

The Dissidents
The Dissidents
Welcome to the Dissidents podcast from the Institute for Liberal Values (formerly the Counterweight Podcast), where we talk about how we can strive for a world in which freedom and reason are at the forefront of all human society.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Oct 25, 2024 • 57min
S4 E30 | Bittersweet Reality: The Dark Side of Chocolate Production
Chocolate is the top-selling Halloween candy and is considered a must-have treat for the trick-or-treaters and eaters of leftovers alike. But do you think about where your chocolate comes from? Listen to this week's podcast to find out!
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This week's episode is part of an occasional series about coffee, and this week we actually take time to discuss a closely related commodity--chocolate. Our guest, James Hayes-Bohanan, has been doing research on political, social, cultural, and environmental geography of coffee for 20 years and by extension has learned a fair amount about cacao. In this episode James gives us an overview of growing, harvesting and processing, including an open secret of child exploitation and slave labor. We learn that the manufacturers of the most popular store brands are the worst offenders. James helps us understand the complexities of fair trade, small farms, and large cacao traders, as well as what we can do to find and support more socially responsible producers of chocolate.
Podcast Notes
Supreme Court decision in support of Nestle and Cargill regarding slave labor: https://www.politico.com/news/2021/06/17/supreme-court-ruling-child-slave-labor-495022
An overview from Equal Exchange with embedded links to company scorecards and more: https://www.info.equalexchange.coop/articles/who-grows-your-chocolate
Newspaper article Burdick Chocolate: https://www.sentinelsource.com/news/local/burdick-clears-the-air-on-rumors-of-walpole-chocolate-company-sale/article_1aa500d3-b4fe-518a-8c1e-2010b1b7a45b.html
Burdick chocolate partnership with Grenada farmers: https://www.jouvaychocolate.com/about-us
An industry site: https://worldcocoafoundation.org/
Living Earth Festival Symposium on Chocolate from Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indianhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oCw5OE_2sgo

Oct 23, 2024 • 26min
FSF Ep. 13: Free Speech Challenges in California and Beyond | Frank Xu
In this episode of the Free Speech Forward podcast, host Chris Bush engages with Frank Xu, President of Californians for Equal Rights Foundation (CFER) and Founding President of San Diego Asian Americans for Equality (SDAAFE). Frank shares his journey as an activist, highlighting the interconnectedness of free speech and equal opportunity. He discusses his experiences in California and the importance of effective communication in public advocacy. Frank also emphasizes the need for youth activism and the role of community support in standing up for free speech rights. He concludes with a vision for investing in initiatives to promote free speech on a global scale, drawing lessons from countries with restrictive regimes.
Learn more about Frank and his efforts at: https://www.cferfoundation.org/

Oct 18, 2024 • 2h 18min
Series | Left Turn in Social Work Education: The Harmful Effects of a Narrow Political Ideology
In this week's episode Elizabeth and Matt Watson discuss ideology in his field of social work. A recently published survey study confirmed that a trend toward liberalism in higher education faculty is even stronger in social work and the researchers expressed less concern about this than we'd hoped. We consider what the findings and the tone of the article mean for the field. We also discuss the social work code of ethics and potential conflicts created by the preponderance of progressive faculty and elaborate on the importance of diversity of thought in both social work education and social work itself. We also reached out to the author and Dr. Stephen Stoeffler joined us for a follow up. We asked Stephen about provisions for protecting religious and political views, and how social work faculty can avoid alienating their less progressive students at a time when the field needs more good candidates. Stephen expressed an openness and commitment to viewpoint diversity in social work classrooms and practice. He also reiterated his beliefs that the field's alignment with the progressive left is appropriate and that social work education should maintain that focus. We all agreed that these are the kind of difficult conversations we need in the fields of social work and social work education.
Podcast notes
Stoeffler, S., Young, B. & Hassler, M. (2023). Embracing our values: Social work faculty progressivism in a conservative world. International Journal of Social Work Values and Ethics, 20, 194-219
LSW Matt Watson from our ILV partner, ProSocial Workers is co host this week.
ProSocial Workers is committed to creating a viewpoint inclusive and politically diverse environment for social workers and other helping professionals. Professionals can find support and continuing education at ProSocialWorkers.com.
Get access the full author Q&A here: https://prosocialworkers.com/courses/the-case-for-and-against-political-orthodoxy-in-social-work/
First part of the series: Critical vs. Classical Social Justice in Social Work

