01/27/17 – Joseph Stromberg on the politics, protectionism and foreign policy of The New Deal – The Scott Horton Show

Joseph Stromberg, an independent historian and writer, discusses how the Smoot-Hawley Tariff and worldwide protectionism ground the US economy to a halt in the 1930s; the enduring “accordion effect” of increasing government power and decline of civil liberties during wartime; how the distribution of defense contractor jobs among key congressional districts makes cuts in military spending politically impossible; and why government rationing is more a show of force than an attempt to fix...

01/23/17 – Doug Bandow on ending the decades-long, counterproductive US sanctions on Sudan – The Scott Horton Show

Doug Bandow, a Senior Fellow at the Cato Institute, discusses why US sanctions against Sudan, put in place not long after President Omar Hassan al-Bashir took power in a 1989 coup, have failed to produce any positive results, serving only to economically cripple the Sudanese people and alienate them from Americans. Yet the sanctions endure, even though their original purpose – punishing the al-Bashir regime for sponsoring terrorism – is no longer valid.

01/23/17 – Ray McGovern on Obama’s admission that there’s no proof Russian hackers gave DNC emails to WikiLeaks – The Scott Horton Show

Ray McGovern, a former CIA analyst and co-founder of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS), discusses the “gap” in the Russian hack case; why it makes much more sense that a Democratic insider, fed up with the sidelining of Bernie Sanders, gave the DNC emails to WikiLeaks; why Obama protected the CIA and John Brennan from the Senate Intelligence committee’s investigation on torture; and how Donald Trump could fulfill his professed goal of quickly knocking out ISIS.

01/20/17 – Kelley Vlahos on the loss of civilian control of the military – and if it even matters – The Scott Horton Show

Kelley B. Vlahos, a Washington, DC-based freelance reporter, discusses the unusual number of recently-retired generals in Donald Trump’s administration and whether security and foreign policy will be negatively effected as a result; and how Trump’s shift to the right on Israel has alarmed moderate Jewish groups like J Street who worry about an end to a two-state solution.

01/18/17 – Stanley L Cohen on Israel’s unpunished crimes – up to and including genocide – against the Palestinian people – The Scott Horton Show

Stanley L Cohen, a lawyer and human rights activist, discusses the UN’s most recent toothless resolution chastising Israel’s occupation of the West Bank; why Israel’s treatment of Palestinians since 1948 amounts to genocide, as defined in international law; how secular and religious Israelis differ in their devotion to the state; and how love (sex and intermarriage) can ultimately overcome segregation in a bi-national state.

01/18/17 – Carlos Miller talks about his website that reports police abuse, Photography is Not a Crime (PINAC) – The Scott Horton Show

Carlos Miller, founder and publisher of Photography is Not a Crime, discusses his 2007 arrest for photographing cops while working as a journalist, and why it prompted him to start the website; and how camera phones, social media, and brave activists have made the public much more aware of rampant cop violence – even though they are still mostly unaccountable for their crimes and violations of our rights.

01/18/17 – Chase Madar on President Obama’s unexpected commutation of Chelsea Manning’s 35-year prison sentence – The Scott Horton Show

Chase Madar, author of The Passion of Bradley Manning: The Story of the Suspect Behind the Largest Security Breach in U.S. History, discusses President Obama’s commutation of Chelsea Manning’s unprecedented 35-year prison sentence for leaking government documents; whether Donald Trump could undue the commutation if he wanted to; Obama’s otherwise terrible record on government whistleblowers; and Manning’s personal motivation for giving WikiLeaks and the world an incredible treasure trove of...

01/16/17 – Ramzy Baroud on the death of an Israel-Palestine two-state solution – The Scott Horton Show

Ramzy Baroud, the editor of PalestineChronicle.com and author of My Father was A Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story, discusses why a two-state solution is not – and has never been – a viable solution to the Israel-Palestine problem; and why it’s imperative to focus on the one remaining alternative – a democratic state for all its people based on equality and justice for all, regardless of ethnicity or religion.

01/13/17 – Daniel Lazare on President Obama’s disastrous foreign policy legacy, especially in the Middle East – The Scott Horton Show

Daniel Lazare, author of The Frozen Republic: How the Constitution Is Paralyzing Democracy, discusses Obama’s expansion of Bush’s wars in Iraq and Afghanistan into Libya, Syria and Yemen; the fragility of democratic government in both Turkey and the US; and why the deep state seems intent on stopping Trump before he even takes office.

01/13/17 – Trita Parsi on the incoming Trump administration’s acceptance (or rejection) of the Iran nuclear deal – The Scott Horton Show

Trita Parsi, the founder and president of the National Iranian American Council (NIAC), discusses why the Iran nuclear deal has so far been more favorable to the US than Iran; Trump’s (probably misinformed) opinion that the deal is terrible and must be scrapped; and what Iran’s loss of its moderate political leaders could mean for diplomacy in the near future.

01/13/17 – William Binney on Russian hacking, NSA spying, and counterproductive means of fighting terrorism – The Scott Horton Show

William Binney, a retired senior NSA official and whistleblower, discusses the dubious evidence that Russia used computer hackers to manipulate the election and help Donald Trump win; why 9/11 and other terrorist attacks could have been prevented if the NSA used a targeted approach to intelligence gathering instead of “get it all” bulk collection; and the flawed method of using cell phone metadata to identify and target terrorists.