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Mining in the Santa Fe National Forest?

Mining in the Santa Fe National Forest?

by radiocafe | Aug 5, 2019 | Environment, New Mexico, Santa Fe New Mexican

What would it mean for camping, hiking, hunting, fishing, and wildlife if there were mining in the national forest? What would be the downstream consequences for communities? We talk to two experts.

Learn more & listen …

Local food: 31 good reasons to eat it

Local food: 31 good reasons to eat it

by radiocafe | Aug 1, 2019 | Food & agriculture, New Mexico, Santa Fe New Mexican

Did you ever a piece of fruit that was so delicious that you went into an altered state? If so, it was probably local fruit from your farmers market. We talk to a farmer and a local food advocate about the many benefits of eating local food–and the rewards and challenges of producing it.

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A poetry of listening in wild places

A poetry of listening in wild places

by radiocafe | Jul 18, 2019 | Arts & films, Books, New Mexico, Santa Fe New Mexican

Timothy P. McLaughlin’s new book Seeds Under the Tongue is a compilation of poems, some of them inspired by a brush with death in a canyon that the author transformed into a ceremonial experience. McLaughlin’s work combines well-honed craft, inspiration and a profound connection to wild nature.

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Allegra Love on immigrant prison camps: an attorney’s perspective

Allegra Love on immigrant prison camps: an attorney’s perspective

by radiocafe | Jul 15, 2019 | Activism, New Mexico, Politics, Santa Fe New Mexican

How is it possible that children seeking safety can be housed in squalid, filthy prison camps–in the United States? Immigration attorney Allegra Love tells us, paints the bigger picture, and shares ideas about how to respond.

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Roswell 2019: Aliens, UFOs, and Abductees

Roswell 2019: Aliens, UFOs, and Abductees

by radiocafe | Jul 11, 2019 | New Mexico, Santa Fe New Mexican

Have you ever talked to someone who claims to have been abducted by aliens? We discuss the alleged phenomenon and much more on today’s program, with speakers and attendees of the annual Roswell UFO Festival. A little glimpse on a world of conspiracy theories, flying saucers, and little gray men.

Bromance, infidelity, and death from consumption: The Santa Fe Opera 2019

Bromance, infidelity, and death from consumption: The Santa Fe Opera 2019

by radiocafe | Jun 24, 2019 | Arts & films, New Mexico, Santa Fe New Mexican

Santa Fe Opera dramaturg Cori Ellison talks about this summer’s operas–history, production, themes–including a world premiere.

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Kids with disabilities — and their parents — face harassment from schools

Kids with disabilities — and their parents — face harassment from schools

by radiocafe | Jun 20, 2019 | Education, New Mexico, Santa Fe New Mexican

Discrimination, marginalization, and criminalization: these are among the challenges facing students in some of NM’s public schools schools—and the parents who try to advocate for them. We talk to investigative reporter Ed Williams of Searchlight New Mexico.

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Medicine and miracles in Navajo Country

Medicine and miracles in Navajo Country

by radiocafe | Jun 13, 2019 | Books, Education, Native & indigenous, New Mexico, Santa Fe New Mexican

Before Erica Elliott decided to become a physician, she worked as a teacher on the Navajo reservation–where she also experienced being a shepherd, going into trance in peyote ceremonies, and being kissed by a mountain lion. We talk about her new memoir.

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Breaking the chain of inequity in housing and transportation

Breaking the chain of inequity in housing and transportation

by radiocafe | Jun 10, 2019 | Activism, New Mexico, Politics, Santa Fe New Mexican

Chainbreaker Collective director Tomás Rivera talks about community organizing for some of the most vulnerable neighborhoods in Santa Fe–and how people can make their voices heard as the city makes decisions about land, housing, and transportation.

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The struggle for pueblo sovereignty

The struggle for pueblo sovereignty

by radiocafe | Jun 6, 2019 | Books, Native & indigenous, New Mexico, Santa Fe New Mexican

Imagine you’ve been living in a place for countless generations and suddenly you’re told it belongs to the King of Spain. Pueblo people learned quickly how to fight to keep their land and water. We talk to historians Malcolm Ebright and Rick Hendricks about their new book, Pueblo Sovereignty.

Learn more & listen …

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