Oct 11, 2024 • 57min
S4 E29 | Black Sheep and Dissidents with Salomé Sibonex
In this week’s Dissidents Podcast, Jennifer Richmond and Winkfield Twyman, Jr. talk about the meaning of life through the eyes of black sheep and non-conformists. Like Martin Buber in I and Thou, we find meaning in relationships. When we can see each other as they are, and make room for that, we end up expanding ourselves. Unlike social media that constrains us to a narrow lens that boxes us into collectivist and cynical ideologies, we find hope in the more expansive idea that “we are all just here to walk each other home”. We move beyond the shallowness of the many ways we, as a society, interact, honing an internal locus of control and seeking for depth in a search for “something more”.
Podcast Notes:
I and Thou, Martin Buber
https://www.amazon.com/I-Thou-Martin-Buber/dp/1774641658/
How Social Justice Is Exploiting Us ft. Kimi Kaititi & Salomé Sibonex | HERD-LESS, Revolution of One
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1eVO29XhH-Y&t=1s
How Open-Minded People Think Differently | The Third Space, Black Sheep Podcast with Zander Keig
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u1XTaTECpKs&t=1s
Joscha Bach, Ideology and Understanding Black Culture and Consciousness, Winkfield Twyman, Jr.
https://twyman.substack.com/p/joscha-bach-ideology-and-understanding
The Language of Klingons, Jennifer Richmond and Winkfield Twyman, Jr.
https://truthinbetween.substack.com/p/ep-78-the-language-of-klingons
Redefining Racism: How Racism Became "Power + Prejudice", Jake Klein
https://www.amazon.com/Redefining-Racism-Became-Power-Prejudice/dp/B0DHFMPNPF/
The Black Sheep on Substack
wetheblacksheep.com

Oct 8, 2024 • 24min
FSF Ep. 12: “We Live in A Society That Doesn't Allow People to Talk” | David Bernstein
Welcome to another episode in which co-hosts and co-founders of 1776 Forward, Joia & Chris, speak with one of the Board Members of the Institute of Liberal Values, David Bernstein. David shares his experiences growing up in a politically liberal environment and how his belief in free speech was shaped by personal and historical events. He also emphasizes the importance of free speech in society, the challenges posed by cancel culture, the need for a cultural shift to support open dialogue, and the critical role of education in shaping future generations' understanding of liberal values.
Get your copy of David’s book “Woke Antisemitism” at https://jilv.org/book/

Oct 4, 2024 • 1h 11min
S4 E28 | The Bean, the Brew, and the Babble: From Small Farms and Small Cafes to Big Business
This week's episode is the first in an occasional series about coffee and chocolate. Our guest, James Hayes-Bohanan, has been doing research on political, social, cultural, and environmental geography of coffee for 20 years. In this episode James gives us an overview of historical and contemporary coffee culture and the sociopolitical impact of coffee shops. He describes the growing process, introduces us to growers, and helps us understand the complexities of social justice in the context of fair trade, small farms, and large coffee traders. We talk about coffee tasters' impact on price and quality, coffee rituals, and Frank Sinatra's coffee song.
Podcast Notes:
Stafford, T. (2003). Psychology in the coffee shop. The Psychologist, 16(7), 358–359.
Here is a link to blog posts (compiled by James' and his students) about local coffee shops: https://geocafes.blogspot.com/
Read the post about Vietnam Coffee, with embedded links to more resources: https://www.environmentalgeography.net/2024/07/siegried-in-vietnam.html
Listen to Frank Sinatra sing about coffee here: https://youtu.be/hc_Y4oqdP0I?si=T2XJo9VJ222t1rJD

