Headlines:
Israel has issued a forced displacement order to residents of seven villages in southern Lebanon, including Houmine al-Faouqa, Bnaafoul, Arab Salim, Roumine, Aazze, Arki and Jbaa.
The Allan government has released a State Forest By-Products Framework that effectively creates a loophole for a new form of incentivised logging and land clearing, with fewer protections than the industry it replaced, and no public consultation.
Bulldozers have begun digging at Barrambin Victoria Park, following a weekend of protests against the planned construction of the 2032 Olympic stadium.
Brooklyn Rivera, an Indigenous leader, politician and activist, has died at age 73 after years in Nicaraguan state custody, prompting outcry from rights advocates.
Lisa Barrand is one of the founding members of Gippsland Forest Guardians and has joined the program on multiple occasions throughout the past few years to speak about the state of native forests in the Strzelecki Ranges, most notably Fellas Coupe and the endangered Slender Tree-Ferns. Lisa is back with us this morning to give an update regarding the Forest Stewardship Council and its interpretation of Principle 10.1 and what this could mean for the Mountain Ash native species forests in the Strzelecki's. For more information and updates regarding their campaign, head to https://www.gippslandforestguardians.org.au/
Lucinda Thorpe is a Privacy Campaigner at Digital Rights Watch, is back on Tuesday Breakfast this week to talk about an upcoming gig informing the public about the infiltration of AI in the music industry and raising funds for the work of Digital Rights Watch. How is generative AI being used to disempower artists and how is it changing the way we access music? Lucina speaks about the Electronic Musicians Against "A.I." Fundraiser taking place at The Tote on Sunday, 14 June 2026 2:30 pm. To buy tickets and find out more about the gig, go to https://thetotehotel.com/gig-guide/
Tabitha Lean is a First Nations prison advocate. On 18 May, Tabitha joined Marisa on Doin Time to discuss Crim Con, a gathering created by and for criminalised and formerly incarcerated people, grounded in the belief that the people most impacted by prisons, policing and punishment are not just participants in these conversations, but leaders, theorists, artists and organisers in their own right. Tabitha discusses how Crim Con shifts power back to people with lived experience of being incarcerated and criminalised and her work to challenge the colonial carceral state. Here is part of this interview between Tabitha and Marisa.
Kristin works with the Antipoverty Centre. Last week federal employment minister Amanda Rishworth gave an address at the National Press Club outlining changes to the employment services system. Kristin joins us to discuss what this shake-up to the system looks like, and how it will tangibly affect people on Jobseeker payments. We will also dig into whether this new model will better support job seekers and what changes are still needed.
Thinzar Shunlei Yi is a Myanmar Democracy activist, and director of Sisters2Sisters a women's rights and feminist collective. In the second half of the interview, Thinzar speaks about the intention behind the ban of menstural products in Myanmar and the work Sisters2Sisters is acting upon in response. Here is part two of the conversation, which initially aired on Women on the Line on Monday 25 May.
songs:
nabii (Grace Kim) is a Korean-Australian artist/producer/DJ, blending hyperpop and trance to create emotional, euphoric dance music. This is her most recent song 'in my room!' that was released last month
Born and raised on Meanjin land, Filipino/Cambodian musician 'ixaras' makes predominantly indie-rock music, and started her own label, antidismal music. This is 'new to this'.
Phuong, Juliette, Fiza, Elena, Julia, Kannagi