MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
Edit to add original source:
Comments
Good point to add:
by artappraiser on Sat, 10/06/2018 - 9:43pm
solidarity returns to the GOP, at least temporarily:
by artappraiser on Sun, 10/07/2018 - 12:30am
Screwing someone and assholism are their only metrics. Not quite idealists.
by PeraclesPlease on Sun, 10/07/2018 - 1:35am
Smith makes a good point about measuring division by awful things people do to each other. But it is not crazy talk to note how bitter political discourse has become. The take no prisoner methodology of Gingrich is hard to step back from once it is started.
by moat on Sun, 10/07/2018 - 4:47pm
Offered just as a thought provoker, I don't know if I necessarily agree simply because of how fast our society can change now. It may no be a long lasting thing. Just compare Trump vs. Obama. There could be backlash. The millennial generation is huge and will influence where this goes and boomers influence less as more are in the nursing home or grave. I definitely sense that Trump will eventually tire people about expressing outrage on social media soon and that will affect things. A majority of people can only sustain angry passion for so long, that why they created a label of "fringe" for those who can't.
Look at the radicals of the late 60's and early 70's. By the late 70's, Jerry Rubin was a networking enterpreneur. And the rest of us were using up our outrage at the gas station.
by artappraiser on Sun, 10/07/2018 - 1:41pm
by Peter (not verified) on Sun, 10/07/2018 - 4:08pm
I can hear that something terrible happened to you when you were young.
Do you have any way to corroborate your story?
by moat on Sun, 10/07/2018 - 4:26pm
Jerry Rubin:
Quotes -
Don't trust anyone over thirty.
Most men act so tough and strong on the outside because on the inside, we are scared, weak, and fragile. Men, not women, are the weaker sex.
Phil Ochs:
by barefooted on Sun, 10/07/2018 - 5:19pm
by Peter (not verified) on Sun, 10/07/2018 - 9:45pm
You have gotten on to the wrong bus. Those fellow travelers you are shaking pom poms with don't want what you say you want.
by moat on Mon, 10/08/2018 - 6:55am
Strikes me from the reveals on this thread that Peter might some solidarity with another member here using the name Lulu, if only they had a chance to sit down and share war stories over a beer. Peter's love for the use of the snowflake derogative in an odd manner confused things all to heck. Semiology matters! We can't communicate well if we have different meanings for slurs. So of course, now I am thinking about the meaning of the term "Identity Politics"....
by artappraiser on Mon, 10/08/2018 - 7:22am
Your arguments over terms with Lulu reflect a difference of viewpoint about what is happening and what can be changed. You are not incomprehensible to each other. As a witness to the conversation, I can sort out my opinion of where you actually disagree with each other and where you talk past each other. Other witnesses have other opinions.
Peter is not trying to persuade anybody here that what he thinks is the truth. He is announcing our impending death without interest in whether we understand why we are dying.
The snowflake stuff is the rhetoric of class war where Peter plays the proletariat consciousness denouncing the "liberal" bourgeoisie. Sort of like Lenin without the chewy Marxist center. Now combine that inchoate substance with a heaping portion of blood and soil to establish the privilege that the enemy is hell bent upon taking away from poor victims of equal rights. Hard to say what this thing is he is speaking for but I hear the announcement of my impending death clearly enough. This is not a conversation.
by moat on Mon, 10/08/2018 - 10:24am
the proletariat consciousness denouncing the "liberal" bourgeoisie. Sort of like Lenin without the chewy Marxist center.
Ah yes, thank you for the reminder. It was so long ago that I heard this stuff (and regurgitated it myself for a short while) that I tend to forget these finer points, hah.
Still, who'd ever imagine back in those days that a (supposed) billionaire with tastes that are virtually a stereotype illustrating the french term bourgeois would become an inspiration to the proletariat consciousness. I cannot handle Peter's cognitive dysfunction as well as you, sorry, it is simply far too complex for like a SNL parody, very few would recognize it.
Edit to add: I wasn't referring to Lulu about the miscommunication issue, that was about someone else here and their definition of "identity politics".
by artappraiser on Mon, 10/08/2018 - 10:50am
I cannot make heads or tails out of it. I doubt the generator of the rhetoric can either.
by moat on Mon, 10/08/2018 - 11:31am
You're flattering Peter - he just goes for scorched earth, insults on insults. As long as "liberals" are uncomfortable, he's content, whatever it means to real people in real life. When he waxes nostalgic about Yippies it just means he likes jokey motherfuckers like Rubin and Trump who can do marketing/be-ins that overturns the apple cart. He's a chaos monkey without actual ideology, just a sports team to root for.
by PeraclesPlease on Mon, 10/08/2018 - 11:44am
by Peter (not verified) on Mon, 10/08/2018 - 1:58pm
I am feeling the love.
