Project Censored – 11.14.17

Peter and Mickey spend the hour in conversation with author Carol Anderson. Her latest book, “White Rage,” chronicles the history of white resistance and obstruction to African-American equality, from the Reconstruction period to modern times. Notes:   Carol Anderson is Professor of African-American Studies at Emory University in Atlanta. Her previous works include “Eyes Off the Prize” and “Bourgeois Radicals.” …

Truth To Power – 08.11.17

Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and the CDC’s HIV Ponzi Scheme In this episode, Charles Ortleb explores the similarities between the Bernie Madoff financial Ponzi Scheme and the deceitful Ponzi-like HIV science of AIDS at the Centers for Disease Control. Ortleb makes the case that the CDC’s Ponzi scheme uses HIV fraud to disguise the real AIDS epidemic of HHV-6 diseases that …

The Natural Nurse And Dr. Z – Functional Neurology – 02.14.17

Ellen Kamhi, PHD RN, www.naturalnurse.com , speaks with Dr. Eric Kaplan. Eric Kaplan, D.C., D.A.C.N.B, F.A.C.F.N., F.A.B.V.R., F.A.B.C.D.D is an enthusiastic teacher and student of the world of health and wellness. Dr. Kaplan has impressive academic credentials. He received a B.S. in Human Biology at Emory University and a D.C. from Palmer College of Chiropractic-West. In addition, he is a Board Certified Chiropractic Neurologist, with over 1,500 hours of post graduate studies at The Carrick Institute, including specialty courses in Movement Disorders, Vestibular Rehabilitation and Childhood Developmental Delays. He is a Board Certified Functional Neurologist and a Fellow of the American Board of Vestibular Rehabilitation. Being trained in dozens of chiropractic and neurology techniques, he has the ability to treat many different types of patients. Groundbreaking research shows how functional neurology can help where modern medicine has failed. Contact:

Mental health in the 19th century, when soldiers died of homesickness

Abner R Small, a commissioned officer in the 16th Maine Volunteers, was captured by Confederate forces in August 1864 and spent several months as a prisoner of war. In his diary, Small recorded the effects of imprisonment upon his fellow inmates. “They became homesick and disheartened,” he noted. “They … were dying of nostalgia.” Nostalgia, once regarded as a condition …

Project Censored – 10.11.16

In the first half-hour, author and professor Carol Anderson
rejoins the Project Censored Show to discuss structural racism in the US,
especially in the context of the presidential campaign.
In the second half of the program, human-rights activists Hector Aristizabal and
Isabel Garcia speak about conditions on the US-Mexico border, and how multiple
US administrations have enforced border policies that bring death to many immigrants.
They also discuss the Border Convergence taking place October 7 – 10.

Project Censored – 06.28.16

Peter and Mickey spend the hour in conversation with author Carol Anderson. Her latest book, “White Rage,” chronicles the history of white resistance and obstruction to African-American equality, from the Reconstruction period to modern times. Carol Anderson is Professor of African-American Studies at Emory University in Atlanta.
Her previous works include “Eyes Off the Prize” and “Bourgeois Radicals.”

Jennifer Margulis, Ph.D – What If Home Birth Is Actually SAFER Than Hospital Birth?

During a February thunderstorm, with her toddler sleeping peacefully down the hall, Jennifer Lang gave birth to her second child. Nico was born just 90 minutes after the first contraction, in the bathtub of Lang’s home in Benedict Canyon. “It’s a very convenient place to have a baby,” Lang points out, adding that the labor went so quickly that her …

Emerging form of poliovirus threatens hopes for eradication

The oral version of the polio vaccine gives better intestinal immunity than the injected vaccine, a boon in areas where people are often exposed to sewage. But because it’s made with live strains, there is a risk that the virus could escape. Credit: Julien Harneis/Wikimedia Commons Polio is about to be eradicated. By 2018, if all goes according to the World Health …