Near the beginning of The Trial of the Chicago 7, Jerry Rubin and Abbie Hoffman walk the gauntlet of court steps, surrounded by an extravagance of anger and mutual hostility: Culture and counter-culture in two seething blobs of mutual loathing amidst the ricochet of crossfire invective.
Once inside the courthouse Hoffman turns to the apparently stunned Rubin. “Ah you aaright?” He asks.
“I was until I saw that,” Rubin replies. (Rubin, in fact, stalks the entire movie with that stunned look.)
The pair continue walking through the grand lobby of the Chicago courthouse until they approach another, smaller gauntlet. It…
It is not just that Donald Trump lies. It is not just that any particular member of the GOP lies.
It is, also, that the lies are so readily accepted by some voters.
The lies are either believed, wholesale, in an immoral credulity, or wielded in an amoral ruthlessness — Narrative as blunt force trauma. It is this particular and malignant symbiosis between the liars and those willing to accept the lie in service to their goals, that is the damage. …
We can safely abandon the doctrine of the eighties, namely that the rich were not working because they had too little money, the poor because they had too much. John Kenneth Galbraith, 1991.
A theory of economics, as told by a conservative, is that if you put more money in the pockets of some people, those people will create jobs.
On the entire other hand, that same conservative will tell you that, if you put more money in the pockets of some people, those people will lose jobs.
What the what?
In the first instance, the money is about tax…
“Your representative owes you, not his industry only, but his judgment; and he betrays, instead of serving you, if he sacrifices it to your opinion.” Edmund Burke.
The Republican Party is caught in a trap: Senators and Congressmen/women, representatives of people, in great fear of the Trump voters, are completely in thrall to Donald Trump. The Trump voters, then, as they see devotion to Donald Trump rewarded with the obsequious behavior of their elected representatives, double down on their devotion to Trump.
It is a trap because this is not democratic representation, this is merely delegation: a willingness, upon the…
Netflix’s new prestige drama, The Dig is based on a true story. On the eve of World War II, a wealthy Englishwoman, Edith Pretty, (Carey Mulligan) hires the unlettered Basil Brown (Ralph Fiennes) to excavate some earthen mounds on her property. The title of the movie is simultaneously straightforward and also metaphor and also metacognizant: where characters deliberately dig into the geography, searching for something meaningful and tangible, their emotions, prejudices, and fears lying beneath the placid surface of life in the east English countryside mutely push against the contours of that life, begging for excavation and exegesis.
What we…
Senator Rand Paul isn’t happy. Fact is, he’s spitting mad. After Joe Biden’s Inaugural Address in January he ran to Fox News with claims to have been treated most unjustly:
“If you read his speech and listen to it carefully, much of it is thinly veiled innuendo,” Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) said during an interview on Fox News, “calling us white supremacists, calling us racists, calling us every name in the book.”
This is from the Senator who deliberately held up a federal anti-lynching law the week after George Floyd was murdered… (… and, not for nothing, did you know…
At least, that’s the purported take-away after reading a lot of… well… malarky
One week into the Biden Administration and I’m seeing headlines above excoriations decrying the imminent failure of the administration. I won’t link to the actual pieces, as they are legion, but I will single out Lauren Elizabeth, Shannon Ashley and umair haque as particularly egregious.
What the what?
If the great sin on the American Right is a casually cruel melange of immoral credulity and amoral truthiness the corresponding and opposite sin on the Left is an admixture of seething impatience wedded to a blind hubris. We…
As the 117th Congress met to tally and certify the Presidential vote in the 2020 election on January 6, 2021, they were interrupted by a violent mob. The intruders had forced their way into the Capital building and had spent several hours searching for Senators and Representative. In addition to makeshift weapons like sticks and fire extinguishers, some of the intruders had holstered sidearms and were carrying zip-tie restraints, like the kind police use in crowd control. The Congress had fled the chambers, some evacuating the building, others bunkered in their offices, barricading doors with furniture. The intruders, American citizens…
The return of Tom Joad
I arrived in Sarasota some time ago, on a pastel sunny day, when it was nearly 80 degrees, and the deep green palm leaves on the trees slowly rippling in the lazy breeze. At the end of my rope, after a nightmare year of pandemic and lockdown, I was offered a place to stay in the hopes of getting back on my feet. So I came to Sarasota.
After the slow bore of quarantine and a negative test, my host took me for a ride-around Sarasota. We saw some of the interesting architecture and the…
Wednesday, as the joint House and Senate was about to meet in congress to tally and to certify the votes of the several states, a Trump rally turned into, first a march, then a protest, then a melee and, finally, a rout of the DC police. For the first time ever, the Confederate Flag was openly taken into the Capitol Building of the Union. Windows were broken. People were injured and some died.
A foolhardy band of, mostly, men — acting on the loosest of conspiracies — broke windows, faced off against police, looted various office buildings, defecated on the…