Khury Petersen-Smith on Economic Sanctions, Greg LeRoy on Amazon Subsidies

 

IPS: Sanctions May Sound “Nonviolent,” But They Quietly Hurt the Most Vulnerable

Institute for Policy Studies (3/6/22)

This week on CounterSpin: Russia’s horrendous invasion of Ukraine is providing yet another reminder that when elephants fight, it’s the grass that’s trampled. We see that not just in the front-page casualties; teenage soldiers dying fighting; civilian men, women and children killed by dropping bombs—but also in the measures we are told are meant to avert those harms: economic sanctions. Khury Petersen-Smith is Michael Ratner Middle East Fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies. He joins us to talk about the problem with seeing sanctions as an alternative to war.

      CounterSpin220311PetersenSmith.mp3

 

Depiction of Amazon subsidies

Good Jobs First (3/1/22)

Also on the show: In March 2012, Amazon opened an office dedicated to ferreting out tax breaks and subsidies. In other words, the megacorporation making hundreds of billions of dollars in profit puts in time finding ways to avoid supporting the communities it operates in—and to push local governments to divest money from education, housing and healthcare—to give to a company that doesn’t need it. This March, the group Good Jobs First marked that anniversary with a call to #EndAmazonSubsidies. We talk with the group’s executive director, Greg LeRoy.

      CounterSpin220311LeRoy.mp3

 

The post Khury Petersen-Smith on Economic Sanctions, Greg LeRoy on Amazon Subsidies appeared first on FAIR.

This post was originally published on CounterSpin.