Your Weekly Constitutional

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editora: Podcast
  • Duração: 343:37:49
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Informações:

Sinopse

Produced in partnership with James Madison's Montpelier, Your Weekly Constitutional is a public radio show featuring lively discussion of controversial constitutional topics, from Gay Rights to Gun Rights. Find us on Facebook and iTunes!

Episódios

  • Philadelphia Stories, Part III - The National Constitution Center

    24/01/2012 Duração: 59min

    Join us for a tour of the nation's only museum dedicated entirely to the United States Constitution. We'll get up close & personal with the Framers. We'll also go outside into Philadelphia's Historic District for the Constitutional Walking Tour. So put on your comfy shoes and get set.

  • Health Care Reform

    29/12/2011 Duração: 59min

    Doctor, doctor, gimme the news, I got a bad case of . . . Health Care reform. We'll talk to two learned gentlemen with very different opinions about the constitutionality of what is commonly referred to as either the Affordable Health Care Act or Obamacare. Listen in and take your pick.

  • Textbooks and Witchcraft and God - Oh, My!

    22/12/2011 Duração: 59min

    Battleground! Where? Right here in Northeast Tennessee. What's the fighting about? The First Amendment and the free exercise of religion.We'll talk to Stephen Bates, who wrote a book about the great textbook battle of the 1980's in Hawkins County, Tennessee - a constitutional slugfest between Concerned Women for America and People for the American Way.But before it became a national sensation, this particular battle began with a local "homebody homemaker" named Vicki Frost and her concerns about witchcraft and "secular humanism" in the public schools.

  • A Tribute to Norman Corwin and the Bill of Rights

    14/12/2011 Duração: 59min

    It's that magical time of year! Carolers, presents, and . . . Bill of Rights Day! It's December 15 - remember? Sure you do. In honor of the 220th Anniversary of the Bill of Rights, we'll be celebrating this most-overlooked of holidays with a special treat - a tribute to radio pioneer Norman Corwin, who produced a remarkable broadcast in 1941 - the 150th Anniversary of the Bill of Rights - called "We Hold These Truths." Our show will feature extensive excerpts from the 1941 broadcast, plus explanation and commentary from our host, Stewart Harris. So tune in your crystal sets or join us online at wets.org.

  • The Impeachment of Andrew Johnson

    30/11/2011 Duração: 59min

    Who is this Andrew Johnson? Hint: he has something in common with another guy you might more easily recognize named William Jefferson Clinton. In fact, these two guys have a lot in common. You see, both started out poor in the rural South, both were reared primarily by their mothers, and both ended up being . . . . well, let's not spoil it.

  • The National Archives, Part 2

    23/11/2011 Duração: 59min

    The second part of our visit to the National Archives, where we'll talk about the actual, original, handwritten United States Constitution. We'll also speak with other visitors as they experience firsthand the Charters of Freedom, which include not only the Constitution, but also the Bill of Rights, and, of course, the Declaration of Independence. And we'll finish our fascinating conversation with conservator Kitty Nicholson.

  • The National Archives, Part I

    16/11/2011 Duração: 01h27s

    Join us as we visit the original Constitution of the United States in its high-tech encasement in the Rotunda of the National Archives in Washington, DC. We'll have a fascinating discussion with Catherine "Kitty" Nicholson, one of the conservators who literally preserve and protect that great document every day. We'll also visit the Declaration of Independence and the original proposed Bill of Rights - all 12 of them.Kitty has lots of wonderful stories, dating back to the very creation of the Constitution. Did you know, for example, that it's not printed on paper, but on . . . . Tune in to find out.

  • Supreme Court Roundup

    11/11/2011 Duração: 01h08s

    It's time for our first annual Roundup! A Supreme Court Roundup, that is. I'll be talking to several of my learned and articulate colleagues at the Appalachian School of Law about some of the more interesting cases coming before the United States Supreme Court this term. So grab your hat, saddle up your horse and get ready for some serious constitutional ropin' and ridin'. Yeeeee-haaa!

  • Military Funerals and Hate Speech

    02/11/2011 Duração: 59min

    Can we do anything to stop the venomous rantings of groups like the Westboro Baptist Church? Is some speech so hateful that it is beyond the protections of the First Amendment?

  • Prohibition Forum

    19/10/2011 Duração: 59min

    Our Prohibition Forum! Or at least as much of it as we could squeeze into an hour's worth of radio.

  • Was it Constitutional to Kill Osama bin Laden?

    05/10/2011 Duração: 59min

    Was it constitutional for President Obama to kill Osama bin Laden? How about the killing of Anwar al-Awlaki, an American citizen living in Yemen? The answers are more complex than you might think. We talk to John Bellinger, former Legal Advisor to both Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and to the National Security Council. We also speak with Professor Robert Turner of the Center for National Security Law at the University of Virginia.

  • Banned Book Week

    28/09/2011 Duração: 59min

    Are we talking Nazis and bonfires? Or is it something more nuanced? Is every attempt to remove a book from a library a "ban?" We'll talk to a lawyer for the American Library Association and to one of the ALA's critics. We'll also talk to a high school English teacher and a public librarian. Listen up - it's a hot one.

  • Prohibition, Part II: The Rise and Fall of Al Capone

    21/09/2011 Duração: 59min

    In our second episode on Prohibition, we conclude the bloody tale of the St. Valentine's Day Massacre. By 1929, gang violence had become so brazen than many people started openly calling for repeal of the 18th Amendment.

  • Prohibition, Part I

    14/09/2011 Duração: 59min

    The first in a series of episodes on Prohibition, which tie in with the new Ken Burns PBS documentary. Former Cook County Police Chief Art Bilek tells the gripping story of the Chicago mob and the St. Valentine's Day Massacre, the single most notorious act of gang violence during Prohibition. Such violence and the inability of corrupt politicians to prevent it eventually led to the repeal of the 18th Amendment.

  • Who was Jim Crow?

    07/09/2011 Duração: 59min

    Well, it's a long, sad tale. We'll tell it with help from Derrick Howard of the Appalachian School of Law and James Loewen, author of "Sundown Towns."

  • Philadelphia Stories, Part II

    24/08/2011 Duração: 59min

    We'll hunt for National Treasures where Congress and the Supreme Court first met, and at the Second Bank of the United States, precursor to the Federal Reserve. That's where they keep all the money.

  • Is the Pledge of Allegiance unconstitutional?

    10/08/2011 Duração: 59min

    Is the Pledge of Allegiance unconstitutional? Michael Newdow thinks so. And he's gotten at least one federal court to agree with him. We'll talk to Dr. Newdow, and to Gregory Katsas, a former Justice Department lawyer who defended the Pledge against one of Dr. Newdow's lawsuits.

  • Philadelphia Stories, Part I

    03/08/2011 Duração: 59min

    We're taking a field trip to . . . Independence Hall! To the very place where the Founders came together and debated our Constitution. So grab your tri-cornered hat, pull on your knee breeches, and let's get down to business.

  • Same Sex Marriage

    28/07/2011 Duração: 59min

    Cue the bridesmaids! Find the groom! It's time for . . . Gay Marriage. Or is it? We'll discuss both sides of the issue Tuesday at 8PM. No gifts, please.

  • Should Women Vote? Part II

    20/07/2011 Duração: 59min

    Part II of our two-part series features Knoxville attorney Wanda Sobieski telling the dramatic story of the final ratification of the 19th Amendment in Tennessee.

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