank you for calling in from washington.
4:42 pm
we urge you to call. keep the phone calls coming. it was wonderful to be in silver city just a few months ago. helen, alabama. scott, arizona. susan, minnesota. helen, los angeles. stephen, california. bonnie, colorado. keep these phone calls coming. 866-359-4334. we offer you today, juan gonzalez of's remarkable decades of work, documented and latinos in america and the history. we urge you to call in right now. the book and dvd, yours for
4:43 pm
$150. the last day. we do not turn to corporations for support to bring you independent news. we turn to you, the viewer. make the call that makes a difference. we don't have much time. and spat at wartime pitching on the last at one rising, we left last time because the list instead of leaving more time pitching on the last day of fundraising, we have less brea. on monday, the special on aaron swartz. there will be a memorial service here in new york on saturday at 4:00. he is the 26-year-old cyber, social justice activist. it was his speech that he gave it the freedom to connect conference in washington, d.c. just a few months ago. he committed suicide last friday as he was being pursued by prosecutors, facing 35 years in jail for downloading millions of articles from jstor at mit. no one said you could not do this.
4:44 pm
perhaps the chief witness in the case said maybe it might have been considered inconsiderate, but facing 13 felonies? the prosecution, some said persecution, did not stop. he faced a trial in a few weeks. a fragile person, heroic figure in the cyberactivists movement. that day we brought you a special on aaron and offered you julian assange's book. you can call in for that as part of the pack for $1,000, you get all the books and dvd is we offered for the week. on tuesday, we offered you oliver stone, "the untold history of the united states." and the conversation we had with the authors, oliver stone, the book and dvd yours for $200. on wednesday, we brought you gabor mate.
4:45 pm
the canadian physician who has been so popular on our airwaves. you can get all three of his books as well as the dvd of the speech he just gave in california. any of the books separately, $100. the books separately. as one package, $300. on thursday, we brought you tavis smiley and cornell west, "the rich and the rest of us." you get an amazing evening that we spent with a thousand people. we play the speech yesterday. that is the contribution of $100 -- that is for a contribution of $150. and "harvest of empire." for all of this, $1,000. you get "democracy now!" twice a day on link tv. call 866-359-4334.
4:46 pm
866-359-4334. if you want to come to new york for a dinner and show and watch the broadcast, you and your special guest, sit on the set as hundreds have done over the years, drinking in "democracy now!" fair trade organic coffee, muffins and bagels, meet the team that makes "democracy now!" happen. a wonderful team, which will be -- that is french. we urge you. you will need the team behind the scenes. who knows who will be in studio that morning? there will definitely be running around. if you not on the door, i look forward to greeting you and your
4:47 pm
special guest. -- if you knock on the door, i look forward to greeting you and your special guest. you'll meet the guests. maybe it will be oliver stone or juan gonzalez, co-host. i was going to say julian assange, but he is holed up in the ecuador embassy in london. whoever is in studio, you will meet. i will host you and your special guest for dinner. we will kick back and toast "democracy now!" and link tv together. we become fast friends. it is a wonderful way to celebrate independent media. selfishly, i get to meet you. it is a wonderful gift. if you want to pledge $2,000 contribution, dinner and a show, you don't know how to know when you can do it. the show is watching "democracy now!" we share a dinner together, breaking bread together. the last time we're offering it.
4:48 pm
$2,000 contribution. you don't know when he -- you don't have to know when you can do it. my colleague brenda will call you and work out the details. whether you want to do it next month, next year. maybe you are here and wondering what to wear in a restaurant maybe it is nyc. it definitely is. the chelsea neighborhood of manhattan. it is wonderful to tour you through the greenest internet radio show. $2,000. we will not be doing this next week. if you have been thinking about getting juan gonzalez's book and dvd, or oliver stone's book and dvd, or gab or mate or julian assange or cornell west and tavis smiley, all of that this week you can get separately or together for $1,000. at $2,000 for dinner and a show. if you're wondering where the money goes, it goes to keeping independent media alive. it is a tax-deductible
4:49 pm
charitable contribution. what ever you can do. you can get other gifts as well. $10, we thank you. you will get the "democracy now!" bumper sticker. "democracy now!" independent tv revenues. but it on your car or bicycle. call right now, 866-359-4334. 866-359-4334. make the call that makes the difference. "democracy now!" coffee. we have our own brand called grounds for democracy. $75 contribution, two mugs and the coffee for $200. yellow or blue. please call. that is what counts. 866-359-4334. 866-359-4334. by the way, we will be streaming live the memorial service for the summer activist, social justice activist, computer programmer pioneer who helped to
4:50 pm
develop rss and was co-owner of reddit, aaron swartz. the memorial service will be saturday at 4:00 in the afternoon in new york. maybe you live in maryland or massachusetts or washington state and cannot be in new york, he comes from illinois. we will live stream that ad democracynow.org. check that out on saturday at 4:00 eastern standard time on democracynow.org. we urge you to call right now, 866-359-4334. 866-359-4334. your call makes it possible for link tv to continue. we don't have much time. the last few minutes of this "democracy now!" fund-raising drive on the tv. please call 866-359-4334.
