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    <title>Pinboard (matthewmcvickar)</title>
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  </channel><item rdf:about="https://www.nytimes.com/2022/10/21/opinion/minority-rule-majoritarian-democracy.html">
    <title>Jamelle Bouie: What if We Let Majoritarian Democracy Take Root? (NY Times)</title>
    <dc:date>2022-10-24T06:33:05+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.nytimes.com/2022/10/21/opinion/minority-rule-majoritarian-democracy.html</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>If it were up to the national majority, American democracy would most likely be in a stronger place, not the least because Donald Trump might not have become president. Our folk beliefs about American government notwithstanding, the much-vaunted guardrails and endlessly invoked norms of our political system have not secured our democracy as much as they’ve facilitated the efforts of those who would degrade and undermine it.

Majority rule is not perfect but rule by a narrow, reactionary minority — what we face in the absence of serious political reform — is far worse. And much of our fear of majorities, the legacy of a founding generation that sought to restrain the power of ordinary people, is unfounded. It is not just that rule of the majority is, as Abraham Lincoln said, “the only true sovereign of a free people”; it is also the only sovereign that has reliably worked to protect those people from the deprivations of hierarchy and exploitation.

If majoritarian democracy, even at its most shackled, is a better safeguard against tyranny and abuse than our minoritarian institutions, then imagine how we might fare if we let majoritarian democracy actually take root in this country. The liberty of would-be masters might suffer. The liberty of ordinary people, on the other hand, might flourish.
</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>america politics history</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/oct/14/kanye-west-keeps-moving-further-and-further-to-the-right-why">
    <title>Derecka Purnell: Kanye West keeps moving further and further to the right. Why? (The Guardian)</title>
    <dc:date>2022-10-16T04:52:13+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/oct/14/kanye-west-keeps-moving-further-and-further-to-the-right-why</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>The problem is, Kanye behaves as if the only real and brave truth tellers today are conservatives with money. He acts as if the rich right wing holds a monopoly on criticisms of the Democratic party or liberal activists. This ignores a host of progressives and radicals – people like Cornel West, Nick Estes, Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, Mariame Kaba, Aja Monet, the Rev Jeremiah Wright, and too many artists and grassroots organizers to name who criticise the liberal establishment more fiercely than the right and with commitments to end oppression. In fact, entire progressive and radical traditions exist where people of all races offer vigorous critiques of the status quo with surgical precision. We need fewer “free thinkers” and more critical thinkers who ask about these traditions and find their places within them.

The question for me is whether billionaire Kanye can ever really know about these robust traditions. Not because he doesn’t already know or will never learn about them, but because to know them is to also learn their critiques of gross wealth accumulation, Black capitalism, desire for imperial leadership, and so much more of what Kanye currently represents. Supporting free thinkers with weak conservative analysis does not threaten his status, land, antisemitic views or bank account.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>racism america wealth capitalism music</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
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<item rdf:about="http://www.its-her-factory.com/2022/07/scotus-to-us-there-is-no-such-thing-as-civil-society/">
    <title>Robin James: SCOTUS to US: There is no such thing as civil society</title>
    <dc:date>2022-07-15T15:26:32+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>http://www.its-her-factory.com/2022/07/scotus-to-us-there-is-no-such-thing-as-civil-society/</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>Civil society was something that existed among white Europeans and which was supposedly lacking among indigeneous peoples across the rest of the globe. Because personhood and all the rights that go with that status were thought to exist only in civil society and not in the state of nature, it was then no violation to colonize land thought to be in the state of nature or to treat people thought to be in that state as property. Social contract theory used the idea of “civil society” to justify the colonial/racial project of excluding non-white people from personhood.

[…]

By de-funding public education, rendering public space inherently more risky, and eliminating the right to privacy in one’s sexual and reproductive choices, these three decisions all eliminate the existence of a key element of classically liberal social ontology: the civil private sphere (i.e., the realm of civil privacy, the private sector, etc.). Put simply, they’re reworking the way the U.S. Constitution models the relation between public and private from the classically liberal model the framers used in the 18th century into a neoliberal one premised on the idea that, as Margaret Thatcher infamously put it, “there is no such thing as society.” In this neoliberal model, there is no civil society (e.g., public space, the realm of individual civil privacy, etc.) and the state only exists to enforce the boundaries of the patriarchal racial capitalist framing of the domestic private sphere.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>america society</dc:subject>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.commonwealmagazine.org/three-cheers-socialism">
    <title>David Bentley Hart: Three Cheers for Socialism (Commonweal Magazine)</title>
    <dc:date>2022-07-15T15:25:43+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.commonwealmagazine.org/three-cheers-socialism</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>In the late modern world something like socialism is the only possible way of embodying Christian love in concrete political practices.

---

Americans are, of course, the most thoroughly and passively indoctrinated people on earth. They know next to nothing as a rule about their own history, or the histories of other nations, or the histories of the various social movements that have risen and fallen in the past, and they certainly know little or nothing of the complexities and contradictions comprised within words like “socialism” and “capitalism.” Chiefly, what they have been trained not to know or even suspect is that, in many ways, they enjoy far fewer freedoms, and suffer under a more intrusive centralized state, than do the citizens of countries with more vigorous social-democratic institutions. This is at once the most comic and most tragic aspect of the excitable alarm that talk of social democracy or democratic socialism can elicit on these shores. An enormous number of Americans have been persuaded to believe that they are freer in the abstract than, say, Germans or Danes precisely because they possess far fewer freedoms in the concrete. They are far more vulnerable to medical and financial crisis, far more likely to receive inadequate health coverage, far more prone to irreparable insolvency, far more unprotected against predatory creditors, far more subject to income inequality, and so forth, while effectively paying more in tax (when one figures in federal, state, local, and sales taxes, and then compounds those by all the expenditures that in this country, as almost nowhere else, their taxes do not cover). One might think that a people who once rebelled against the mightiest empire on earth on the principle of no taxation without representation would not meekly accept taxation without adequate government services. But we accept what we have become used to, I suppose. Even so, one has to ask, what state apparatus in the “free” world could be more powerful and tyrannical than the one that taxes its citizens while providing no substantial civic benefits in return, solely in order to enrich a piratically overinflated military-industrial complex and to ease the tax burdens of the immensely wealthy?

[…]

…where health care in particular is concerned, Americans are slaves thrice-bound: wholly at the mercy of a government that despoils them for the sake of the rich, as well as of employers from whom they will receive only such benefits as the law absolutely requires, as well as of insurance companies that can rob them of the care for which they have paid.

[…]

States depend upon capital for revenues, material goods, and political patronage. Without the support of an omnicompetent, vastly prosperous, orderly, and violent state, global corporate capitalism could not thrive. Without corporations, the modern state would lack the resources necessary to perpetuate its supremacy over every sphere of life.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>capitalism christianity politics socialism america</dc:subject>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.readthepresentage.com/p/johnny-depp-amber-heard?s=r">
    <title>The bleak spectacle of the Amber Heard-Johnny Depp trial</title>
    <dc:date>2022-06-02T20:50:17+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.readthepresentage.com/p/johnny-depp-amber-heard?s=r</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>All of this — the bad-faith scrutiny, the obsession with minor discrepancies, the confidence that vast conspiracies can be discovered on Google — is instantly recognizable from previous explosions of internet-enabled misogynistic bullying. The “body language experts” that swarmed around Heard spent years applying the same junk science to Amanda Knox, Meghan Markle, and Carole Baskin. The gremlins who targeted Anita Sarkeesian during Gamergate pretended to be offended by the (extremely minor) technical errors in her videos rather than her presence in their boy’s-only treehouse. 

The best evidence for the motivations behind the anti-Heard campaign is that while her every slip-up has been dissected ad nauseum, Depp’s far more numerous and consequential discrepancies have been all but ignored. His testimony that he was too high on opioids to attack Heard during the airplane incident, for example, contradicts his own text messages (“angry, aggro injun in a fuckin blackout”) from the day after. His absurd denials of his drug problem belie his own contemporaneous communications and bolster Heard’s account. In the final week of the Virginia trial, he bafflingly claimed that he hadn’t sent text messages from his own phone — I guess someone hacked into it and sent texts that sound exactly like him? 

[…]

Heard is not a perfect victim and has never claimed to be. In her own testimony, she admitted to engaging in screaming matches, fighting back, and insulting Depp in the final year of the relationship. The judge in the UK trial said there was probably some truth in Depp’s accusation that Heard was condescending about his drug use, something that triggered his sense of internalized shame and, ultimately, his rage. The psychologist who saw them in 2015 said both partners had poor communication skills and weren’t able to de-escalate fights or have productive conflicts.

This is all damning evidence against Heard and I see no reason not to believe it. But remember: The relationship at the heart of this case was one in which the smaller, less powerful partner has evidence of at least 10 serious incidents of violence. Black eyes, bloody lips, trashed homes, chunks of ripped-out hair on the carpet. WHY ARE WE TALKING ABOUT WHETHER SHE WAS ANNOYING SOMETIMES?

[…]

If you entertain the possibility that Heard has not concocted an elaborate hoax but is in fact an actual domestic abuse victim, having an emotional reaction when her husband shows up and merrily announces that he has broken his promise to her — a broken promise which may put her safety at risk — her actions suddenly make more sense.

[…]

There is almost no evidence that the op-ed had any effect on Depp’s career. Over the previous decade, Depp had released a string of high-profile bombs (The Rum Diary, Alice Through the Looking Glass, Transcendence, The Lone Ranger, Mortdecai, Dark Shadows — I haven’t even heard of most of these) and had been the subject of numerous articles documenting his dimming star power. For years, set leakers reported that he showed up late and drunk and needed an earpiece to remember his lines (Depp says he used it to listen to music).

[…]

In hindsight, the verdict came down the minute the judge allowed the case to be televised. Jurors weren’t sequestered or sheltered from the internet in any way, meaning they were likely exposed to the same bad-faith memes and out-of-context clips as everyone else. Plus, this case has been swirling around the internet for years, making an impartial jury an impossibility in the first place. One man was allowed to stay in the jury pool after revealing a text from his wife that read, “Amber is psychotic.” 

I have no idea what happens next, but I do know that Depp’s unbelievably cynical strategy to discredit his ex-wife’s abuse claims (Jessica Winter called it “a high-budget, general-admission form of revenge porn”) was a resounding success. Heard is now one of the most hated figures in America. Even if she overturns the decision on appeal, she will likely never be cast in a major Hollywood role again — what studio wants to risk a hostile internet campaign before they even start shooting?

Depp’s core claim — women advance their careers by accusing powerful men of abuse — doesn’t even hold up to the evidence of his own abuse accusation. Heard is ruined; Depp is in pre-production for his next role; other alleged abusers are already copying his legal strategy. 