Too bad your model fails to include any working class people who are not white and/or female. Or all the working class people who understand that your team is increasing the power of wealth over others. Or the fact that corporations are just as global as they were before you got on the bus with Mitch.
But I appreciate you dropping the smarmy concern troll crap and just got down to celebrating our demise.
by moat on Mon, 10/08/2018 - 2:15pm
Here's a nice rant on Rubin & Libertarianism and how jacked up their supposed protest is...
http://exiledonline.com/radicals-imbeciles-fbi-stooges-from-jerry-rubin-...
by PeraclesPlease on Sun, 10/07/2018 - 5:22pm
Interesting site. The very different contributors are seriously into documents.
Anecdotal note that cannot be verified: When I was a very young man in Colorado, I knew some hippies who scoffed when I showed them my copy of Steal This Book. I remember one encounter very clearly:
"We are trying to prove to others that our way doesn't have to kill other people in order to live with other people. This is just more binary shit that will get people killed."
by moat on Sun, 10/07/2018 - 6:07pm
wise person, great quote, I would remember it too if it had been said to me. Makes me think about how there were actually a lot of sympathetic grownups involved in "the movement" trying to guide us, but we didn't often listen that closely, we knew better....or we weren't communicating well...whatever...
by artappraiser on Sun, 10/07/2018 - 6:12pm
That is the generation gap, not being able to complete the circles started before and giving the same problem to the ones who follow.
by moat on Sun, 10/07/2018 - 6:33pm
by Peter (not verified) on Sun, 10/07/2018 - 9:57pm
Oh, I imagine he just thinks both of them are clueless and suck, even if in different ways.
(apparently Rubin's book on sex between the sheets is even more bizarrely awful as well)
You have a different opinion?
by PeraclesPlease on Mon, 10/08/2018 - 8:29am
by Peter (not verified) on Mon, 10/08/2018 - 2:30pm
I am doing none of that, I am trying in a feeble way to get info. on which way the world is going to go in the next decade in order to know how to plan for me and mine. Personally, I actually pretty much loathe political activism.ever since they made us go to pep rallies in high school. Though I did the radical thing for a short while as a freshman in college which I quickly dropped for the new and exciting disco world where straights mixed with gays.
Since you do appear to be a political activist, though, I would love it if you answered moat's question above.
I can hear that something terrible happened to you when you were young.
Do you have any way to corroborate your story?
by artappraiser on Sun, 10/07/2018 - 6:08pm
Corroborate or combobulate?
by PeraclesPlease on Sun, 10/07/2018 - 6:59pm
It's 1968. The candidates. The democratic convention.
It's Vietnam... Peter is a very disaffected liberal. My suspicion is that he's not a young man; he's extremely bitter.
by barefooted on Mon, 10/08/2018 - 12:14am
One more fed up with the partisan hatred gaming, not going to partake anymore:
Why I’m Leaving the Republican Party
The Kavanaugh confirmation fight revealed the GOP to be the party of situational ethics and moral relativism in the name of winning at all costs.
By Tom Nichols (Tom Nichols is a professor at the U.S. Naval War College), @ TheAtlantic.com, Oct. 7
by artappraiser on Sun, 10/07/2018 - 9:31pm
Both sides do it'ism. Except Mitch told them he was going to plow this through, withheld the normal records, expedited the schedule, and as usual sidelined the Dems in the process despite revious perjury and real evidence of covered up heavy judicial activism. But instead of accepting this fait accompli the Dems acted execrably. They leaked something that was supposed to be left buried. They acted as if Kavanaugh had alread committed perjury when he had, or that he had distributed stolen Democratic Congressional papers, which he had.
Fuck Radio Tom.
by PeraclesPlease on Mon, 10/08/2018 - 12:54am
Yep, false "both sides do it'ism" from Nichols.
Mann and Ornstein, two devoted establishment non-partisans, factually demonstrated that there is nothing remotely close to equivalence between the two major parties, in It's Even Worse Than You Think. The Republican party, both procedurally in terms of their politics is war by other means MO and the deviation of their substantive agenda from majority public opinion on most issues, has gone far to the extreme radical right. Much, much farther than the Democratic party has moved away from its "center" before the Southern Democrats exited.
Those who consider themselves above the fray "moderates" or "centrists" have nowhere now to go other than to the Democratic party. They can pretend as though they have no dog in this fight. I fundamentally disagree. It is not opinion but fact that one partisan side is well off the rails, both in terms of any sort of commitment to minimal operating norms necessary to have a functioning government, and in terms of its radical right wing policy agenda far outside the mainstream of public opinion in this country. All of which former GOP warrior Jennifer Rubin fully seems to grasp.
By no means does this mean I have no criticisms of or dissatisfactions with the Democratic party, in re to any offering the idiotic strawman "you're an apologist for the Democratic party" retort. And I challenge anyone to find any Democrat who does not feel the same way.
by AmericanDreamer on Mon, 10/08/2018 - 1:00pm