DiscoverThe 812113 [S2E16]: The Rev. Bill Breeden on War, the Death Penalty, and Protesting in Indiana
113 [S2E16]: The Rev. Bill Breeden on War, the Death Penalty, and Protesting in Indiana

113 [S2E16]: The Rev. Bill Breeden on War, the Death Penalty, and Protesting in Indiana

Update: 2024-09-11
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The Reverend Bill Breeden is perhaps most famous for a protest in 1987, when he stole a street sign in his nearby hometown of Odon, Indiana. It was named for John Poindexter, the admiral convicted of multiple felonies in the Iran-Contra affair during the Reagan administration. But that affair was the tip of the iceberg for this minister emeritus of the Bloomington Unitarian Church, who's had a long career as a peace activist. We talk about how anti-war protests, and the policing of them, have changed in Bloomington since the 1980s, and catch up with his more recent work as an opponent of the federal death penalty. 

In our Last Pitch today, we ask: consider the ostrich and its plumage. How would the city work if we applied...strategic ostrich thinking? 


The 812 is a production of Plateia Media ©2024. All rights reserved.

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113 [S2E16]: The Rev. Bill Breeden on War, the Death Penalty, and Protesting in Indiana

113 [S2E16]: The Rev. Bill Breeden on War, the Death Penalty, and Protesting in Indiana

Steve Volan / Plateia Media