And outside the courtroom, America’s march backward toward the 1950s continues apace.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>celebrity abuse law america</dc:subject>
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<item rdf:about="https://www.todayintabs.com/p/what-can-we-do?s=r">
    <title>Rusty Foster: What Are You Willing to Do? (Today in Tabs)</title>
    <dc:date>2022-05-26T03:57:14+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.todayintabs.com/p/what-can-we-do?s=r</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>The truth is, I don’t know what to do. I hugged my own third grader goodbye this morning and sent her off to school. The middle school she’ll attend in three years is remote today because they discovered “threats” in a bathroom. We live in a country where statistically, until age 19, she is most likely to die of a gunshot wound. So what am I willing to do? Anything. </blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>guns america politics</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:b023b60eaec5/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:guns"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:politics"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.thedailybeast.com/donald-rumsfeld-killer-of-400000-people-dies-peacefully">
    <title>Spencer Ackerman: Donald Rumsfeld, Killer of 400,000 People, Dies Peacefully (Daily Beast)</title>
    <dc:date>2021-06-30T23:09:28+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.thedailybeast.com/donald-rumsfeld-killer-of-400000-people-dies-peacefully</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>Do not mourn the defense secretary. Mourn his victims. There were nearly too many to tally, but his Pentagon refused to count anyway.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>politics war history america iraq afghanistan obituary</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:bbfabbae59ca/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:politics"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:war"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:history"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:iraq"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:afghanistan"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:obituary"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://local.theonion.com/something-about-the-way-society-was-exposed-as-complete-1846251067">
    <title>Something About The Way Society Was Exposed As Complete Illusion Over Past Year Really Getting Man Down Today (The Onion)</title>
    <dc:date>2021-02-19T22:46:21+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://local.theonion.com/something-about-the-way-society-was-exposed-as-complete-1846251067</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>VANCOUVER, WA—Unable to shake off an overall negative feeling he couldn’t attribute to anything in particular, local man Paul Carpenter confirmed Monday that something about the way society was exposed as a complete illusion over the past year was really getting him down today. “Maybe it’s just quarantine talking, but the reality dawning on me that American life is a fundamentally hollow cesspool of spectacle and misery is really bumming me out lately,” said Carpenter, adding that he had the vague idea that living in a social system based on brutal competition that made all human relationships transactional and perverted the very idea of community might have something to do with it. “I can’t put my finger on it, but maybe I’m just really tired of the coronavirus pandemic, which wasn’t mishandled as some people say but in fact shown to be rationally handled by a group of insulated wealthy individuals who can pursue their greedy desires with the full knowledge that a vast percentage of Americans are economically superfluous and thus willing to fight among themselves for scraps? On the other hand, though, maybe it’s the stress of a news cycle in which people from both political parties are invested in a series of increasingly baroque conspiracy theories guided by the grotesque and increasingly obvious lies we tell ourselves about American exceptionalism that’s making me feel kind of sad. There’s just this nagging feeling I have that it became very clear over the past 12 months that the basic building blocks of society are crumbling and there is absolutely no plan for changing anything at any level to avoid plunging the vast majority of humanity into cycles of ever-worsening suffering and violence. Maybe it’s just that being fundamentally powerless and living among other similarly disenfranchised, surveilled, and downtrodden people have made me feel completely alienated from any kind of community at all, or maybe I just need to get more sleep.” Carpenter added that he did plan to address the way he’d been feeling lately, perhaps by tuning out of the news and letting other people who weren’t ever even afforded the option to believe in the illusions of American society figure out what to do, or by trying to exercise more.
</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>comedy america politics covid19</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:55a61ace7ef0/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:comedy"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:politics"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:covid19"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://verysmartbrothas.theroot.com/55-ways-white-people-say-white-people-without-actuall-1845706752">
    <title>Damon Young: 55 Ways White People Say ‘White People’ Without Actually Saying ‘White People’ (Updated)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-11-28T00:16:25+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://verysmartbrothas.theroot.com/55-ways-white-people-say-white-people-without-actuall-1845706752</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>1. Americans
2. Real Americans
3. Middle America
4. Working-class Americans
5. Patriots
6. Europeans
7. Southerners
8. Midwesterners
9. Millennials
10. Christians</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>america racism politics language</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:1038f4b287c9/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:racism"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:politics"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:language"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://popula.com/2020/11/13/for-shame/">
    <title>Maria Bustillos: No Olive Branch (Popula)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-11-16T18:16:54+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://popula.com/2020/11/13/for-shame/</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>Stop asking sane people to lovingly accept those who cheered on a man who has done grave and permanent damage to this world. It’s outrageous that half the country should be asked to exhibit mercy while the other half is permitted to wallow in its criminality and ignorance.

[…]

Americans have a sliver of a chance to demonstrate that there is some conscience left among us by requiring those who did harm to apologize, and if they do not, to be denied any further role in public life. And obviously, it’s incredible that this needs to be said, but those who are guilty of crimes must be prosecuted (just for a change!) The absence of accountability means condoning wrongdoing, as a glance at cable TV news, with its parade of war criminal guests, can show you.

Demanding accountability is what being ‘reasonable’ requires of us. Being ‘empathetic’ means empathy for those who’ve been harmed, before we begin even to think of empathizing with those who’ve done harm. It’s an insult to every family broken by ICE, an insult to George Floyd, to ask that Trump voters be forgiven in the absence of a total and credible apology from them, and a repudiation of all the wrong they’ve done.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>politics america trump republicans</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:ff0c780d9518/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:politics"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:trump"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:republicans"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/30/opinion/trump-presidents-history.html?auth=login-email&amp;fbclid=IwAR1ZlhbXkpg8ynsTFRSq9BiZQ8K5yjt7rZKop0WzwToC69DDbAcJtLoIe40&amp;login=email">
    <title>Jamelle Bouie: Don’t Fool Yourself. Trump Is Not an Aberration. (NYT)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-10-30T16:34:40+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/30/opinion/trump-presidents-history.html?auth=login-email&amp;fbclid=IwAR1ZlhbXkpg8ynsTFRSq9BiZQ8K5yjt7rZKop0WzwToC69DDbAcJtLoIe40&amp;login=email</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>Many of the worst things the president has said and done were said and done by his predecessors.

---

For as much as it seems that Donald Trump has changed something about the character of this country, the truth is he hasn’t. What is terrible about Trump is also terrible about the United States. Everything we’ve seen in the last four years — the nativism, the racism, the corruption, the wanton exploitation of the weak and unconcealed contempt for the vulnerable — is as much a part of the American story as our highest ideals and aspirations. The line to Trump runs through the whole of American history, from the white man’s democracy of Andrew Jackson to the populist racism of George Wallace, from native expropriation to Chinese exclusion.

And to the extent that Americans feel a sense of loss about the Trump era, they should be grateful, because it means they’ve given up their illusions about what this country is, and what it is (and has been) capable of.

There is very little about Donald Trump or his policies that doesn’t have a direct antecedent in the American past. Despite what Joe Biden might say about its supposedly singular nature (“The way he deals with people based on the color of their skin, their national origin, where they’re from, is absolutely sickening”), the president’s racism harkens right back to the first decades of the 20th century, when white supremacy was ascendant and the nation’s political elites, including presidents like Woodrow Wilson, were preoccupied with segregation and exclusion for the sake of preserving an “Anglo-Saxon” nation.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>trump politics america history racism</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:0eedadf8c48b/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:trump"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:politics"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:history"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:racism"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/14/opinion/sunday/coronavirus-racism-african-americans.html?action=click&amp;module=RelatedLinks&amp;pgtype=Article">
    <title>Jamelle Bouie: Why Coronavirus Is Killing African-Americans More Than Others (NYT)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-10-11T19:58:46+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/14/opinion/sunday/coronavirus-racism-african-americans.html?action=click&amp;module=RelatedLinks&amp;pgtype=Article</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>To give just a few, relevant examples, black Americans are more likely to work in service sector jobs, least likely to own a car and least likely to own their homes. They are therefore more likely to be in close contact with other people, from the ways they travel to the kinds of work they do to the conditions in which they live.

Today’s disparities of health flow directly from yesterday’s disparities of wealth and opportunity. That African-Americans are overrepresented in service-sector jobs reflects a history of racially segmented labor markets that kept them at the bottom of the economic ladder; that they are less likely to own their own homes reflects a history of stark housing discrimination, government-sanctioned and government-sponsored. If black Americans are more likely to suffer the comorbidities that make coronavirus more deadly, it’s because those ailments are tied to the segregation and concentrated poverty that still mark their communities.

[…]

American capitalism did not emerge ex nihilo into the world. It grew out of existing social, political and economic arrangements, toppling some and incorporating others as it took shape in the second half of the 19th century.

White supremacy was one of those arrangements. The Civil War may have destroyed slave society, but the racial hierarchy that was central to that society survived the carnage and disruption of the conflict to shape the aftermath, especially in the absence of a sustained program to radically restructure the social and economic life of the South.

[…]

Which is to say that, as it developed in the United States, industrial capitalism retained a caste system with whites as the dominant social group. This wasn’t just a matter of prejudice. As it did under slavery, race under industrial capitalism structured one’s relationship to both production and personhood. Whiteness, the philosopher Charles W. Mills notes, underwrote “the division of labor and the allocation of resources, with correspondingly enhanced socioeconomic life chances for one’s white self and one’s white children.”

[…]

But if you look at the full picture of American society, it is clear that the structural position of black Americans isn’t so different from what it was at the advent of the industrial age. Race still shapes personhood; it still marks the boundaries of who belongs and who doesn’t; of which groups face the brunt of capitalist inequality (in all its forms) and which get some respite. Race, in other words, still answers the question of “who.” Who will live in crowded, segregated neighborhoods? Who will be exposed to lead-poisoned pipes and toxic waste? Who will live with polluted air and suffer disproportionately from maladies like asthma and heart disease? And when disease comes, who will be the first to succumb in large numbers?

If there was anything you could predict about this pandemic — anything you could be certain about once it reached America’s shores — it was that some communities would weather the storm while others would sink under the waves, and that the distribution of this suffering would have everything to do with patterns inscribed by the past.

As long as those patterns remain, there is no path to a better society. We have to break them, before they break us.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>racism america capitalism covid19</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:04a2209ed827/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:racism"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:capitalism"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:covid19"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/05/opinion/coronavirus-mental-illness-depression.html">
    <title>Jennifer Senior: We’ve Hit a Pandemic Wall (NYT)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-10-11T05:31:58+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/05/opinion/coronavirus-mental-illness-depression.html</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>New data show that Americans are suffering from record levels of mental distress.

---

According to the National Center for Health Statistics, roughly one in 12 American adults reported symptoms of an anxiety disorder at this time last year; now it’s more than one in three. Last week, the Kaiser Family Foundation released a tracking poll showing that for the first time, a majority of American adults — 53 percent — believes that the pandemic is taking a toll on their mental health.

This number climbs to 68 percent if you look solely at African-Americans. The disproportionate toll the pandemic has taken on Black lives and livelihoods — made possible by centuries of structural disparities, compounded by the corrosive psychological effect of everyday racism — is appearing, starkly, in our mental health data.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>mentalhealth poverty america covid19</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:6cf75fbb4036/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:mentalhealth"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:poverty"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:covid19"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2020/09/rand-study-how-high-is-inequality-us.html">
    <title>Eric Levtiz: Study: Inequality Robs $2.5 Trillion from U.S. Workers Each Year (NYMag)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-09-14T22:03:33+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2020/09/rand-study-how-high-is-inequality-us.html</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>If America’s level of income inequality had remained constant since 1970, the median U.S. worker would now make $100,000 a year, according to a new study from the RAND Corporation.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>wealth economy america racism</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:7e3080619782/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:wealth"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:economy"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:racism"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://whentheycamedown.com/">
    <title>whentheycamedown</title>
    <dc:date>2020-09-04T05:30:36+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://whentheycamedown.com/</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>whentheycamedown is a project documenting the removal of statues representing white supremacy, oppression, genocide, colonialism, and racism throughout the world. This is a collaborative effort started by Emily Gorcenski, although the intention of the project is to open source contribution in the style of open knowledge.

This project takes the stance that the removal of statues represents an important and inextricable part of the history of the people, groups, and moments that those statues represent. Removing of statues, renaming of parks, and similar actions is not an act of erasing history, but an act of adding to history by capturing the spirit, beliefs, motivations, and actions of the people who lived during the times those statues stood. It is the goal of this project to document the people who aimed to remove the monuments more than the people represented by the monuments. The project seeks to document the history of the activists, their efforts to remove statues through proper and improper channels, and the history of the people oppressed by those who the statues represent.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>history racism america blm protest</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:df4322d99732/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:history"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:racism"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:blm"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:protest"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://first-vigil.com/">
    <title>First Vigil</title>
    <dc:date>2020-09-04T05:27:25+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://first-vigil.com/</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>Since the events in Charlottesville on August 11-12, 2017, a number of far-right fascists, white supremacists, and neo-Nazis have caught charges for violent crimes. These crimes range from misdemeanors to serious felonies, from state charges to federal charges, and possible penalties can include life in prison or even death.

