This week, weâre showing thanks to everyone who's stepping up for our collective civil liberties, with a People Power potluck! And weâve got a seat at the table for you. Our guest of honor is Maribel HernĂĄndez Rivera, the ACLUâs National Director of Immigrant Community Strategies. And we have three volunteers from the ACLUâs grassroots network People Power stopping by. Kathy joins us just around the 20-minute mark from Minnesota, Sophia around 40 minutes in from Colorado, and Terry at the hour mark from Tennessee. Listen in as they speak with Kamau about why and how they're advocating for immigrantsâ rights, and what their hopes are for their communitiesâand yoursâthis giving season and beyond.
If youâd like to join Kathy, Sophia, Terry, and other People Power volunteers, nowâs the perfect time. You can head to aclu.org/campaigns-initiatives/people-power to learn more.
And make sure to check out the ACLU's Holiday Conversation Guide, at aclu.org/the-aclus-holiday-conversation-guide.
At Liberty is a production of the ACLU. For the ACLU, our senior executive producer is Sam Riddell, our executive producer is Jessica Herman Weitz, and our intern is Madhvi Khianra. W. Kamau Bell and Melissa Hudson Bell, PhD are executive producers for Who Knows Best Productions. At Liberty is produced and edited by Erica Getto and Myrriah Gossett for Good Get. This episode was recorded at Skyline Studios in Oakland, CA.
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1:28:27
From The Joke Files: A Comedy and Censorship Roundtable
Weâre living through a moment where late night jokes are next-day news, and each opening monologue feels like a litmus test for our freedom of expression. But is this dynamic anything new? This week, comedian Dean Obeidallah and writer Kliph Nesteroff join Kamau to reflect on the historyâand present stateâof censorship in comedy, and what makes this moment more than a callback.
This episode was recorded on Monday, November 10, in the lead-up to the New York Arab American Comedy Festival, which Dean co-founded more than two decades ago. Kliphâs insights are drawn from research that he conducted for his book Outrageous: A History of Showbiz and the Culture Wars.
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Deployments At Our Doorstep
Frog costumes. The Star Wars theme. Whistlemania. These could be the sights and sounds of Halloweenâbut this year, they've taken on new meaning. As federal agents and military troops arrive in their cities across the country, communities have used pop culture references, humor, and irreverence as an act of resilience. Theyâve also banded together to form school escorts and other protective measures for their neighbors. This week, weâre exploring how residents of three cities have met this moment. We have three ACLU experts joining us. First up, we have Chandra S. Bhatnagar and Ed Yohnka of the ACLU of Southern California and Illinois. And around the 46-minute mark, Monica Hopkins of the ACLU of DC joins Kamau to discuss deployments in the nationâs capital.
Want to get involved? Here are two actions you can take right now:
action.aclu.org/send-message/tell-congress-no-troops-our-streets
action.aclu.org/send-message/tell-congress-stop-masked-agents
And if youâre still curious about the deployments, thereâs a great explainer on YouTube: âAsk an ACLU Expert: President Trumpâs Deployment of Federal Forces to Our Communitiesâ with Hina Shamsi.
https://youtu.be/1wQLAqD-KFM?si=LGsW6vlAM_A-1WKo
At Liberty is a production of the ACLU. For the ACLU, our senior executive producer is Sam Riddell, our executive producer is Jessica Herman Weitz, and our intern is Madhvi Khianra. W. Kamau Bell and Melissa Hudson Bell, PhD are executive producers for Who Knows Best Productions. At Liberty is produced and edited by Erica Getto and Myrriah Gossett for Good Get. This episode was recorded at Skyline Studios in Oakland, CA.
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The Journalist Who Spent More Than 100 Days in ICE Detention
This summer, Emmy Award-winning journalist Mario Guevara was covering a protest near Atlanta when local law enforcement arrested him. Then, ICE detained him. For more than 100 days, the agency refused his release, citing his reporting as dangerous. On October 3, after more than 20 years of living in the United States, he was deported to El Salvador.
This week, the ACLUâs Scarlet Kim, who served on Guevara's legal team, joins Kamau to discuss his case and why it should sound alarm bells for us all. Then, the ACLUâs Jessica Herman Weitz drops in to discuss another Emmy Award winner in the headlines for free speech repression: Jimmy Kimmel.
You can check out the Kimmel letter here:
https://www.aclu.org/defend-free-speech-letter-kimmel
And add your name to an open letter in support of free speech here:
https://action.aclu.org/petition/defend-free-speech-all-condemn-governments-censorship-jimmy-kimmel
At Liberty is a production of the ACLU. For the ACLU, our senior executive producer is Sam Riddell, our executive producer is Jessica Herman Weitz, and our intern is Madhvi Khianra. W. Kamau Bell and Melissa Hudson Bell, PhD are executive producers for Who Knows Best Productions. At Liberty is produced and edited by Erica Getto and Myrriah Gossett for Good Get. This episode was recorded at Skyline Studios in Oakland, CA.
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Live from SeriesFest: Our Right to Laughter
Can humor help us make sense of unprecedented threats to our civil liberties? Join us this week for a special episode of At Liberty, recorded live at SeriesFest in Denver, where Kamau and moderator Mo Fry Pasic explore Kamau's signature style of sociopolitical comedy, how something can be funny without being true, and why laughter means weâre paying attention.
You can hear Mo in conversation with a different comedian each week on their podcast, Worse Than You with Mo Fry Pasic. And you can keep up with SeriesFest year-round at seriesfest.com.
Our senior executive producer is Sam Riddell. This episode was executive produced by Jessica Herman Weitz for the ACLU, and W. Kamau Bell and Melissa Hudson Bell, PhD for Who Knows Best Productions. At Liberty is edited and produced by Erica Getto and Myrriah Gossett for Good Get.