Only the abstract is available free of charge at link; I will however be on the lookout for further discussion of the research to add in comments
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Only the abstract is available free of charge at link; I will however be on the lookout for further discussion of the research to add in comments
Kidz these days, really this time: The situation is so bad that the DNC is considering disaffiliation with the national organization
By Shalia Dewan @ NYTimes.com, Nov. 13
The Kyle Rittenhouse and Ahmaud Arbery cases raise intriguing legal questions about people who take the law into their own hands and then claim self-defense when someone dies.
The documents released by a congressional committee lay out a timeline for how the Trump White House began to downplay the dangers posed by Covid-19.
By Erin Banco @ Politico.com, Nov. 11
New emails and documents released by a congressional committee investigating the Trump administration’s handling of the pandemic show the extent to which top White House officials interfered in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s efforts to warn Americans about Covid-19.
The House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis has conducted interviews over the last several months about how former President Donald Trump and his closest confidantes, including former White House adviser Scott Atlas and son-in-law Jared Kushner, tried to steer the course of the federal response, sidestepping the interagency process [....]
"It’s likely that Trump won a significant number of votes in these economically anxious communities with promises to create factory jobs and to stand up to a Democratic elite that had shipped those jobs overseas (and was planning to again with the Trans-Pacific Partnership). Recall how, in the 1990s, the Clintonites and their Democratic Leadership Council buddies rewarded the corporate donor class with NAFTA, leaving displaced factory workers behind. Martin reports that, in the 382 manufacturing counties where Trump votes grew, 496,000 factory jobs were lost from 2001 to 2019."
If only somebody had told us this before. Oh yeah they did. Four years ago.
A "study by professors from the University of Minnesota and Boston University concludes that Hillary Clinton’s narrow loss may be attributed to her relative hawkishness. For example, Trump came out in opposition to the Iraq War far earlier than Clinton grudgingly admitted it was a mistake. Likewise, analyses from such disparate and credible sources as Scientific American, CNN, and Fortune Magazine see Trump’s opposition to free trade as an important factor in his victory." http://halginsberg.com/democratic-opportunity/
Anybody want to bet that these facts start putting an end to the off-putting sanctimony that elite coastal chardonnay sippers have for working-class Americans who voted for Trump? Me neither.
Representative Darin LaHood voted against the infrastructure bill while Representative Adam Kinzinger supported it. The split reflects the Republican Party’s post-Trump era of uncertainty.
By Jonathan Weisman @ NYTimes.com, Nov. 11
WASHINGTON — For months, Representative Darin LaHood appeared to be a sure Republican vote for President Biden’s major infrastructure bill that had passed the Senate with bipartisan support and was awaiting House consideration.
His Illinois district includes the heart of the nation’s heavy construction equipment manufacturing industry [....]
His father, Ray LaHood, was a famously pro-infrastructure Republican member of the House who later served as President Barack Obama’s transportation secretary. And when the infrastructure bill was before the Senate this summer, the younger Mr. LaHood was an enthusiastic booster.
“I give the Biden administration and the bipartisan group of senators a lot of credit,” he told local reporters in July as he expressed optimism for a deal. “They keep working at this.”
Then last week, Mr. LaHood voted no, joining all but 13 of his fellow Republicans in opposition to the bill.
One of the 13 who voted for the measure was Representative Adam Kinzinger, who represents an Illinois district that adjoins Mr. LaHood’s.
The votes of both men say a lot about the Republican Party in an age of uncertainty [.....]