Tracking these cases has given anti-fascist and anti-extremist researchers a wealth of information regarding the organizing methods, networks, and objectives of these groups. Tracking all of these cases, however, can be hard. So here is a resource that should hopefully compile that information for future work. Fascists are never on the side of truth, so sunlight can be a powerful tool to disrupt their organizing. It is with high hopes that this information is used to save lives. This is not an endorsement of the police, of state violence, or of state intervention. This is simply a repository of the most accurate possible information, culled from public records, newspapers, and court hearings.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>politics america fascism</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:aee62ca1847e/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:politics"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:fascism"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/aug/27/white-supremacists-militias-infiltrate-us-police-report">
    <title>Sam Levin: White supremacists and militias have infiltrated police across US, report says (The Guardian)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-08-27T19:01:26+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/aug/27/white-supremacists-militias-infiltrate-us-police-report</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>A former FBI agent has documented links between serving officers and racist militant activities in more than a dozen states

---

Michael German, a former FBI special agent who has written extensively on the ways that US law enforcement have failed to respond to far-right domestic terror threats, concludes that US law enforcement officials have been tied to racist militant activities in more than a dozen states since 2000, and hundreds of police officers have been caught posting racist and bigoted social media content.

[…]

Activists in Kenosha say police there have responded aggressively and violently to Black Lives Matter demonstrators, while doing little to stop armed white vigilantes. Supporting their claims is at least one video taken before the shooting that showed police tossing bottled water to what appeared to be armed civilians, including one who appeared to be the shooter, the AP noted: “We appreciate you being here,” an officer said on loudspeaker.

[…]

The FBI and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) have directly identified white supremacists as the most lethal domestic terrorist threat in the country. According to German’s report, the FBI’s own internal documents have directly warned that the militia groups the agency is investigating often have “active links” to law enforcement.

And yet US agencies lack a national strategy to identify white supremacist police and root out this problem, German warned. Meanwhile, popular police reform efforts to address “implicit bias” have done nothing to confront explicit racism.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>police america racism blm</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:972efd1643ce/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:police"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:racism"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:blm"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://themail.substack.com/p/superheroes">
    <title>Aaron Gordon: Superheroes (The Mail)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-08-27T07:04:54+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://themail.substack.com/p/superheroes</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>We, as a country, need to agree on something important: that the post office is not a business but a service every American directly benefits from, and therefore every American should pay into. In fact, it is difficult to imagine anything more deserving of tax dollars than a peaceful, civil service that binds every American together, promotes commerce, and serves as a link of last resort to vulnerable populations. Instead of feeding the good thing, we, as a country, have decided to starve it. Reversing this policy would require not just reversing a bad law, but admitting we were wrong about some very big ideas. That is what makes it so difficult, and also so important.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>mail usps government america</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:15726e65dbbd/</dc:identifier>
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</item>
<item rdf:about="https://projects.propublica.org/protest-police-videos/">
    <title>Zipporah Osei, Mollie Simon, Moiz Syed, Lucas Waldron: We Are Tracking What Happens to Police After They Use Force on Protestors (ProPublica)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-08-24T16:25:47+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://projects.propublica.org/protest-police-videos/</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>These 68 videos show clear apparent instances of police officers escalating violence during protests. Most departments refused to share details about investigations and discipline or even officers’ names. Here’s what we learned about each case.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>police blm protests america racism abolition</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:4f76500e4fbf/</dc:identifier>
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</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/jun/01/george-floyd-riots-violence-damage-property-police-brutality">
    <title>Rebecca Solnit: As the George Floyd protests continue, let's be clear where the violence is coming from (Guardian)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-08-24T16:23:34+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/jun/01/george-floyd-riots-violence-damage-property-police-brutality</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>Using damage to property as cover, US police have meted out shocking, indiscriminate brutality in the wake of the uprising.

---

The distinction between damaging or destroying human beings and inanimate objects matters. But it’s not simple. People trapped inside a burning building break down the doors to escape; an estranged husband with a restraining order breaks down a door to further terrorise his ex-wife. The same actions mean different things in different situations. Martin Luther King famously called riots “the voice of the unheard” – and as the outcry of people who have tried absolutely everything else for centuries, property damage means something very different from merely malicious or recreational destruction. When they riot, the black people most impacted by police brutality and by four centuries of poverty, dehumanisation and deprivation of basic rights and equality, are more like people trapped inside that burning house trying to break out. 

There is no easy way to distinguish between ardent white supporters of a black uprising and black bloc-style white people who revel in property destruction, taunting the police and escalating situations (before often slipping away before the police crack down). They are anti-authoritarians opposed to police brutality and the overreach of the state, and should not be confused with the rightwing authoritarians who many fear will use the pandemonium as cover for their own agenda, which could include creating more chaos. 

[…]

The story of activist violence is often used to justify police violence, but damage to property is not a justification for wholesale violence against children, passersby, journalists, protesters, or anyone at all. It is the police who should have lost their legitimacy, over and over, after the many individual killings from Eric Garner to Walter Scott to Breonna Taylor to George Floyd. And after reckless, entitled, out-of-control violence in police riots like that on Saturday night. Perhaps the point of their action this week is that they don’t need legitimacy, just power.

There’s one more kind of violence to talk about, and that’s structural violence. That’s the way that institutions and societies are organised to oppress a group of people, and for black Americans, that’s included slavery, the long terrorism of Jim Crow and lynching, voter suppression from the 19th century to the present, redlining (denying or charging more for necessary services) and subprime mortgages, discrimination in housing, education, and employment and far more.

Right now, several forms of structural violence that particularly matter are the chronic stress and lack of access to healthcare, housing issues, and work situations that have made black Americans die of Covid-19 at far higher rates than other races.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>activism police america protest blm racism</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
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</item>
<item rdf:about="https://thenewinquiry.com/abolition-is-not-a-suburb/">
    <title>Tamara K. Nopper: Abolition is Not a Suburb (The New Inquiry)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-08-24T00:04:57+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://thenewinquiry.com/abolition-is-not-a-suburb/</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>If anything, what Ocasio-Cortez is actually describing is the way that affluence and whiteness provide these communities the means to avoid consistent targeting by the police, to ignore laws, or to evade punishment. To be able to be the target of less policing, as well as to hire attorneys and use money and networks when accused, is a thing that white affluence provides — an affluence tied up in and made possible by the racist-classist financial infrastructure concealed by the suggestion that affluent, white suburbanites just have different budgeting priorities. In cases where harm might be perpetrated, using one’s resources in terms of money and connections to avoid criminalization and incarceration can be more an evasion of accountability than abolition.

[…]

I would never confuse captivity with the privacy, money, and racial status shielding an affluent, white suburbanite. But a shared dimension is that each approach tries to make people, when they have committed harm, be disappeared from public view and consciousness while the structural roots of harm go unaddressed and society operates as normal. Again, abolition involves figuring out what nonpunitive accountability looks like in public. Affluent, white suburbanites being shielded from the violence of carceral systems while others are not offered the same opportunity is not a model of abolition. It is just an expression of relative power and racism.

[…]

The racist double standard Ocasio-Cortez speaks of is not simply an issue of different budget priorities or treatment. The disparity in punishment is relational. When it happens, the different treatment of white people — even when they are found guilty — involves rescuing them from forms of carceral control and violent punishment deemed racially appropriate for others.

This is not a call for parity in punishment. An abolitionist project would never consider this justice, since punishment itself is at the heart of carcerality, and equal punishment means Black people — who, as Jared Sexton notes, are the “prototypical targets of the panoply of police practices and the juridical infrastructure” — will never be free. But what we get from the affluent, white suburb is less a model of abolition and more an evasion of accountability, which can rely on racialized tropes of innocence to avoid punishment — which only enforces carcerality against those who serve as the raced specter of criminality.

While discussing abolition during the Rising Majority panel, Ocasio-Cortez proclaimed, “And to say, you know, we not actually wanting anything different, the world that we’re fighting for already exists, it just exists for some people, and we want it to exist for all of us.” The world that already exists, according to Ocasio-Cortez, is the affluent, white suburb. Yet these suburbs are part of a spatialized racial-class design in which capitalism and anti-Blackness structure public finance. Affluent, white suburbanites may seek protection for their children in ways that legitimate carcerality for others who serve as the specter of criminality and “deserving” harsh punishment, and often use their money, power, influence, and racial status to evade accountability for real harms they commit. Taken together, this cannot be what abolition looks like. While we are told the suburb gives us a model of the world we’re fighting for, looking to the affluent, white suburb for quick inspiration can only work if we ignore the logic and design of racial capitalism and carcerality we seek to undo. Ultimately, the suburban frame, even when employed with the best intentions, works against what is required of abolition. As Ruth Wilson Gilmore tells us, “Abolition requires that we change one thing: everything.”</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>abolition police racism class america</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:13bab1f496aa/</dc:identifier>
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</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.ncsl.org/research/labor-and-employment/state-minimum-wage-chart.aspx">
    <title>National Conference of State Legislatures: State Minimum Wages</title>
    <dc:date>2020-08-14T17:07:00+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.ncsl.org/research/labor-and-employment/state-minimum-wage-chart.aspx</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><dc:subject>america labor economy</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:67f4811f5b74/</dc:identifier>
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	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:economy"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://m4bl.org/">
    <title>THE MOVEMENT FOR BLACK LIVES</title>
    <dc:date>2020-08-13T19:33:49+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://m4bl.org/</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><dc:subject>blm racism america police</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:d1351fb5cdb0/</dc:identifier>
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</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.democracynow.org/2020/6/12/angela_davis_2020_race_biden_trump">
    <title>Angela Davis: Dems &amp; GOP Tied to Corporate Capitalism, But We Must Vote So Trump Is “Forever Ousted” (Democracy Now)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-08-13T17:19:41+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.democracynow.org/2020/6/12/angela_davis_2020_race_biden_trump</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>AMY GOODMAN: We only have two minutes, and I want to get to the election. When I interviewed you in 2016, you said you wouldn’t support either main-party candidate at the time. What are your thoughts today for 2020?

ANGELA DAVIS: Well, my position really hasn’t changed. I’m not going to actually support either of the major candidates. But I do think we have to participate in the election. I mean, that isn’t to say that I won’t vote for the Democratic candidate. What I’m saying is that in our electoral system as it exists, neither party represents the future that we need in this country. Both parties remain connected to corporate capitalism. But the election will not so much be about who gets to lead the country to a better future, but rather how we can support ourselves and our own ability to continue to organize and place pressure on those in power. And I don’t think there’s a question about which candidate would allow that process to unfold.

So I think that we’re going to have to translate some of the passion that has characterized these demonstrations into work within the electoral arena, recognizing that the electoral arena is not the best place for the expression of radical politics. But if we want to continue this work, we certainly need a person in office who will be more amenable to our mass pressure. And to me, that is the only thing that someone like a Joe Biden represents. But we have to persuade people to go out and vote to guarantee that the current occupant of the White House is forever ousted.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>voting democracy america trump capitalism</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
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	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:trump"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:capitalism"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/12/opinion/sunday/floyd-abolish-defund-police.html">
    <title>Mariame Kaba: Yes, We Mean Literally Abolish the Police (NYT)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-08-11T06:32:41+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/12/opinion/sunday/floyd-abolish-defund-police.html</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>Because reform won’t happen.

---

Congressional Democrats want to make it easier to identify and prosecute police misconduct; Joe Biden wants to give police departments $300 million. But efforts to solve police violence through liberal reforms like these have failed for nearly a century.

Enough. We can’t reform the police. The only way to diminish police violence is to reduce contact between the public and the police.

There is not a single era in United States history in which the police were not a force of violence against black people. Policing in the South emerged from the slave patrols in the 1700 and 1800s that caught and returned runaway slaves. In the North, the first municipal police departments in the mid-1800s helped quash labor strikes and riots against the rich. Everywhere, they have suppressed marginalized populations to protect the status quo.

[…]

Why on earth would we think the same reforms would work now? We need to change our demands. The surest way of reducing police violence is to reduce the power of the police, by cutting budgets and the number of officers.

[…]

We can build other ways of responding to harms in our society. Trained “community care workers” could do mental-health checks if someone needs help. Towns could use restorative-justice models instead of throwing people in prison.

[…]

When people, especially white people, consider a world without the police, they envision a society as violent as our current one, merely without law enforcement — and they shudder. As a society, we have been so indoctrinated with the idea that we solve problems by policing and caging people that many cannot imagine anything other than prisons and the police as solutions to violence and harm.

