On the radio this evening, Friday, June 29th on "The Michael Cutler Hour"

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Hi Gang:

Happy Friday!

This evening, as I do on just about every Friday evening, at 7:00 PM Eastern Time, I will host my radio program, “The Michael Cutler Hour”

This evening I will be joined by an amazing journalist, Martin Sieff.  He is currently the Editor-at-Large of the Globalist.  He has an incredible background and I am pleased that he will be on my show tonight.

Here is his bio as it appears on the Globalist website:

                

Martin Sieff
Chief Global Analyst, The Globalist Research Center | Editor-at-Large, The Globalist


Martin Sieff is Chief Global Analyst at The Globalist Research Center and Editor-at-Large at The Globalist.

For the past decade, he has been chief news analyst for United Press International and is its former Managing Editor for International Affairs. He has received three Pulitzer Prize nominations for international reporting.

He is the author of “The Politically Incorrect Guide to the Middle East” (Regnery, 2008), the upcoming “Shifting Superpowers: The U.S.-China-India Relationship in the 21st Century” (Cato, 2009) and the upcoming “Cycles of Change: The Eras of U.S. Political History” and “War and Peace in the 21st Century.”

Mr. Sieff has covered conflicts in his native Northern Ireland, Israel and the West Bank, Indonesia, Bosnia, Azerbaijan, Georgia and the Baltic states. He has also reported from China, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Kazakhstan, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore, Syria, Egypt, Jordan, Kuwait, Turkey and more than 40 other nations.

Mr. Sieff led UPI’s political coverage of the 2000, 2004 and 2008 presidential election campaigns. From May 2005 to July 2007 he was UPI’s National Security Correspondent — and, from October 2003 to May 2005, he was its Chief Political Correspondent.

From 1994 to 1999, Mr. Sieff was Chief Foreign Correspondent for The Washington Times. He was the paper’s Soviet and East European correspondent covering the collapse of communism for six years from 1986 to 1992 and from 1992 to 1994 its State Department correspondent.

Mr. Sieff has been a columnist for The Globalist.com since 2002 and has appeared as an expert on Asian security affairs and the Middle East on National Public Radio, the Fox News Channel and C-SPAN. His work has been published in The American Conservative, the Wall Street Journal, Commentary, National Review and National Review Online and many other publications.

Mr. Sieff is a native of Belfast, Northern Ireland, where he covered the conflict as a young journalist for the Belfast Telegraph and the Belfast News-Letter from 1980 to 1985.

Mr. Sieff received his B.A. and M.A in modern history from Oxford University in 1972 and 1976. He did graduate work in Middle East studies at the London School of Economics from 1973 to 1976.

Mr. Sieff lives with his wife and three children in Maryland. He is a U.S. and Irish citizen.


     

Recent contributions:


The Unfashionably Successful Mr. Putin 
 
David Cameron: Embracing Europe in Churchill’s Footsteps 
 
Seven Billion Humans: The World Fritz Haber Made 
 
A Transatlantic Reversal of Fortune 
 
Lessons for Libya from 1911 
 
Britain’s Tabloid Cancer 
 
Germanica: The German Love Affair with America 
 

I met him in Dayton, Ohio a couple of weeks ago when we were both presenters at a seminar conducted by Alan L. Freed Associates.  Martin’s presentation was stunning and I was eager to invite him to be on my show.  

I hope you will be listening to what I expect will be an exciting and thought provoking program.
Please tell your friends and neighbors to tune in as well!

Here is a link to my program:

http://www.usaradionetwork.com/cutler.htm

If our government’s failures to secure our nation’s borders and effectively enforce our immigration laws concerns you or especially if it angers you, I ask you to call your Senators and Congressional “Representative. This is not only your right- it is your obligation! 

All I ask is that you make it clear to our politicians that we are not as dumb as they hope we are!

We live in a perilous world and in a perilous era. The survival of our nation and the lives of our citizens hang in the balance.

This is neither a Conservative issue, nor is it a Liberal issue- simply stated, this is most certainly an AMERICAN issue!

You are either part of the solution or you are a part of the problem!

Democracy is not a spectator sport!

Lead, follow or get out of the way!


-michael cutler- 

Please check out my website:

       


On Friday evenings from 7:00 PM until 8:00 PM Eastern Daylight Savings Time, I my show, “The Michael Cutler Hour” on the USA Talk Radio Network on Blog Talk Radio.

I hope you will be listening!  (Please tell your friends and neighbors!)

Here is a link to the program:


The Michael Cutler Hour 
Friday7pm Eastern


 Archived shows here:
  USA Talk Radio

The call-in number for a live show is 310-982-4145

Call in via Skype for free here
(while show is Live)


One thought on “On the radio this evening, Friday, June 29th on "The Michael Cutler Hour"”

  1. I disagree with the pimsree of the article, though I find it interesting. I don’t believe China is a status-quo power at all. China seeks to extend its influence throughout sub-Saharan Africa and SE Asia, partly at America’s expense. China’s opposition is not based on ideology, but geopolitics. But a revolution need not be ideological it might also be diplomatic or geo-political. In that sense, China does seek to upset the status quo. While I agree that the US should not seek to export democracy where there is no local support for it (and, after the Iraq War, it seems that the US is happy to deal with autocratic regimes like the Gulf States), there is nothing wrong with diplomatically supporting democratic movements in Lybia, Egypt and Syria. (And by the way, this policy is consistent with US policy since the 1940s, although its aplication has been uneven)If a democratic movement is allowed to be crushed, fascistic or repressive elements within the existing govt tend to take over anyway, whether or not there is support from the outside (see, e.g., Hungary 1956 or Iran 2009).

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