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DESCRIPTION:\n\n\nIncome inequality has been on the rise in the U.S. for decades. The 
 top 1 percent of earners in the U.S. now holds a much greater share of 
 national income than three decades ago. At the same time, incomes for the 
 bottom half of American households have remained virtually flat.\n\nSome 
 economists and social scientists argue that income inequality leads to 
 unequal access to opportunity and resources like nutrition and education. 
 That's left children born to poor families with little hope of escaping 
 poverty themselves, they argue, and has made upward mobility unattainable 
 for many in the middle class, as well.\n\nBut others say that income 
 inequality is not inherently a bad thing. They point to research that finds 
 that countries with greater inequality also experience more economic 
 growth. That means that people at all income levels will benefit, they 
 argue, even if their individual slice of the economic pie becomes 
 smaller.\n\nBefore the debate, the audience at the Kaufman Music Center in 
 New York was 60 percent in favor of the motion and 14 percent against, with 
 26 percent undecided. After the debate, 53 percent favored the motion and 
 37 percent voted against it, making the team arguing against the motion the 
 winner of this debate.\n\n\n\nVenture capitalist Nick Hanauer, with Elise 
 Gould, argues that a robust economy\n relies on large numbers of innovators 
 and affluent consumers —\nand that too much inequality prevents too many 
 Americans from joining those groups.\nSamuel LaHoz/Intelligence Squared 
 U.S.\n\nFor The Motion:\nElise Gould is the senior economist and director 
 of health policy research at the Economic Policy Institute, where she 
 researches wages, poverty, inequality, economic mobility and health care. 
 Elise a author and has written for academic journals. Elise has testified 
 before the U.S. House Committee on Ways and Means, Maryland Senate Finance 
 and House Economic Matters committees, the New York City Council and the 
 District of Columbia Council.\nNick Hanauer is an entrepreneur and venture 
 capitalist with more than 30 years of experience across a broad range of 
 industries. Nick has managed, founded or financed more than 30 companies, 
 creating aggregate market value of tens of billions of dollars. Nick is 
 actively involved in a variety of civic and philanthropic activities and 
 has served a broad range of civic organizations. Nick currently serves as a 
 director for the Democracy Alliance and as a board advisor to the policy 
 journal Democracy.  In 2012, his TED talk on income inequality went viral 
 after TED, citing it as overtly partisan, declined to publish it on their 
 website.\n\n\n\nEdward Conard, a former partner at Bain Capital, argues 
 that the success\nof America's top earners actually spurs economic growth 
 —\ngrowth that, in turn, has increased incomes at all levels of the 
 economic spectrum.\nSamuel LaHoz\nSamuel LaHoz\n\nAgainst The 
 Motion:\nEdward Conard is a visiting scholar at the American Enterprise 
 Institute.  Edward was a senior managing director at Bain Capital, where he 
 headed the New York office and was responsible for the acquisitions of 
 large industrial companies. He previously worked for Wasserstein Perella, 
 an investment bank that specialized in mergers and acquisitions, and Bain & 
 Company, a management consulting firm, where he headed the firm's 
 industrial practice. \nScott Winship is the Walter B. Wriston Fellow at the 
 Manhattan Institute. Previously a fellow at the Brookings Institution, his 
 areas of expertise include living standards and economic mobility, 
 inequality and insecurity. Earlier in his career, Winship was research 
 manager of the Economic Mobility Project of The Pew Charitable Trusts and a 
 senior policy advisor at Third Way. His research has been published in 
 National Affairs, National Review, The Wilson Quarterly, Breakthrough 
 Journal and Real Clear Markets, among other outlets.\n\nSource: 
 intelligence2: Debate: Does Income Inequality Impair The American 
 Dream?\n\n\n\n\n\n\nAmazon tribes threatened by energy industry\n\nThere 
 are still hunter-gatherer groups in the Amazon who have had little or no 
 contact with the outside world. Oil and gas exploration brings the threat 
 of disease and catastrophic loss of life. Rebecca Spooner is a campaigner 
 with Survival International in London, England. Rebecca speaks with Jane 
 Williams about the situation.\nSource: Redeye Collective: Uncontacted 
 tribes in Peru threatened by energy industry\n\n\nExecutive Producer James 
 Cameron. \n(Photo: The Years Project/SHOWTIME)Years of Living 
 Dangerously\n\nHollywood Director James Cameron won a 2014 non-fiction EMMY 
 for the TV documentary, Years of Living Dangerously that he produced.  With 
 celebrity hosts, the series covered the globe and laid out the gravity of 
 climate change. The series is now released on DVD. Cameron discussed the 
 show and its message with Steve Curwood.\nSource: living on earth: Years of 
 Living Dangerously\n\n\nDownload or Play Income Inequality Part 1Download 
 or Play Income Inequality Part 2Download or Play Income Inequality Part 
 3Download or Play Years Of Living Dangerously\n\nMusic includes Peter 
 Yarrow - Have You Been to Jail for Justice, Katharine Hepburn - The Lion in 
 Winter, The Compassionate Conservatives - White House Crock, Capitol Steps 
 - Immigration Medley, Roy Zimmerman - Mitt's America, Capitol Steps - Hava 
 No-Deala,  Reverend Billy - Earthalujah Explained, Youngbloods - Get 
 Together, Wizard Of Oz - The Cowardly Lion On Courage, The Midnight Special 
 - Odetta, Creedence Clearwater Revival - Lodi, Bernice Johnson Reagon - We 
 Are Climbing Jacob's Ladder, The Beatles - Strawberry Fields Forever, Leo 
 Smit / Aaron Copland / Radio Rome Symphony Orchestra - III. Allegro assai, 
 Aaron Copland - Danzon cubano, Pink Floyd - Nobody Home\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2015/01/23/18767410.php
SUMMARY:Does Income Inequality Impair The American Dream? - A Debate
LOCATION:Stream or download at http://greatspeechesandinterviews.blogspot.com/ 
 \n\nBroadcast at Access Sacramento, Sundays 6-8pm PDT at KUBU 96.5 FM and 
 at http://www.live365.com/stations/accesssacramento?site=pro\n
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2015/01/23/18767410.php
DTSTART:20150126T020000Z
DTEND:20150126T040000Z
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