People like me who want to abolish prisons and police, however, have a vision of a different society, built on cooperation instead of individualism, on mutual aid instead of self-preservation. What would the country look like if it had billions of extra dollars to spend on housing, food and education for all? This change in society wouldn’t happen immediately, but the protests show that many people are ready to embrace a different vision of safety and justice.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>police pic abolition racism america</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:1e5ede3302bc/</dc:identifier>
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</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2020/06/black-lives-matter-viral-underclass.html">
    <title>Steven W. Thrasher: An Uprising Comes From the Viral Underclass (Slate)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-08-11T06:31:33+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2020/06/black-lives-matter-viral-underclass.html</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>And the Black Lives Matter movement could be the vaccine the country needs.

---

But both Floyd and Taylor are part of the viral underclass—a population harmed not simply by microscopic organisms but by the societal structures that make viral transmission possible. Viruses directly affect the lives of people who become infected. But the bodies of the viral underclass are made needlessly vulnerable, and that vulnerability shapes their lives and their communities, even if individual people ultimately don’t become infected or killed.

[…]

When we follow a virus—HIV, SARS-CoV-2, hepatitis B or C—we find all the fault lines of the society it is infecting.

[…]

Where you’d find policing, you’d find poverty, and Black people, and new cases of HIV, and untreated cases of HIV—which, untreated, proceeded to AIDS, and to AIDS deaths.

[…]

As Black people have organized against the connected crises of the virus and policing, they’re giving the viral underclass a map toward liberation. Facing the contagion of financial ruin and with time at home, many white people have realized (perhaps for the first time) that they have far more in common with other members of the viral underclass than they do with the ruling class.

[…]

We are roughly 5 percent of Earth’s population but account for 25 percent of the world’s prisoners and COVID-19 deaths. That the wealthiest nation on Earth has the most coronavirus deaths is because we put resources into policing, militarism, and punishment that we haven’t (yet) put into public health.

[…]

U.S. citizens have a hard time understanding that—while there’s a viral underclass within the country, the country might be the underclass of the world. We are a “failed social experiment,” as Cornel West put it. Other countries may treat the U.S. as pariahs for years because our society allowed for uncontrolled community spread, staggering unemployment, and horrific levels of death. The nation’s massive wealth was not used to provide prophylaxis from this virus for the many; it just concentrated upward.

[…]

Understanding and embracing this can lead us away from selfish politics and toward a new politics of communal care and understanding—to create the kind of multiracial, multinational uprising we have been seeing in the past few weeks.

[…]

In the past, when I’ve thought about what a world without AIDS would look like, I’ve thought about the words of the 1977 Combahee River Collective statement, which coined the concept of identity politics.* In writing about working in coalition, they wrote, “We might use our position at the bottom, however, to make a clear leap into revolutionary action.” This could benefit everyone, because, “[i]f Black women were free, it would mean that everyone else would have to be free since our freedom would necessitate the destruction of all the systems of oppression.” A world without AIDS would mean everyone had gotten the food, medicine, and shelter they needed and would, thus, be free.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>racism america class poverty covid19</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:cfd5569bcadc/</dc:identifier>
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</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://maps.everytownresearch.org/everystat/database">
    <title>EveryStat</title>
    <dc:date>2020-08-09T17:24:08+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://maps.everytownresearch.org/everystat/database</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[A project by the Everytown for Gun Safety organization.

<blockquote>The Gun Violence Archive is an online archive of gun violence incidents collected from over 7,500  law enforcement, media, government and commercial sources daily in an effort to provide near-real time data about the results of gun violence. GVA is an independent data collection and research group with no affiliation with any advocacy organization.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>guns data reference death america</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:f7b1d132ace3/</dc:identifier>
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</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.gunviolencearchive.org/">
    <title>Gun Violence Archive</title>
    <dc:date>2020-08-09T17:19:10+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.gunviolencearchive.org/</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>The Gun Violence Archive is an online archive of gun violence incidents collected from over 7,500  law enforcement, media, government and commercial sources daily in an effort to provide near-real time data about the results of gun violence. GVA is an independent data collection and research group with no affiliation with any advocacy organization.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>america data death guns reference</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:67f5a7ee04bd/</dc:identifier>
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</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/jul/27/us-rightwing-extremists-attacks-deaths-database-leftwing-antifa?CMP=usbriefing_email">
    <title>Lois Beckett: Anti-fascists linked to zero murders in the US in 25 years (The Guardian)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-07-27T18:18:06+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/jul/27/us-rightwing-extremists-attacks-deaths-database-leftwing-antifa?CMP=usbriefing_email</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>As Trump rails against ‘far-left’ fascism, new database shows leftwing attacks have left far fewer people dead than violence by rightwing extremists.

---

American white supremacists and other rightwing extremists have carried out attacks that left at least 329 victims dead, according to the database.

[…]

Daily interpersonal violence and state violence pose a much greater threat to Americans than any kind of extremist terror attack. More than 100,000 people have been killed in gun homicides in the United States in the past decade, according to estimates from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. US police officers shoot nearly 1,000 Americans to death each year. Black Americans are more than twice as likely to be shot by the police as white Americans, according to analysis by the Washington Post and the Guardian.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>antifa america racism guncontrol</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:e3cbeb3f3200/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:antifa"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:racism"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:guncontrol"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://blacksocialists.us/resource-guide/">
    <title>Black Socialists in America Resource Guide</title>
    <dc:date>2020-07-17T16:48:07+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://blacksocialists.us/resource-guide/</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>These are the official writings, videos, and more that BSA recommends all Socialists explore, regardless of skin color.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>socialism politics government america</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:ad59bd354328/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:socialism"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:politics"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:government"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1266894029498675200.html">
    <title>Thread by @clairewillett: on the assassination of Fred Hampton</title>
    <dc:date>2020-07-13T21:44:58+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1266894029498675200.html</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>When you learn white people history in white people schools your whole life, one of the most poisonous threads running through it is this confident, implicit trust in institutions. This idea that the government, while imperfect, is nonethless reliably on the side of Good For All.

Most white people learn about the Civil Rights Era only through a few carefully-selected MLK quotes misinterpreted as a call for niceness. If you're about the Black Panthers at all, it's often with an air of danger and menace, even now.

So I didn't learn about Assata Shakur and the Panther 28, I didn't learn about Fred Hampton and COINTELPRO, I didn't learn about Nixon and J. Edgar Hoover and the Southern Strategy and the FBI's strategic attacks on Freedom Riders, until I was in my thirties.

we as white people have NO LIVED CONTEXT for what it means to grow up as Black in America, where the entire system of law enforcement is not just not there to help, but is actively at war with you, and carefully rewriting the narrative to make the victims look like the threat.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>racism america history</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:106d54d5df93/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:racism"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:history"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/jun/29/white-people-ally-black-people-sacrifice">
    <title>Kelsey Smoot: White people say they want to be an ally to Black people. But are they ready for sacrifice? (The Guardian)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-07-12T17:27:22+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/jun/29/white-people-ally-black-people-sacrifice</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>If the White people in my life could hit a button and instantly remove the privileges afforded to them along racial lines, would they hit that button?

---

The truth is, genuine allyship is not kindness, it is not a charitable act, nor is it even a personal commitment to hold anti-racist ideals – it is a fall from grace. Real allyship enacted by White Americans, with a clear objective to make equitable the lived experiences of individuals across racial lines, means a willingness to lose things. Not just the extra $50 in one’s monthly budget by way of donating to an organization working towards racial justice. I mean palpable, incalculable loss. The loss of the charmed life associated with being a White person in America. Refusing a pay raise at one’s job and insisting that it be reallocated to co-workers of color who are undoubtedly being underpaid. The loss of potentially every close relationship with other White friends and family members who refuse to acknowledge or amend their behaviors that reinforce systemic oppression. The loss of bodily safety, by way of physically intervening when violence is being inflicted on to Black bodies.

This notion, one of true allyship, extends so far beyond the purview of contemporary White engagement with racial justice that it seems fanciful; almost laughable. I hardly ever allow myself the mental space to contemplate it. To wonder, if the White people in my life could hit a button and instantly remove the privileges afforded to them along racial lines, would they hit that button? Would they truly want to wake up tomorrow, in an America in which my life mattered just as much as theirs, if it came at the cost of all they have come to know and enjoy in the vein of White privilege? To expect true allyship from the White people in my life would be to ask them to be willing to sacrifice the thing that they covet most, though they may never be truly conscious of it: their Whiteness. So, I don’t. I respond to each message I receive with “thank you for thinking of me”, place my phone face downward on my desk, and prepare for another day of navigating White America.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>racism blm america antiracism</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:050ec40e52c1/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:racism"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:blm"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:antiracism"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.theroot.com/star-spangled-bigotry-the-hidden-racist-history-of-the-1790855893">
    <title>Jason Johnson: Star-Spangled Bigotry: The Hidden Racist History of the National Anthem (The Root)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-06-21T18:56:44+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.theroot.com/star-spangled-bigotry-the-hidden-racist-history-of-the-1790855893</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>Key was on the boat waiting to see if the British would release his friend when he observed the bloody battle of Fort McHenry in Baltimore on Sept. 13, 1814. America lost the battle but managed to inflict heavy casualties on the British in the process. This inspired Key to write “The Star-Spangled Banner” right then and there, but no one remembers that he wrote a full third stanza decrying the former slaves who were now working for the British army.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>history racism america</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:a175048f52b6/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:history"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:racism"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/tomgara/economy-recession-coronavirus">
    <title>Tom Gara: The Real Economic Catastrophe Hasn’t Hit Yet. Just Wait For August. (Buzzfeed)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-06-17T03:54:32+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/tomgara/economy-recession-coronavirus</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>After a terrifying spring spent in lockdown and a summer of protests in the streets, things are going to get a lot worse in the fall.

---

As millions of people experience a sudden collapse of their income at the very moment their landlords are allowed to start kicking them out, other bills will also come due. Payments on millions of paused student loans will begin again at the beginning of October; the more than 4 million homeowners who received a six-month pause on their mortgage after April’s mass layoffs will need to start making payments again at the end of October.

[…]

You might have noticed a few major things — like, well, the coronavirus pandemic — missing from this equation. If we’re really lucky, we won’t experience a nasty second wave of infections in the fall and early winter, spurring new rounds of attempted lockdowns shortly after the economic plane crashes into the mountain — lockdowns that will once again disproportionately affect Black people and people with low incomes who can't safely work from home. Fingers crossed on that one.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>america economics covid19</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:70c87c252ba4/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:economics"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:covid19"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.counterpunch.org/2006/05/31/stop-saying-this-is-a-nation-of-immigrants/">
    <title>Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz: Stop Saying This is a Nation of Immigrants! (Counterpunch)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-05-26T16:31:40+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.counterpunch.org/2006/05/31/stop-saying-this-is-a-nation-of-immigrants/</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>Misrepresenting the process of European colonization of North America, making everyone an immigrant, serves to preserve the “official story” of a mostly benign and benevolent USA, and to mask the fact that the pre-US independence settlers, were, well, settlers, colonial setters, just as they were in Africa and India, or the Spanish in Central and South America. The United States was founded as a settler state, and an imperialistic one from its inception (“manifest destiny,” of course). The settlers were English, Welsh, Scots, Scots-Irish, and German, not including the huge number of Africans who were not settlers. Another group of Europeans who arrived in the colonies also were not settlers or immigrants: the poor, indentured, convicted, criminalized, kidnapped from the working class (vagabonds and unemployed artificers), as Peter Linebaugh puts it, many of who opted to join indigenous communities.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>immigration racism imperialism colonialism america history</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:51ddb4905f44/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:immigration"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:racism"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:imperialism"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:colonialism"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:history"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2020/06/underlying-conditions/610261/">
    <title>George Packer: We Are Living in a Failed State (The Atlantic)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-04-23T16:44:50+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2020/06/underlying-conditions/610261/</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>The coronavirus didn’t break America. It revealed what was already broken.

---

When the virus came here, it found a country with serious underlying conditions, and it exploited them ruthlessly. Chronic ills—a corrupt political class, a sclerotic bureaucracy, a heartless economy, a divided and distracted public—had gone untreated for years. We had learned to live, uncomfortably, with the symptoms. It took the scale and intimacy of a pandemic to expose their severity—to shock Americans with the recognition that we are in the high-risk category.

