"Daily Dose of Dennis" is Exclusive to Pragertopia Members Only!
Pragertopia members will still get their daily dose of Dennis. These are the best Prager Show segments and interviews ever recorded, automatically delivered to your podcast feed!
PLUS: Get all the many amazing benefits Pragertopia PLUS has to offer.
Become a Member Today!Prager H3: Per usual, callers set the agenda: should parents monitor what their high school students are listening to; how do you honor your mother when she’s stealing from you;should public schools teach diversity.
Prager H2: Dennis welcomes back Dr. Stephen Marmer, clinical professor of psychiatry at UCLA and psychiatrist in private practice in Brentwood, CA. Dr. Marmer outlines three levels of forgiveness and how they relate to personal happiness.
Prager H1: Elmhurst College introduces sexual preference as part of their diversity program… Ahmadinejad calls for “the eradication” of Israel… Sea levels are dropping. Aren’t they supposed to be rising?… The sculptor of the ML King memorial has done many sculptures for the Chinese Communist government, including sculptures celebrating the greatest mass murderer in history, Mao.
Prager H3: Who or what is to blame for the childhood obesity?
Prager H2: Mark talks more about his personal connection to Rick Perry and why he’s enthusiastic about Perry’s run for President and why he has doubts.
Prager H1: Endless regulations, even for goat herders, are strangling business, costing jobs across the economy… Mark goes way back with Rick Perry. They attended the same college and hung out together and have remained friends. He shares some of his personal observations about the Texas governor.
Prager H3: A black congresswoman does the obvious – blame problems in black life on racism and the Tea Party. Who else could it be? Callers weigh in.
Prager H2: Is growing older harder for men or for women? A Best of Prager Hour. Originally broadcast on February 17, 2010.
Prager H1: Dennis talks to James Hannam, science historian. His new book is The Genesis of Science: How the Christian Middle Ages Launched the Scientific Revolution