Illicit trade has been with us since the dawn of antiquity. We even glamorized the craft in folklore about the pirates on the high seas. Yet, the pace and sophistication of illicit trade has broken with all historical precedents over the last thirty years, according to Louise Shelley, author of 'Dark Commerce'. The anonymity of the dark web and payment in cryptocurrency have fueled the acceleration of trade in tangible and intangible goods. Not only is this bad for consumers who may be unaware that products purchased on the internet are inferior or unsafe, but this commerce is actually a key factor in the now galloping sixth great extinction on earth. It's compelling material which you will hear nowhere else.
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About America Trends Podcast:
You've come to a place where we look ahead, not entangled in the daily back and forth of the headlines. What will our society look like in 20 years? How vastly different are the forces at play which really drive us forward? Where we work....how we live....the way we run our businesses and even how we approach death...it's all fair game. We will take you just beyond the horizon. And in an age of exponential change, the way we are is not the way we will be. Curious minds only, please.
About Larry Rifkin:
Larry Rifkin has mastered the language of television and radio over his career in both.
Now, he turns his attention to podcasts, which he believes can incorporate some of the best of both media to create a new form of communication with an audience.
He wants to imprint his personality and editorial awareness on issues that will be with us for the long term.
Thus, he’s created, America Trends.
He’s been able to look at the media landscape both in public television and commercial radio to see where there were voids that needed to be filled.
So, for example, he brought to public television a series that became the most successful local franchise in the history of PBS stations. And nationally, his keen eye picked up on a void in children’s program and he brought along a series that revolutionized the field.
When he returned to commercial radio, his first love, after over a quarter century in public television, he built a new template for a talk program that could be smart, funny, whimsical and focused, and boundless in terms of the topics he chose to highlight.
He built a loyal listenership who recognized that they were being offered a distinct voice.
Now after 15 years in that medium, he is determined to help us all envision what the social and political future will look like in America.
He’s built a reputation of attracting the best talkers because of his meticulous reparation and a political sensibility that is more pragmatic, than dogmatic.
Come along for a new listening experience.
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