The crisis demanded a response that was swift, rational, and collective. The United States reacted instead like Pakistan or Belarus—like a country with shoddy infrastructure and a dysfunctional government whose leaders were too corrupt or stupid to head off mass suffering. The administration squandered two irretrievable months to prepare. From the president came willful blindness, scapegoating, boasts, and lies. From his mouthpieces, conspiracy theories and miracle cures. A few senators and corporate executives acted quickly—not to prevent the coming disaster, but to profit from it. When a government doctor tried to warn the public of the danger, the White House took the mic and politicized the message.

Every morning in the endless month of March, Americans woke up to find themselves citizens of a failed state. With no national plan—no coherent instructions at all—families, schools, and offices were left to decide on their own whether to shut down and take shelter. When test kits, masks, gowns, and ventilators were found to be in desperately short supply, governors pleaded for them from the White House, which stalled, then called on private enterprise, which couldn’t deliver. States and cities were forced into bidding wars that left them prey to price gouging and corporate profiteering. Civilians took out their sewing machines to try to keep ill-equipped hospital workers healthy and their patients alive. Russia, Taiwan, and the United Nations sent humanitarian aid to the world’s richest power—a beggar nation in utter chaos.

[…]

The long recovery over the past decade enriched corporations and investors, lulled professionals, and left the working class further behind. The lasting effect of the slump was to increase polarization and to discredit authority, especially government’s.

[…]

Trump acquired a federal government crippled by years of right-wing ideological assault, politicization by both parties, and steady defunding. He set about finishing off the job and destroying the professional civil service. He drove out some of the most talented and experienced career officials, left essential positions unfilled, and installed loyalists as commissars over the cowed survivors, with one purpose: to serve his own interests. His major legislative accomplishment, one of the largest tax cuts in history, sent hundreds of billions of dollars to corporations and the rich. The beneficiaries flocked to patronize his resorts and line his reelection pockets. If lying was his means for using power, corruption was his end.

Read: It pays to be rich during a pandemic

This was the American landscape that lay open to the virus: in prosperous cities, a class of globally connected desk workers dependent on a class of precarious and invisible service workers; in the countryside, decaying communities in revolt against the modern world; on social media, mutual hatred and endless vituperation among different camps; in the economy, even with full employment, a large and growing gap between triumphant capital and beleaguered labor; in Washington, an empty government led by a con man and his intellectually bankrupt party; around the country, a mood of cynical exhaustion, with no vision of a shared identity or future.

[…]

It turns out that “nimble” companies can’t prepare for a catastrophe or distribute lifesaving goods—only a competent federal government can do that. It turns out that everything has a cost, and years of attacking government, squeezing it dry and draining its morale, inflict a heavy cost that the public has to pay in lives. All the programs defunded, stockpiles depleted, and plans scrapped meant that we had become a second-rate nation. Then came the virus and this strange defeat.

The fight to overcome the pandemic must also be a fight to recover the health of our country, and build it anew, or the hardship and grief we’re now enduring will never be redeemed. Under our current leadership, nothing will change. If 9/11 and 2008 wore out trust in the old political establishment, 2020 should kill off the idea that anti-politics is our salvation. But putting an end to this regime, so necessary and deserved, is only the beginning.

We’re faced with a choice that the crisis makes inescapably clear. We can stay hunkered down in self-isolation, fearing and shunning one another, letting our common bond wear away to nothing. Or we can use this pause in our normal lives to pay attention to the hospital workers holding up cellphones so their patients can say goodbye to loved ones; the planeload of medical workers flying from Atlanta to help in New York; the aerospace workers in Massachusetts demanding that their factory be converted to ventilator production; the Floridians standing in long lines because they couldn’t get through by phone to the skeletal unemployment office; the residents of Milwaukee braving endless waits, hail, and contagion to vote in an election forced on them by partisan justices. We can learn from these dreadful days that stupidity and injustice are lethal; that, in a democracy, being a citizen is essential work; that the alternative to solidarity is death. After we’ve come out of hiding and taken off our masks, we should not forget what it was like to be alone.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>politics trump america health capitalism covid19</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:17daa83544ed/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:politics"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:trump"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:health"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:capitalism"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:covid19"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://kottke.org/20/04/how-we-reopen-the-country-a-roadmap-to-pandemic-resilience">
    <title>How We Reopen the Country: A Roadmap to Pandemic Resilience (Kottke)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-04-23T16:41:25+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://kottke.org/20/04/how-we-reopen-the-country-a-roadmap-to-pandemic-resilience</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>Working under the direction of The Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics at Harvard University, a bipartisan group of experts in public health, economics, technology, and ethics have produced a plan for a phased reopening of public life in the United States through testing, tracing, and supported isolation.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>america covid19</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:eae607600879/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:covid19"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/kadiagoba/coronavirus-new-york-brooklyn-essential-workers-black-poc">
    <title>Kadia Goba: Brooklyn's Black And Brown Communities — Home To Many Of New York City's Essential Workers — Are Coronavirus Hot Spots (Buzzfeed)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-04-23T16:35:26+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/kadiagoba/coronavirus-new-york-brooklyn-essential-workers-black-poc</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>“We’re telling you that no one should be out here because it’s dangerous, but we’re sending you out there and we’re not giving out any masks.”

---

The bus driver, who declined to be named for fear of losing her job, is one of hundreds of thousands of Brooklynites still working essential jobs, even as the borough is hit hard by the coronavirus. Twenty-eight percent of New York City’s essential workers live in Brooklyn — the most in any borough — and the vast majority of them are people of color. In Brooklyn, the number of deaths outpaced those in Queens on Sunday. Brooklyn has more than 2,606 confirmed COVID-19 deaths and 865 “probable” COVID-19 deaths, according to NYC data released April 19.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>racism capitalism america nyc medicine healthcare covid19</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:c550845910e4/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:racism"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:capitalism"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:nyc"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:medicine"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:healthcare"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:covid19"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/apr/21/coronavirus-threatens-generation-of-black-americans">
    <title>Kenya Evelyn: 'The last flag bearers of an era': how coronavirus threatens a generation of black Americans (The Guardian)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-04-23T16:34:55+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/apr/21/coronavirus-threatens-generation-of-black-americans</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>Older black people are more likely to die of the virus that their white counterparts – among those lost are prominent black pastors, performers and civil rights activists.

---

Coronavirus has claimed more than 45,000 lives in the US as of Tuesday – especially those of older Americans, who represent 91% of all Covid-19 deaths.

Within that vulnerable population, older black people are more likely to die of the virus than their white counterparts. And among those lost are prominent black pastors, performers, and practitioners who lived through struggles for civil and cultural rights in their communities.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>racism health america medicine covid19</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:87643a74a50d/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:racism"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:health"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:medicine"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:covid19"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://gen.medium.com/you-dont-have-to-like-voting-for-joe-biden-182faf64cb72">
    <title>Jessica Valenti: I Can’t Believe I Have to Vote for Joe Biden (Gen)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-04-18T21:00:51+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://gen.medium.com/you-dont-have-to-like-voting-for-joe-biden-182faf64cb72</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>Democratic women are once again being asked to help save the country by voting for the deeply problematic former vice president.

---

Biden is the better choice by a mile, and I’ll do what’s right for the country and vote for him. But I’m still furious: I can’t believe that when faced with the most dangerous president of our lifetime, Democrats are moving ahead with a nearly 80-year-old moderate who has shown himself time and again not up for the fight. I am livid that Democratic women will be called on, once again, to cast our vote in the name of reducing harm to the country rather than moving it forward.

[…]

And the truth is that this election is going to be terrible for women, no matter what we do. Feminists have long warned about Biden’s treatment of Anita Hill (along with his decades-late non-apology), his nastiness toward women he doesn’t find sufficiently deferential and sweet, and the former vice president’s trademark handsiness — but we’re still going to see these new allegations weaponized against us should we vote for him.

[…]

(Pro tip: If the only time you have spoken out against our country’s culture of sexual violence is to play some sort of perverse “gotcha” game with Democratic women, you do not actually care about this issue.)

[…]

So like a lot of American women, if I pop any corks on election night, it won’t be because Joe Biden won — but because Donald Trump lost. I can live with that. But I won’t forget that Democrats put American women in this position. And I won’t ever forgive it.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>biden politics america</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:f5da9f9cd884/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:biden"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:politics"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2020/04/trump-coronavirus-message/610009/">
    <title>McKay Coppins: False Prophet (The Atlantic)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-04-18T20:59:05+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2020/04/trump-coronavirus-message/610009/</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>Media-bashing robocalls, chloroquine Twitter trolls, briefing-room propaganda—how the president and his allies are trying to convince America he was right all along.

---

As reality continues to assert itself in the coming months—whether in the form of rising death tolls, or clinical drug trials, or shifting White House policy—Trump’s information warriors will likely retreat from some of their current positions. (They may also notch a few “wins” as the facts catch up to their narratives.) In the meantime, they are staying cautiously on message.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>health america trump politics covid19</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:671f57d48638/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:health"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:trump"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:politics"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:covid19"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2020/04/pandemic-summer-coronavirus-reopening-back-normal/609940/">
    <title>Ed Yong: Our Pandemic Summer (The Atlantic)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-04-18T20:02:04+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2020/04/pandemic-summer-coronavirus-reopening-back-normal/609940/</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>The fight against the coronavirus won’t be over when the U.S. reopens. Here’s how the nation must prepare itself.

---

The pandemic is not a hurricane or a wildfire. It is not comparable to Pearl Harbor or 9/11. Such disasters are confined in time and space. The SARS-CoV-2 virus will linger through the year and across the world. “Everyone wants to know when this will end,” said Devi Sridhar, a public-health expert at the University of Edinburgh. “That’s not the right question. The right question is: How do we continue?”

[…]

These problems—the continuing testing debacle, the drying supply chains, the relentless pressure on hospitals—should temper any impatience about reopening the country. There won’t be an obvious moment when everything is under control and regular life can safely resume. Even after case counts and death rates fall, the pandemic’s challenges will continue, and will not automatically subside on their own. After all, despite ample warning, the U.S. failed to anticipate what would happen when the coronavirus knocked on its door. It cannot afford to make that mistake again. Before the spring is over, it needs a plan for the summer and fall.

[…]

Even in the optimistic scenario, a quick and complete return to normalcy would be ill-advised. And even in the pessimistic scenario, controlling future outbreaks should still be possible, but only through an immense public-health effort. Epidemiologists would need to run diagnostic tests on anyone with COVID-19–like symptoms, quarantine infected people, trace everyone those people had contact with in the previous week or so, and either quarantine those contacts or test them too. These are the standard pillars of public health, but they’re complicated by the coronavirus’s ability to spread for days before causing symptoms. Every infected person has a lot of potential contacts, and may have unknowingly infected many of them.

[…]

The U.S. is still a scientific and biomedical powerhouse. To marshal that power, it needs a massive, coordinated, government-led initiative to find the cleverest ways of controlling COVID-19—a modern-day Apollo program. No such program is afoot. Former Trump- and Obama-era officials have published detailed plans. Elizabeth Warren is on her third iteration. But the White House either has no strategy or has chosen not to disclose it.

Without a unifying vision, governors and mayors have been forced to handle the pandemic themselves. Ludicrously, states are bidding against one another—and the federal government—for precious supplies. Six states still haven’t issued any kind of stay-at-home order, while those that moved late, such as Florida, may have seeded infections in the rest of the country.

[…]

With COVID-19, I fear that the U.S. might enter the neglect phase before the panic part is even finished. If the current shutdown succeeds in flattening the curve, sparing the health-care system and minimizing deaths, it will feel like an overreaction. Contrarians will use the diminished body count to argue that the panic was needless and that the public was misled. Some are already saying that.

[…]

The virus is disproportionately killing people in low-income jobs who don’t have the privilege of working from home, but who will nonetheless be shamed for not distancing themselves. The virus is disproportionately killing black people, whose health had already been impoverished through centuries of structural racism, but who will nonetheless be personally blamed for their fate. The virus is disproportionately killing elderly people, who had already been shunted to the fringes of society, but who will nonetheless be told to endure further loneliness so that everyone else can be freer.