4:51 pm
we are headed to washington for the inauguration, a five-hour special monday morning live at 8:00 eastern standard time to 1:00 in the afternoon. then we fly out to salt lake city to utah, broadcasting from the 10th anniversary of the documentary track of the sundance film festival, tuesday through friday. we will be carrying our "democracy now!" tote bags. if you want, you get it for a $100 contribution. it is released 30. you can also get a "democracy now!" baseball cap. the last time we're offering it in this fund-raising drive. it is a fantastic calf. $100. t-shirt, $125. the hoodie is $200. you can also get the "democracy now!" library of books, my five books. they include the last one, all of them signed, all five for
4:52 pm
$200 contribution. for $1,200 contribution, all of the gifts we have offered this week, the books and the bees and my five books, that would be $1,200. the latest is the silent majority. silenced majority has an introduction by michael moore. these two are each $25, signed copies. the third one, $75. all five of the books for $200 if you call 866-359-4334. all signed for you. think of gives you want to give people for birthdays or holidays or anniversaries graduations. think ahead. speaking of gifts, think about giving someone dinner and a show. taking your partner, may be an
4:53 pm
anniversary or were they, your daughter or son or grandparent or parent. i want to thank william who called in from maryland and gregory from salem, massachusetts. daryl, north carolina. constance, and georgia. nelson, new york read karl, north carolina. missouri. keep these phone calls coming. in this number of people to think. i think each and one of the. -- i thank each and every one of you. tom, iowa. mary, north carolina. keep these phone calls coming in. let's break a record today. paul, arlington, texas. is there an arlington, virginia and a house?
4:54 pm
tacoma park? we urge you to call. stand up for independent media. call-in right now. we're offering you juan gonzalez's wonderful book. you will not be able to put it down. what a history you have on how this country was created. "harvest of empire." the book is yours for $100, $100 for the dvd. put them together, $150. "harvest of empire" the film based on his book. this film, a feature-length documentary, examines the direct connection between the long history of his intervention in latin america and the immigration crisis we face today. based on his groundbreaking book. it takes an unflinching look at the role of u.s. economic interests played in triggering an unprecedented wave of migration that's transforming our nation's cultural and economic landscape. from the world's third true
4:55 pm
expansion that gave the u.s. control of puerto rico, cuba, and more than half of mexico, to the covert operations that opposed the oppressive military regimes in the dominican republic, guatemala, nicaragua, and salvador. "harvest of empire." as juan says, they never teach us in school the huge latino presence was a direct result of our own government's actions and mexico, caribbean, and sentiment and central america. please call 866-359-4334. 866-359-4334. your call makes a difference. you make it possible for a link "democracy now!" tv! to happen right here. 866-359-4334. if you want a separate set of work, his, -- juan's latest book in paperback called
4:56 pm
news for all the people. an amazing book he wrote with joe torres read that book is yours for $125, or part of the juan's superpack. we have less than three minutes to go for the entire fund raising drive. be as generous as you possibly can. your contribution is tax deductible. if you want a copy of the tote bag, i look forward to having it sent to you. each one of these has a "democracy now!" logo. under it is as "independent radio and tv news." we are making it available to you if you call 866-359-4334. 866-359-4334. whether you get the "democracy now!" bumper sticker, democracynow.org, whether you get the bumper sticker or you get dinner and a show, $10 or $2,000, what counts is your call.
4:57 pm
calling in and letting a steady support independent media. what a gift to give us at the beginning of this year 2013. 866-359-4334. 866-359-4334. your call makes a difference. you make it possible for link tv to happen. for folks who live in santa fe, new mexico, i will be there at the end of the month. you can check democracynow.org. the commencement address in may and hampshire college in western massachusetts. keep checking our website as we travel the country, as we continue our silenced majority to wear. your call counts. i will be in ithaca, new york at the end of march. 866-359-4334. 866-359-4334 is the number to call. become a member of link tv, of the independent media community in this country. like an independent film center, every hour of every day.
4:58 pm
we urge you to call in. getting perspectives you might not normally here. you definitely want here in the corporate media. whether we're talking about doping in sports or what is happening in algeria, bringing you the voices of people who are not usually heard. your comics of possible. it opens the gates, it turns on, keeps the microphones alive. we urge you to call right now. 866-359-4334. juan gonzalez has book and dvd for $150. you can get all of them for $1,000 contribution for the entire week. if you want to come for dinner and show in new york, i would love to host you. you got to make the pledge right now 866-359-4334. your call makes a difference. we urge you to be there. the untold story, the untold history of latinos. the film opens in theaters around the country in march. get a copy of oliver stone's
4:59 pm
book and dvd war julian assange's book and dvd -- thank you for being with us from supporting link tv. supporting link tv. thank you for our whole

157 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on