Sep 27, 2024 • 1h 1min
S4 E27 | George Washington, the New Single Drop Rule and Reclaiming Agency with Ian Rowe
In this week’s Dissidents Podcast, Jennifer Richmond and Winkfield Twyman, Jr. speak with Ian Rowe. Ian recently wrote a review of their book (Letters in Black and White: A New Correspondence on Race in America), which he entitled Three Cheers for Colorblindness.
Wink and Jen, much like they start their book, start the conversation with Ian by getting his “origin story,” i.e. what makes you tick?? The author of Agency: The Four Point Plan (F.R.E.E) for All Children to Overcome the Victimhood Narrative and Discover Their Pathway to Power, shares with us his upbringing and family foundations, that leads into the discussion of Wink’s ancestral ties to America’s founding father, George Washington.
With such rich origin stories, why do we reduce individuals to the singular characteristic of race (the single drop rule)? The dearth of nuance and complexity that is denied when we tell our children that “blackness is oppression, nothing else matters,” constrains us from a full life of self-determination, agency and the dignity of achievement.
At the end of the day, we are all cousins and recognizing that common humanity is the best path forward.
Podcast Resources:
Three Cheers for Colorblindness, Ian Rowe
https://rlo.acton.org/archives/125823-three-cheers-for-color-blindness.html
Agency: The Four Point Plan (F.R.E.E) for All Children to Overcome the Victimhood Narrative and Discover Their Pathway to Power, Ian Rowe
https://www.amazon.com/Agency-F-R-Children-Victimhood-Narrative/dp/B0C3WQCYKF/
Letters in Black and White: A New Correspondence on Race in America, Winkfield Twyman, Jr & Jennifer Richmond
https://www.amazon.com/Letters-Black-White-Correspondence-America/dp/1634312368/
White Jamaicans, Winkfield Twyman, Jr.
https://twyman.substack.com/p/white-jamaicans
Please Resign Harvard University President Claudine Gay, Winkfield Twyman, Jr.
https://twyman.substack.com/p/please-resign-harvard-university
Liberalism in Practice Panel Discussion: Lessons from Harvard after the Claudine Gay Affair, The Institute for Liberal Values
https://youtu.be/uMzFvMPHeBU?si=yHxhR7p3dlBWJvdY
Matisyahu
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matisyahu
Vertex Academies
https://www.vertexacademies.org/
FREE Initiative
https://www.aei.org/free/
A Better Chance (ABC Program)
https://abetterchance.org/

Sep 25, 2024 • 22min
FSF Ep. 11: “Truth doesn't come from how many people agree" | Mars Cheung
In this episode of the Free Speech Forward podcast, your hosts Joia and Chris interview Mars Cheung, an advocate for free speech and enlightenment values. Mars shares his journey into the realm of free speech advocacy, emphasizing the importance of free speech for societal flourishing. He discusses the nuances of communication, effective interview techniques, and the significance of critical thinking. Mars envisions projects that promote teaching street epistemology and critical thinking skills, encouraging listeners to find their voice and speak out for their values. Mars believes that if individuals do not speak on controversial topics, others will do so irresponsibly.
Learn more about Mars and his interview and film screening projects at: https://groups.google.com/g/stopcrt

Sep 25, 2024 • 29min
On Censorship Book Club: Episode IV
In recognition of Banned Books Week (September 22-28) we’re reading James LaRue's On Censorship: A Public Librarian Examines Cancel Culture in the US. Join us for a live meeting with the author on Wednesday, Oct 2 at 7pm ET. (https://youtube.com/live/8IGf08uvIK4?feature=share)
In preparation for the live stream, read along with our ILV advisors who will discuss the book in 4 brief special episodes of the Dissidents Podcast to be released on Wednesdays, September 4-25.
This is the fourth episode, but you can find a link to earlier conversations below.
This week we discuss Part III, entitled “The Role of the Citizen: Seven things you can do.”
In On Censorship James LaRue issues a balanced and reasonable call to action for all citizens. It is a combination of personal reflection and deep dive into specifics of book banning. James LaRue has been a public library director for many years, and was director of the Freedom to Read Foundation, and ALA’s Office for Intellectual Freedom. He has written, spoken, and consulted extensively on intellectual freedom issues, leadership and organizational development, community engagement, and the future of libraries. He lives in Glenwood Springs, Colorado.
This year the theme of Banned Books week is "Freed Between the Lines." The annual event is a reminder that the freedom to read is a liberal value worth defending. Learn more about banned books here: https://ala.org/bbooks/banned
Episode III: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8jjgiXg_DF8
Episode II: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j1L-bg7SH3w&t=3s
Episode I: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fAsyMQ5pP5M&t=3s

Sep 20, 2024 • 1h 17min
Series | Critical vs Classical Social Justice in Social Work: Bonus
We left our Critical vs Classical Social Justice in Social Work panel discussion wanting more and were inspired to do a series of follow ups!
The third week each of the upcoming months, we will focus on a related topic, with guests, personal stories, and the latest research on the state of social work education.
In case you missed it, we are re-releasing the panel discussion as a Bonus episode of the Dissidents Podcast. Our co-host is panelist and LSW Matt Watson from our ILV partner, ProSocial Workers.
In this bonus episode, we share the recording of our Liberal Values in Practice livestream about the state of social work practice and education. You will hear panelists answer a series of questions, including whether the dominance of left-leaning practitioners and narratives of oppressed/oppressor groups are compatible with The National Association of Social Workers’ Code of Ethics.
*ProSocial Workers is committed to creating a viewpoint inclusive and politically diverse environment for social workers and other helping professionals. Professionals can find support and continuing education at ProSocialWorkers.com.*


