what they are talking about is going back to a way of life that work for the islands and the people for thousands of years. to the people in tourism, let s break the jobs down. you zoom out and you realize that tourism only works when the people who work here are weaker than the people that play here. it is a permanent underclass. that is a good point and it runs across issues. there are dozens of stories about the connection between tourism and pain. women are part of the vacation package, local women. a lot of my job is really protecting from charisma militarism and hawaii and i wish i didn t have to do that. bell hooks taught us that we have to know the difference between love and abuse. i think that that is part of the tourism conversation. people wanted to come to her and i love hawaii.
first, it was the covid-19 pandemic, which has killed more than 1 million people in the u.s. alone. now, there is monkeypox, which the white house just labeled a public health emergency. and also, if you can believe it, polio seems to be maybe making a come back, as the new york health department warns hundreds of people may be infected with the virus. how did the u.s. bungle this nightmarish trifecta? well, the next guest believes he has the answer. doctor steven thrasher of northwestern university is out in the new book, on the subject, called viral underclass, the human toll inequality and deceased collide. he addresses the societal reaction to viruses, writing, quote, viruses show where the cracks in our society are. they offer a stark revelation of inequality. in times of mass crisis, those cracks get wider and more people fall into them. i call it the viral underclass. and doctor steven thrasher joins me now. thanks so much for coming on this show. stephen, most people would say,
No one is immune from COVID-19, but not everyone's experience of the pandemic is the same in the United States, where the poor face higher risk, NBC reported on Wednesday.
In popular culture, protagonists and antagonists battle eternally for Montana’s precious land. Country folk fight off city folk in Yellowstone and the podcast Land Grab: A Podcast About the Place
women in this country, more than half of our population, was done by a majority of men. there indeed is nuance, but the writing is very clear that there is an intention here to create a permanent underclass of women, and i am here and would love to continue this conversation as we speak directly to the women that justice alito called out in his decision, where he said, it s not as if women don t have electoral or political power, and i think it is time that women across this country show these justices the kind of country that they want their daughters and sons to inherit. and frankly, the kind of country that we deserve. yeah, that s interesting. you re citing some of the selective reference to political turnout in the opinion, but you re also saying, okay, bring it. emily, this brings us back to the juris presumption of