Stephan: Increasingly I see Trump as a symptom, not the disease. As we celebrate the 4th of July, and witness Trump turning it into a partisan fascist pep rally, tanks included, I think it is time to take stock of what has happened to us.
Trump supporters
Credit: Redstate.com
Independence Day presents a good opportunity to consider that many Americans act as if their young country is independent from the rest of the world. The former popularity of the mindless slogan, “My country right or wrong,” offers a perfect summary of America’s suicidal self-absorption. When the fireworks no longer illuminate the sky, the barbecue is down to bones, and the hangovers begin to commence, a genuine act of patriotism would insist on the widespread realization that small-minded chauvinism is not virtuous. One need to look no further than the early stages of the presidential campaign to survey the damage of a country’s inability to look beyond its own borders.
The provincialism of American culture renders its politics both farcical and dangerous. While it is encouraging to see previously “extreme” and “radical” ideas, such as socialized medicine, paid family leave and debt-free higher education, become mainstream in the Democratic Party, it is also amusing to imagine a French or Canadian observer watching American politicians debate a national health care program as if […]
2 Comments
Eric Alterman, Distinguished Professor of English at Brooklyn College - City University of New York - The New Yorker
Stephan: One of the little noticed effects of America's grotesque wealth inequality and the rise of Neo-feudalism is the dumbing down of the United States population and the loss of real information about our past. This article lays out the issue, and some of its implications.
Credit: George S. ZImbel/Getty
Having ignored questions of economic inequality for decades, economists and other scholars have recently discovered a panoply of effects that go well beyond the fact that some people have too much money and many don’t have enough. Inequality affects our physical and mental health, our ability to get along with one another and to make our voices heard and our political system accountable, and, of course, the futures that we can offer our children. Lately, I’ve noticed a feature of economic inequality that has not received the attention it deserves. I call it “intellectual inequality.”
I do not refer to the obvious and ineluctable fact that some people are smarter than others but, rather, to the fact that some people have the resources to try to understand our society while most do not. Late last year, Benjamin M. Schmidt, a professor of history at Northeastern University, published a study demonstrating that, for the past decade, history has been declining more rapidly than any […]
No Comments
Gary Silverman, - Financial Times (U.K.)
Stephan: One of the questions I have been asking myself is how did the religion of Christianity in the United States morph into the political cult of christofascism? Here is at least part of the answer.
Credit: Bloomberg
Please use the sharing tools found via the share button at the top or side of articles. Copying articles to share with others is a breach of FT.com T&Cs and Copyright Policy. Email licensing@ft.com to buy additional rights. Subscribers may share up to 10 or 20 articles per month using the gift article service. More information can be found here.
https://www.ft.com/content/b41d0ee6-1e96-11e7-b7d3-163f5a7f229c
I went down to Alabama a few weeks ago and had a religious experience. A man of God welcomed me into his home, poured us both cups of English tea and talked about what has been happening to Jesus Christ in the land of Donald Trump. My host was Wayne Flynt, an Alabaman who has made the people of the southern US his life’s work. A 76-year-old emeritus professor of history at Auburn University, he has written empathetically about his region in books such as Poor But Proud. A Baptist minister, he still teaches Sunday school at his church and delivered the eulogy at last […]
No Comments
Paul Rosenberg, - Raw Story
Stephan: The media talks a lot about christofascist White Southern men, but hardly a word is said about christofascist White Southern women. Well, here is an article that does, explaining why they matter, and the role they played in making Trump President..
White Southern christofascist women. Notice their hair, their dress. They all like like Stepford wives don’t they?
“The Long Southern Strategy,” a new book by political scientists Angie Maxwell and Todd Shields, first caught my eye because there’s a long history of denialism surrounding the “Southern strategy.” People sometimes claim that it’s a liberal myth or that it’s ancient history, or that wasn’t the real reason for the Southern realignment in American politics. That denialism has only intensified and grown more significant since the election of Donald Trump.
But Maxwell and Shields’ book turns out to be more than just well-timed, as its subtitle suggests: “How Chasing White Voters in the South Changed American Politics.” Rather than simply showing that the Southern strategy was a long-term phenomenon, the book shows that it was a continuously reshaped and evolving strategy, that it was multifaceted — involving gender and religion as crucially as race — and that in remaking the Republican Party and the South, it remade American politics as well. “The Long […]
No Comments
Stephan: As this article describes within 11 years 700 million people around the world will lack drinking water. What do you think those people will do? What would you do if you couldn't get a drink of water, flush a toilet, or wash yourself? Move? Become a refugee? Can you imagine what 700 million people on the move across the national borders of the world's nations is going to be like?
Everyone who studies the data can see this coming, but nothing is being done to prepare for it.
As civilization faces existential threats, Trump is trying to end long-term climate studies. Meanwhile, the global water crisis spurred by climate disruption continues to unfold dramatically.
Credit: Sawitree Pamee / Eyeem
Outside on my front porch, alder chip smoke billows out of my small smoker. The racks inside the tin smoker are filled with wild-caught Alaskan Coho salmon, provided to me by my friend Jonathan. He and his wife take their three daughters in their fishing boat and head north from our town on the north coast of Washington State’s Olympic Peninsula for the late summer salmon runs in Southeastern Alaska. They return with a hull full of frozen fish, for those of us here lucky enough to have placed our orders for it.
Several friends here attached to the land where I live are also outside, busy doing their own things: one is preparing his sailboat to launch in a week, another is working in the garden, two others are pitching a tent, another is out working his summer job with […]
No Comments