[…]

As the rest of the U.S. comes to terms with the same restless impermanence, it must abandon the question When do we go back to normal? That outlook ignores the immense disparities in what different Americans experience as normal. It wastes the rare opportunity to reimagine what a fairer and less vulnerable society might look like. It glosses over the ongoing nature of the coronavirus threat. There is no going back. The only way out is through—past a turbulent spring, across an unusual summer, and into an unsettled year beyond.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>america health covid19</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:b5889a982100/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:health"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:covid19"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://gen.medium.com/parents-are-not-ok-66ab2a3e42d9">
    <title>Chloe I. Cooney: The Parents Are Not All Right (Gen)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-04-16T21:17:57+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://gen.medium.com/parents-are-not-ok-66ab2a3e42d9</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>The coronavirus pandemic exposes how even the most privileged households, with two working parents, are struggling to make it work.

---

Viruses, or in this case, global pandemics, expose and exacerbate the existing dynamics of a society — good and bad. They are like a fun-house mirror, grossly reflecting ourselves back to us. One of those dynamics is the burden we put on individual parents and families. We ask individuals to solve problems that are systemically created.

[…]

This cannot be solved by tweaks to the schedule, helpful routines, and virtual activities. We have to collectively recognize that parents — and any caregivers right now — have less to give at work. A lot less. The assumptions seem to be that parents have “settled into a routine” and “are doing okay now.”

[…]

It exposes everything from the lack of paid sick leave and parental leave to the fact that the school day ends at 3 p.m. when the typical workday goes several hours longer — yet aftercare is not universally available. And that says nothing of our need for universal health care, irrespective of employment. Parents pour endless energy into solving for systems that don’t make sense and don’t work.

[…]

This current situation is almost prophetically designed to showcase the farce of our societal approach to separating work and family lives. We are expected to work from home full time. And care for our children full time. And we cannot have anyone outside our immediate household help. It can’t work and we all are suffering at the illusion that it does.

Our kids are losing out — on peace of mind, education, engagement, the socialization for which they are built.

Our employers are losing out, too. Whether the office policy is to expect full-time work or whether, like in my experience, we are offered a lot of flexibility — work is less good, there is less of it, and returns will be diminishing the longer this juggle goes on.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>parenting education america capitalism covid19</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:d4f795a8026d/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:parenting"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:education"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:capitalism"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:covid19"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2020/04/closing-parks-ineffective-pandemic-theater/609580/">
    <title>Zeynep Tufekci: Keep the Parks Open (The Atlantic)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-04-16T17:00:37+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2020/04/closing-parks-ineffective-pandemic-theater/609580/</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>Public green spaces are good for the immune system and the mind—and they can be rationed to allow for social distancing.

---

Mental health is also a crucial part of the resilience we need to fight this pandemic. Keeping people’s spirits up in the long haul will be important, and exercise and the outdoors are among the strongest antidepressants and mental-health boosters we know of, often equaling or surpassing drugs and/or therapy in clinical trials.

[…]

If pandemic theater gets mixed up with scientifically sound practices, we will not be able to persuade people to continue with the latter.

[…]

Even if health authorities close some parks temporarily while they assess and develop evidence-based policies and best practices, they should do so with transparency and a timeline or conditions under which the parks will reopen. That’s the best of all possible worlds: The authorities will preserve much-needed legitimacy, and the public will retain access to the outdoors under sensible conditions that reduce risk while promoting health, well-being, and resilience—and we will certainly need all of that to get through the next many months.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>health mentalhealth america covid19</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:cf087c8f868c/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:health"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:mentalhealth"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:covid19"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.vox.com/coronavirus-covid19/2020/3/27/21193879/coronavirus-covid-19-social-distancing-economy-recession-depression">
    <title>Ezra Klein: The debate over ending social distancing to save the economy, explained (Vox)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-04-09T04:08:24+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.vox.com/coronavirus-covid19/2020/3/27/21193879/coronavirus-covid-19-social-distancing-economy-recession-depression</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>President Trump wants to cut short social distancing measures to save the economy. Is the cure worse than the disease?

---

So let’s put this clearly: Comparing the cure and the disease is a false choice in both directions. If you let the disease rage, you don’t save the economy. But if you lock down the economy, you don’t cure the disease. It is understandable, in the initial panic to slow the disease, that public health messaging has emphasized the importance of social distancing, but in order to keep people bought into that strategy, it’s necessary to be clear about what comes after.

[…]

The grim truth, for those of us living under tight lockdowns right now, is it’s not clear that the time we’ve bought is being used well. Social distancing is likely slowing disease transmission, but there’s little evidence that the country has been sufficiently swift in surging health and testing capacity. Indeed, governors of key states are saying, daily, that they’re not getting the support they need.

[…]

Rather than make the country’s sacrifices count, Trump is telling Americans we’ve already sacrificed too much, for too long. This is a moment that demands social solidarity, but all Trump knows is fracture. This is a moment that requires long-term thinking and sacrifice, but Trump acts on the timeline of the cable news segment in front of him. It is perhaps the most stunning and dangerous abdication of presidential leadership in the modern era.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>social economics america covid19</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:dd14a4cf515f/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:social"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:economics"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:covid19"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/mar/28/trump-coronavirus-politics-us-health-disaster">
    <title>Ed Pilkington and Tom McCarthy: The missing six weeks: how Trump failed the biggest test of his life (The Guardian)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-04-09T04:07:15+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/mar/28/trump-coronavirus-politics-us-health-disaster</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>The president was aware of the danger from the coronavirus – but a lack of leadership has created an emergency of epic proportions.

---

The White House had all the information it needed by the end of January to act decisively. Instead, Trump repeatedly played down the severity of the threat, blaming China for what he called the “Chinese virus” and insisting falsely that his partial travel bans on China and Europe were all it would take to contain the crisis.

[…]

This week Fauci was asked by a Science magazine writer, Jon Cohen, how he could stand beside Trump at daily press briefings and listen to him misleading the American people with comments such as that the China travel ban had been a great success in blocking entry of the virus. Fauci replied: “I know, but what do you want me to do? I mean, seriously Jon, let’s get real, what do you want me to do?”</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>trump government america covid19</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:31746b95adff/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:trump"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:government"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:covid19"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/26/style/gofundme-coronavirus.html">
    <title>Nathaniel Popper and Taylor Lorenz: GoFundMe Confronts Coronavirus Demand (NYT)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-04-07T17:07:04+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/26/style/gofundme-coronavirus.html</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>Americans are turning to crowdfunding to cover coronavirus-related costs while the government prepares to deliver on its stimulus plan. But most campaigns aren’t meeting their goals.

---

Between March 20 and March 24, the number of coronavirus-related campaigns on GoFundMe shot up by 60 percent, from 22,000 to 35,000. The stories told on those fund-raising pages convey the breadth of destruction that the new coronavirus has wreaked — grieving families facing costs for funerals that few will be able to attend, food pantries stretched thin, and unemployed artists, bartenders, substitute teachers and manicurists simply trying to survive.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>health crowdfunding america covid19</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:21300318decb/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:health"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:crowdfunding"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:covid19"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/27/business/economy/coronavirus-inequality.html">
    <title>Noam Scheiber, Nelson D. Schwartz, Tiffany Hsu: ‘White-Collar Quarantine’ Over Virus Spotlights Class Divide (NYT)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-04-06T17:15:29+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/27/business/economy/coronavirus-inequality.html</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>Child care options, internet access and extra living space leave a gulf between rich and poor in coping with disruptions to school and work.

---

Still, a kind of pandemic caste system is rapidly developing: the rich holed up in vacation properties; the middle class marooned at home with restless children; the working class on the front lines of the economy, stretched to the limit by the demands of work and parenting, if there is even work to be had.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>america class covid19</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:9f9a9ebd2d97/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:class"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:covid19"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/24/magazine/coronavirus-family.html">
    <title>Jessica Lustig: What I Learned When My Husband Got Sick With Coronavirus (NYT)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-04-01T16:32:55+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/24/magazine/coronavirus-family.html</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>Our world became one of isolation, round-the-clock care, panic and uncertainty — even as society carried on around us with all too few changes.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>health america covid19</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:8c57c34a8cfc/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:health"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:covid19"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://newrepublic.com/article/157039/americas-diseased-politics-coronavirus-legislation">
    <title>David Roth: America’s Diseased Politics (The New Republic)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-04-01T16:31:41+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://newrepublic.com/article/157039/americas-diseased-politics-coronavirus-legislation</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>The Republicans are confronting the coronavirus with nihilism—and the Democrats are responding with impotence.

---

Metaphors fail daily: Trump really would sooner risk the lives of a million strangers than do his job, and his party is quite willing to go along with it. In the absence of an opposition party willing and able to point any of that out or call it what it is, the nation is more or less left to take him at his word. Where and when the media takes up the challenge of doing the basic civic work that Democrats can’t or won’t, it lets Trump spin a once-in-a-generation crisis as Another Media Thing. And that renders the whole episode as just another argument to have on television.

[…]

At this moment, erring on the side of saying or doing too little instead of too much would be not just infuriating in the typical Democratic ways but devastating and damning in essential ones: The crystalized threat presented by this crisis and this moment requires a clear and commensurate response in both words and deeds. Strategically lying low or working the angles—such as gaming the outcomes within the denser stretches of mundane appropriations bills—doesn’t work terribly well in comparatively normal circumstances. But the Democrats’ usual tactics are terrifyingly insufficient when they’re deployed in response to business interests and reactionary politicians opting into a holocaust in the best interests of a market. It is ghoulish in the most contemporary of ways that this sort of thing is even up for debate, but it’s most important to see the effort to counter it as what it is: not a political campaign but an existential one, and so not the sort of thing that you get to do twice.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>government america covid19</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:26c5f4ccaf01/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:government"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:covid19"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/03/the-democrats-dont-understand-their-own-strength/608611/">
    <title>Stanley Greenberg: Americans’ Revulsion for Trump Is Underappreciated (The Atlantic)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-03-29T17:51:50+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/03/the-democrats-dont-understand-their-own-strength/608611/</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[Ehhhh we’ll see.

<blockquote>As Democrats fret about their own prospects, many fail to recognize the president’s fundamental weakness.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>trump politics america</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:716dce81fefe/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:trump"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:politics"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="http://www.khuang.io/covidtracker/">
    <title>COVID-19 Tracker</title>
    <dc:date>2020-03-28T19:24:06+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>http://www.khuang.io/covidtracker/</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>COVID-19 tracker generates summary visualizations of COVID-19 testing results in the US to help inform and communicate the current situation. All testing data are retrieved in real time from the COVID Tracking Project. Their database is updated daily by 5 PM EST, and so are the plots on this page. Resident population of the US in 2019 by state was obtained from Statista.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>health america covid19</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:1dd2826aaf5b/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:health"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:covid19"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.tastecooking.com/ugly-history-americas-sandwich/">
    <title>Mari Uyehara: A Second Look at the Tuna Sandwich’s All-American History (Taste)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-03-28T19:20:23+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.tastecooking.com/ugly-history-americas-sandwich/</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>How Japanese-Americans helped launch the California tuna-canning industry—and one of America’s most beloved sandwiches.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>food history america racism wwii</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:d250ee766378/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:food"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:history"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:racism"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:wwii"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2020/03/coronavirus-tsa-liquid-purell-paid-leave-rules.html">
    <title>Dan Kois: America Is a Sham (Slate)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-03-16T05:32:40+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2020/03/coronavirus-tsa-liquid-purell-paid-leave-rules.html</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>All over America, the coronavirus is revealing, or at least reminding us, just how much of contemporary American life is bullshit, with power structures built on punishment and fear as opposed to our best interest. Whenever the government or a corporation benevolently withdraws some punitive threat because of the coronavirus, it’s a signal that there was never any good reason for that threat to exist in the first place.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>america capitalism covid19</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:71dc8c30ceeb/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:capitalism"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:covid19"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/15/us/united-states-coronavirus-response.html">
    <title>Ellen Barry: ‘It’s Totally Ad Hoc’: Why America’s Virus Response Looks Like a Patchwork (NYT)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-03-16T05:31:27+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/15/us/united-states-coronavirus-response.html</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>For centuries, the United States has resisted a centralized public health policy. This week, as protective measures against the coronavirus varied county to county, Americans saw the cost.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>health america covid19</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:7bbcbb717330/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:health"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:covid19"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.propublica.org/article/inside-turbotax-20-year-fight-to-stop-americans-from-filing-their-taxes-for-free">
    <title>Justin Elliott &amp; Paul Kiel: Inside TurboTax’s 20-Year Fight to Stop Americans From Filing Their Taxes for Free (ProPublica)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-02-23T19:22:37+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.propublica.org/article/inside-turbotax-20-year-fight-to-stop-americans-from-filing-their-taxes-for-free</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>Using lobbying, the revolving door and “dark pattern” customer tricks, Intuit fended off the government’s attempts to make tax filing free and easy, and created its multi-billion-dollar franchise.

