Things That Go Boom

By: PRX
  • Summary

  • Stories about the ins, outs, and whathaveyous of what keeps us safe. Hosted by Laicie Heeley.

    © Inkstick Media
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Episodes
  • The Militias Next Door
    Jan 20 2025

    Amy Cooter has been studying US militias since 2008 when, as a graduate student in Michigan, she attended a public meeting of a group that was thought to be a cover for an underground neo-Nazi movement.

    As it turned out, that assumption was wrong.

    It was then that Amy realized this militia movement she encountered was worthy of study all on its own. And at the time, most academics weren't studying it, partly because they believed all these guys were the same. They're not.

    Today Amy is one of the foremost experts on these groups. In this episode, she tells us the things we’re still getting wrong about the US militia movement. And explains how, by ignoring the movement’s complexities, we might have missed our window for change.

    GUEST: Dr. Amy Cooter, Director of Research, Academic Development, and Innovation (RADI), Center on Terrorism, Extremism, and Counterterrorism

    ADDITIONAL RESOURCES:

    "As Trump Touts Plans for Immigrant Roundup, Militias Are Standing Back, but Standing By," Amy Cooter, The Conversation.

    Nostalgia, Nationalism, and the US Militia Movement, Amy Cooter, Routledge.

    "The Sheriffs, Hardliners, and Militias Preparing for Trump’s Return," Tyler Hicks, Inkstick Media.

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    30 mins
  • What a Tipping Point Looks Like
    Jan 6 2025

    In 1970, Canada’s streets were full of troops and the country was on edge. Quebec cabinet minister Pierre Laporte had been captured by a militant French separatist group, the FLQ, and the Canadian government worried thousands of FLQ sympathizers could be ready to unleash chaos in Quebec. As it turned out, the group that caused so much fear throughout the 1960s was never more than a few dozen individuals.

    This season on Things That Go Boom, we’re starting in Canada, because four years after Jan. 6, the US is as divided as ever. And we wondered if it might be headed for an October Crisis of its own.

    It doesn’t take a lot of people to create a lot of fear. But what does it mean for a place to devolve into the grip of that fear, and how do we escape it?

    GUESTS

    Jean Foster, retired schoolteacher; Elizabeth Morgan, philanthropist and organic farmer; Chris Oliveros, graphic novelist, “Are You Willing To Die For The Cause”; Alexandre Turgeon, historian, Laval University; Peter Graefe, political scientist, McGill University

    RESOURCES

    You can buy “Are You Willing to Die for the Cause?” by Chris Oliveros here: https://drawnandquarterly.com/books/are-you-willing-to-die-for-the-cause/

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    35 mins
  • Season 10: Coming Soon!
    Dec 30 2024

    When Members of Congress are sworn into office, they say an oath.

    To protect the country from all enemies… foreign and domestic.

    But what does a domestic enemy look like?

    And how can they be stopped?

    Four years after January 6th, we're turning our eyes on the US to ask, “in our divided times, how do we we stop political violence at home… before it starts… and without losing what makes us, us, along the way.”


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    2 mins

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Fascinating

Great topic. Puts great perspective on a topic easily overlooked: global nuclear effects on local indigenous groups and food scarcity

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