---

By 2019, nearly 40% of U.S. taxpayers filed online and some 40 million of them did so with TurboTax, far more than with any other product.

But the success of TurboTax rests on a shaky foundation, one that could collapse overnight if the U.S. government did what most wealthy countries did long ago and made tax filing simple and free for most citizens.

For more than 20 years, Intuit has waged a sophisticated, sometimes covert war to prevent the government from doing just that, according to internal company and IRS documents and interviews with insiders. The company unleashed a battalion of lobbyists and hired top officials from the agency that regulates it. From the beginning, Intuit recognized that its success depended on two parallel missions: stoking innovation in Silicon Valley while stifling it in Washington.

[…]

Intuit knows it’s deceiving its customers, internal company documents obtained by ProPublica show. “The website lists Free, Free, Free and the customers are assuming their return will be free,” said a company PowerPoint presentation that reported the results of an analysis of customer calls this year. “Customers are getting upset.”

[…]

The industry would offer free tax prep to a larger portion of taxpayers. In exchange, the IRS would promise not to develop its own system.

[…]

Free File only required the companies to offer free federal returns. They could charge for other products. The state return was the most common, but they could also pitch loans, “audit defense” or even products that had nothing to do with taxes.

[…]

Frequently “free” didn’t mean free at all. Many who started in TurboTax Free Edition found that if their return required certain commonplace tax forms, they would have to upgrade to a paid edition in order to file.

The company came to a key insight: Americans’ anxiety around tax filing is so powerful that it usually trumps any frustration with the TurboTax product, according to three former Intuit staffers. So even if customers click on “free” and are ultimately asked to pay, they will usually do it rather than start the entire process anew. Intuit capitalized on this tendency by making sure the paywall popped up only when the taxpayer was deep into the filing process.

“There’s a lot of desperation — people will agree, will click, will do anything to file,” said a former longtime software developer.

Every fall before tax season, the company puts every aspect of the TurboTax homepage and filing process through rigorous user testing. Design decisions down to color, word choice and other features are picked to maximize how many customers pay, regardless if they are eligible for the free product. “Dark patterns are something that are spoken of with pride and encouraged in design all hands” meetings, said one former designer.

[…]

Another celebrated feature, former staffers said, were the animations that appear as TurboTax users prepare their returns. One shows icons representing different tax deductions scrolling by, while another, at the end of the process, shows paper tax forms being scanned line-by-line and the phrase “Let’s comb through your returns.” What users are not told is that these cartoons reflect no actual processing or calculations; rather, Intuit’s designers deliberately added these delays to both reinforce and ease users’ “Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt.” The animations emphasize that taxes are complicated but also reassure users that the technological wizardry of TurboTax will protect them from mistakes.

[…]

Another celebrated feature, former staffers said, were the animations that appear as TurboTax users prepare their returns. One shows icons representing different tax deductions scrolling by, while another, at the end of the process, shows paper tax forms being scanned line-by-line and the phrase “Let’s comb through your returns.” What users are not told is that these cartoons reflect no actual processing or calculations; rather, Intuit’s designers deliberately added these delays to both reinforce and ease users’ “Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt.” The animations emphasize that taxes are complicated but also reassure users that the technological wizardry of TurboTax will protect them from mistakes.

[…]

Barack Obama, then a candidate for president, took aim at the tax prep industry. In a speech to an audience of tax wonks in Washington, he promised that the IRS would establish a simple return system. “This means no more worry, no more waste of time, no more extra expense for a tax preparer,” he declared. […] In response to the Obama threat, McKay and Intuit’s small army of outside lobbyists turned to Congress, where lawmakers friendly to the company introduced a series of bills that would elevate Free File from a temporary deal with the IRS to the law of the land.

Republicans have historically been the company’s most reliable supporters, but some Democrats joined them. Rep. Zoe Lofgren, the California Democrat whose district includes part of Silicon Valley, has introduced or co-sponsored five bills over the years that would codify the Free File program, with names like the Free File Permanence Act. 

[…]

What is clear is that Intuit’s business relies on keeping the use of Free File low. The company has repeatedly declined to say how many of its paying customers are eligible for the program, which is currently open to anyone who makes under $66,000. But based on publicly available data and statements by Intuit executives, ProPublica estimates that roughly 15 million paying TurboTax customers could have filed for free if they found Free File. That represents more than $1.5 billion in estimated revenue, or more than half the total that TurboTax generates. Those affected include retirees, students, people on disability and minimum-wage workers.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>politics taxes america finances</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:e87708260527/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:politics"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:taxes"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:finances"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://tinysubversions.com/notes/the-bot-scare/">
    <title>Darius Kazemi: The Bot Scare</title>
    <dc:date>2020-02-21T20:01:31+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://tinysubversions.com/notes/the-bot-scare/</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>It's clear upon inspection that the media narrative about an influx of Russian or otherwise foreign bots influencing politics in America is built on flimsy data and enormous leaps of logic. Further, the narrative empowers conspiracy theorists to make essentially whatever claims they want about anyone. The bots that do exist are drops of water in the ocean of social media, but I believe that the effect of constant front-page news stirring up fear about foreign influence can have far-reaching negative effects on any democracy.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>internet history america russia trump security</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:28a92fa6de1e/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:internet"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:history"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:russia"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:trump"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:security"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://medium.com/matter/the-racism-beat-6ff47f76cbb6">
    <title>Cord Jefferson: The Racism Beat (Matter)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-02-18T06:34:40+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://medium.com/matter/the-racism-beat-6ff47f76cbb6</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>I used to think that maybe I’d let my anger serve as an engine. But I’ve since discovered that my anger over each new racist incident is now rivaled and augmented by the anger I feel when asked to explain, once more, why black people shouldn’t be brutalized, insulted, and killed. If you’re a person of color, the racism beat is also a professional commitment to defending your right and the right of people like you to be treated with consideration to an audience filled with readers champing at the bit to call you nothing but a nigger playing the race card.

The hostility directed at writers who cover minority beats in America is solid proof that those people are doing important work. But that work can be exhausting. It’s exhausting to always be writing and thinking about a new person being racist or sexist or otherwise awful. It’s exhausting to feel compelled on a consistent basis to defend your claim to dignity. It’s exhausting to then watch those defenses drift beyond the reaches of the internet’s short memory, or to coffee tables in dentists’ offices, to be forgotten about until you link to them the next time you need to say essentially the same thing.

After a while you may want to respond to every request for a take on the day’s newest racist incident with nothing but a list of corresponding, pre-drafted truths, like a call-center script for talking to bigots. Having written thousands of words about white people who have slurred the president over the past six years, you begin to feel as if the only appropriate way to respond to new cases—the only way you can do it without losing your mind—is with a single line of text reading, “Black people are normal people deserving of the same respect afforded to anyone else, but they often aren’t given that respect due to the machinations of white supremacy.”

[…]

I’m ready for people in positions of power at magazines and newspapers and movie studios to recalibrate their understanding of what it means to talk about race in the first place. If America would like to express that it truly values and appreciates the voices of its minorities, it will listen to all their stories, not just the ones reacting to its shortcomings and brutality.

If this doesn’t eventually happen, I wonder how many more writers of color will come to the conclusion, as my colleague did, that this life we’ve made for ourselves is unsustainable. How many essays can go up before fatigue becomes anger becomes insanity? How many op-ed columns before you can feel the gruesomeness of trying to defend another dead black kid slowly hollowing you out? How many different ways can you find to say that you’re a human being?</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>racism writing journalism history america</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:2d54bf93c160/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:racism"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:writing"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:journalism"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:history"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2020/1/16/20991816/impeachment-trial-trump-bannon-misinformation">
    <title>Sean Illing: &quot;Flood the zone with shit&quot;: How misinformation overwhelmed our democracy (Vox)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-02-12T17:15:44+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2020/1/16/20991816/impeachment-trial-trump-bannon-misinformation</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>The impeachment trial didn’t change any minds. Here’s why.

---

The press ideally should sift fact from fiction and give the public the information it needs to make enlightened political choices. If you short-circuit that process by saturating the ecosystem with misinformation and overwhelm the media’s ability to mediate, then you can disrupt the democratic process.

What we’re facing is a new form of propaganda that wasn’t really possible until the digital age. And it works not by creating a consensus around any particular narrative but by muddying the waters so that consensus isn’t achievable.

[…]

Trump can dictate an entire news cycle with a few unhinged tweets or an absurd press conference. The media cycle is easily commandeered by misinformation, innuendo, and outrageous content. These are problems because of the norms that govern journalism and because the political economy of media makes it very hard to ignore or dispel bullshit stories. This is at the root of our nihilism problem, and a solution is nowhere in sight.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>democracy journalism politics america trump</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:1e382cf8b0cc/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:democracy"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:journalism"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:politics"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:trump"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://newrepublic.com/article/145525/ta-nehisi-coatess-uneasy-hope">
    <title>Ismail Muhammad: Ta-Nehisi Coates’s Uneasy Hope (The New Republic)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-01-23T18:40:00+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://newrepublic.com/article/145525/ta-nehisi-coatess-uneasy-hope</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>The writer's critics call him a cynic. But as a new anthology shows, his thinking has matured in subtle ways over the years.

---

The word most frequently attached to Ta-Nehisi Coates is probably pessimistic. His critics charge him with focusing on American racism’s intransigence, and overstating the power that white supremacy exerts on black life.

[…]

The racial backlash that Obama engendered testifies to the fact that any attempt by black people to liberate themselves fundamentally threatens the American order. This is part of the glory of Barack Obama’s presidency, that black people possess the potential to recreate America as a true democracy. But the events that have followed the Obama presidency tell us that democracy’s advent will perhaps remain more of a potentiality than a reality, a protracted struggle that the nation will not resolve without enormous strength of political will.

Eight Years in Power asks us to linger in that tension instead of dismissing it. Coates’s gradual drift away from post-racial hopes towards hard-nosed realism shows us that he has been in motion this whole time, not denying America’s capacity to change, but realizing how monumental the task before us is.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>racism obama writing america history politics</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:e937a348cdfd/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:racism"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:obama"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:writing"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:history"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:politics"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2017/06/lolas-story/524490/">
    <title>Alex Tizon: My Family’s Slave</title>
    <dc:date>2020-01-12T06:29:13+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2017/06/lolas-story/524490/</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>She lived with us for 56 years. She raised me and my siblings without pay. I was 11, a typical American kid, before I realized who she was.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>history slavery america philippines</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:453c416cb30e/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:history"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:slavery"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:philippines"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.curbed.com/2017/9/22/16346892/electric-car-history-fritchle">
    <title>Megan Barber: Before Tesla: Why everyone wanted an electric car in 1905 (Curbed)</title>
    <dc:date>2020-01-02T19:53:19+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.curbed.com/2017/9/22/16346892/electric-car-history-fritchle</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>By 1900, electric cars were so popular that New York City had a fleet of electric taxis, and electric cars accounted for a third of all vehicles on the road. People liked them because in many ways early electric cars outperformed their gas competitors. Electric cars didn’t have the smell, noise, or vibration found in steam or gasoline cars. They were easier to operate, lacked a manual crank to start, and didn’t require the same difficult-to-change gear system as gas cars.

[…]

When Henry Ford introduced the mass-produced and gas-powered Model T in 1908, it symbolized a death blow to the electric car. By 1912, a gasoline car cost only $650 while the average electric roadster sold for $1,750. In 1912 Charles Kettering also invented the first electric automobile starer. Effectively eliminating the hand crank, Kettering’s invention made the gas-powered auto even more attractive to the same drivers who had preferred electric cars.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>cars america industry</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:f7ee4524f01c/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:cars"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:industry"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2016/09/they-are-all-breitbart-now/499511/">
    <title>Ta-Nehisi Coates: How Breitbart Conquered the Media (The Atlantic)</title>
    <dc:date>2019-12-12T19:19:45+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2016/09/they-are-all-breitbart-now/499511/</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>Political reporters were taken aback by Hillary Clinton’s charge that half of Trump’s supporters are prejudiced. Few bothered to investigate the claim itself.

---

Indeed, what Breitbart understood, what his spiritual heir Donald Trump has banked on, what Hillary Clinton’s recent pillorying has clarified, is that white grievance, no matter how ill-founded, can never be humiliating nor disqualifying. On the contrary, it is a right to be respected at every level of American society from the beer-hall to the penthouse to the newsroom.

[…]

It is easy enough to look into Clinton’s claim and verify it or falsify it. The numbers are all around us. And the story need not end there. A curious journalist might ask what those numbers mean, or even push further, and ask what it means that the ranks of the Democratic Party are not totally free of their own deplorables.

[…]

For much of this campaign journalists have attacked Hillary Clinton for being evasive and avoiding hard questioning from their ranks. And then the second Clinton is forthright and says something revealing, she is attacked—not for the substance of what she’s said—but simply for having said it. This hypocrisy carries a chilling implicit message: Lie to me. Lie to the country. Lie to everyone. This weekend was not just another misanalysis, it was a shocking betrayal of the journalistic mission which should urge the revelation of truth as opposed to the propagation of hot takes, Washington jargon, and politics-speak.

The shame reflects an ugly and lethal trend in this country’s history—an ever-present impulse to ignore and minimize racism, an aversion to calling it by its name.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>trump racism america politics</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:e00300f59bb2/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:trump"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:racism"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:politics"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://popula.com/2019/10/11/the-failures-of-ayn-rand/">
    <title>Maria Bustillos: The failures of Ayn Rand (Popula)</title>
    <dc:date>2019-12-08T17:14:19+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://popula.com/2019/10/11/the-failures-of-ayn-rand/</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>For those who are inclined to find such ideas ludicrous, the book will fail, and utterly; its premises betray a bottomless ignorance of the deep interconnectedness of humankind, the needs — economic, social, emotional, intellectual — of human beings for one another, and of the ultimate inalienable reality of life on Earth as a whole, the totality of which each is a part, and our need to live in this wholeness.

Rand is 100% pro-inequality; she preaches the intellectual and moral superiority of wealth, and scorn and hatred of those who have “less.” Objectivism actively praises inequality. But nobody has “less,” because all have the same, of the only thing that matters—life, for a moment, and then?—something, nothing, nobody knows. Equality is not a fantasy, nor even a goal; it is just a fact.

[…]

Rand’s books have sold nonstop from the moment they were published because people love hearing how not only can they get away with being totally selfish, it’s absolutely the right way to be. The best way to be, as in, morally the best. 

[…]

The real looters, it increasingly appears, are the self-styled Objectivist “elites,” rabidly pursuing their own “happiness” at the cost of our social safety net, the prosperity and well-being of the world’s people and even, quite possibly, of this planet’s capacity to sustain life. So much for the triumph of individualism.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>america economics literature</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:c306dc50e5b8/</dc:identifier>
<taxo:topics><rdf:Bag>	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:economics"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:literature"/>
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</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.vox.com/identities/2017/9/1/15951874/prosperity-gospel-explained-why-joel-osteen-believes-prayer-can-make-you-rich-trump">
    <title>Tara Isabella Burton: The prosperity gospel, explained: Why Joel Osteen believes that prayer can make you rich (Vox)</title>
    <dc:date>2019-12-08T17:07:51+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.vox.com/identities/2017/9/1/15951874/prosperity-gospel-explained-why-joel-osteen-believes-prayer-can-make-you-rich-trump</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>It’s difficult to say that the prosperity gospel itself led to Donald Trump’s inauguration. Again, only 17 percent of American Christians identify with it explicitly. It’s far more true, however, to say that the same cultural forces that led to the prosperity gospel’s proliferation in America — individualism, an affinity for ostentatious and charismatic leaders, the Protestant work ethic, and a cultural obsession with the power of “positive thinking” — shape how we, as a nation, approach politics.

What is our collective approach to health care, after all, if not rooted in a visceral sense that the unlucky are responsible for their own misfortune? What is our willingness to vote a man like Trump into office but a collective cultural reward for those who brand themselves as successful?</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>america christianity religion politics</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:04ac44da52cd/</dc:identifier>
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	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:christianity"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:religion"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:politics"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.currentaffairs.org/2017/06/the-difference-between-liberalism-and-leftism">
    <title>Nathan J. Robinson: The Difference Between Liberalism and Leftism (Current Affairs)</title>
    <dc:date>2019-12-05T16:32:31+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.currentaffairs.org/2017/06/the-difference-between-liberalism-and-leftism</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>The core divergence in these worldviews is in their beliefs about the nature of contemporary political and economic institutions. The difference here is not “how quickly these institutions should change,” but whether changes to them should be fundamental structural changes or not. The leftist sees capitalism as a horror, and believes that so long as money and profit rule the earth, human beings will be made miserable and will destroy themselves. The liberal does not actually believe this. Rather, the liberal believes that while there are problems with capitalism, it can be salvaged if given a few tweaks here and there. As Nancy Pelosi said of the present Democratic party: “We’re capitalist.” When Bernie Sanders is asked if he is a capitalist, he answers flatly: “No.” Sanders is a socialist, and socialism is not capitalism, and there is no possibility of healing the ideological rift between the two. Liberals believe that the economic and political system is a machine that has broken down and needs fixing. Leftists believe that the machine is not “broken.” Rather, it is working perfectly well; the problem is that it is a death machine designed to chew up human lives. You don’t fix the death machine, you smash it to bits.

[…]

The liberal sees the conservative patriot wearing a flag pin and says: “A flag pin isn’t what makes you a patriot.” The leftist says: “Patriotism is an incoherent and chauvinistic notion.” The liberal says, “We’re the real ones who love America,” while the leftist says, “What is America?” or “I don’t see what it would mean to love or hate a meaningless conceptual entity.” 

[…]

Does this mean that anti-Trump forces are doomed to political infighting on everything? No, I don’t think so. Because even if you ultimately cannot reconcile your values with someone else’s, you can still forge temporary alliances for the purposes of achieving common political goals. Pelosi and Sanders share the goal of ridding the world of Trump, and it is possible to collaborate based on what we do have in common. That’s why Bernie Sanders endorsed Hillary Clinton and told his followers to vote for her. The fact that, at the end of the day, the liberal/left conflict is real and intractable does not preclude a liberal/left coalition in undermining the Trump agenda. It just means that this coalition is ultimately destined to be temporary.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>politics america</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:1267eda64d5e/</dc:identifier>
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	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://pitchfork.com/thepitch/wu-tang-clan-cream-cash-rules-everything-around-me-misunderstood/">
    <title>Mychal Denzel Smith: Wu-Tang Clan’s “C.R.E.A.M.” Is Not the Capitalist Anthem You Think It Is (Pitchfork)</title>
    <dc:date>2019-12-04T20:04:49+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://pitchfork.com/thepitch/wu-tang-clan-cream-cash-rules-everything-around-me-misunderstood/</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>Twenty-five years after its release, the iconic rap group’s biggest hit remains deeply misunderstood.

---

If Deck’s life, at the ripe old age of 22, felt no different inside or outside of prison, Meth’s cries to “get the money” are utterly meaningless. They sound less like a rallying call and more like desperate pleas of escape shouted into a void. Chasing cash, by whatever means available, is the only option for survival, as it rules everything around us—but should it? Should a lack of money make one’s life indistinguishable from prison?

These are questions that arise if we’re listening to the song as a whole, but pop success alters the way music is heard. As such, “C.R.E.A.M.” has been stripped for parts: The only aspects of real interest to a mass audience are the use of “cream” as slang for money and the repetition of the hook as an admonishment to work harder, longer, and more ruthlessly in the pursuit of it.

The song has become a tool of the unscrupulous system it was meant to expose. By 2014, Drake and JAY-Z were interpolating the hook into their opulent collaboration “Pound Cake” without any semblance of the struggle Wu was rapping about, while Financial Times was using “Cash Rules Everything Around Me” as a headline for a story detailing a select few rappers’ immense wealth. At this point, there’s even a nerdy YouTube tutorial that borrows the acronym to extol the virtues of Google Instant Buy.


In this way, “C.R.E.A.M.” has become something like the hip-hop equivalent of Bruce Springsteen’s “Born in the U.S.A.” Right out the gate, Springsteen’s hit was being co-opted into a bland patriotism. After attending one of his concerts in 1984, the conservative columnist George Will wrote: “I have not got a clue about Springsteen’s politics, if any, but flags get waved at his concerts while he sings songs about hard times. He is no whiner, and the recitation of closed factories and other problems always seems punctuated by a grand, cheerful affirmation: ‘Born in the U.S.A.!’”</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>music capitalism hiphop america racism</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:f08288ff1316/</dc:identifier>
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	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:capitalism"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:hiphop"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:racism"/>
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</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.newyorker.com/culture/cultural-comment/how-we-came-to-live-in-cursed-times">
    <title>Jia Tolentino: How We Came to Live in “Cursed” Times (The New Yorker)</title>
    <dc:date>2019-12-04T18:18:46+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.newyorker.com/culture/cultural-comment/how-we-came-to-live-in-cursed-times</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>Jia Tolentino writes on the uptick in uncanny or unpleasant things being described on Twitter, Reddit, and other social-media platforms as having “cursed energy,” a phrase that has come to signify anxiety and malaise.

---

These are quite obviously cursed times: Donald Trump is somehow still the President; more than a quarter of the birds in North America have disappeared since 1970; and children keep having to take to the streets to plead with our lawmakers to protect their lives. But it is hard—given the sheer extent of what is crumbling around us, and also the natural limits of our individual scopes of vision—to take in the fullness of contemporary cursedness all at once. It’s easier, perhaps, to see dread in individual objects: an eBay listing for a Sonic costume photographed on a child-size mannequin; a drawing of Mickey Mouse with a flesh-colored skull, holding a black, ear-shaped cap; a photo of a brick of ramen being cooked in Mountain Dew.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>culture internet america</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:b9309a41f3fd/</dc:identifier>
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	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:internet"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2018/06/supreme-court-is-now-trumps-and-so-we-grieve-for-america.html">
    <title>Lili Loofbourow: The America We Thought We Knew Is Gone (Slate)</title>
    <dc:date>2019-11-30T18:18:27+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2018/06/supreme-court-is-now-trumps-and-so-we-grieve-for-america.html</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>Trump, a man who has repeatedly said that he only responds to consequences, has faced none. His lies meet with no institutional resistance. Quite the contrary. His decision to say outrageous, incorrect, inflammatory things has paid off handsomely: His supporters believe them, and those in power will not acknowledge that he has said anything at all. The combined effect has rendered him immune to every standard we, as a country, once shared.

[…]

The word hypocrisy bobs up in these discussions, but the issue—as many have pointed out—is not hypocrisy, because those who are failing us do not aspire to intellectual or moral consistency in the first place. There is no negotiating with, or appeasing, or even engaging a party that feels no responsibility to the truth. Lying is more than “uncivil.” It corrodes relationships and trust, and the damage it does it permanent. I know it’s fashionable these days to wear one’s cynicism on one’s sleeve: We predict every promise will be broken because expecting honesty is laughably naïve. This makes reality easier to live with and joke about. But it’s a symptom of national rot. Being lied to, constantly, is not the price of being governed. That we have naturalized this—that we expect nothing less, in fact—shows how far we’ve already gone down a bad, bad road. This was already an unhealthy country in many ways. But at least lies were still resented. Now they are celebrated.

[…]

The good-faith ideological battle some thought right and left were waging turned out to be no such thing: Modern conservatism was never about small government. Or personal liberty—for women and people of color, anyway. It wasn’t about fiscal responsibility: The GOP passed a tax plan that has blown up our national debt, which is projected to reach 78 percent of America’s GDP by the end of this year, the highest it’s been since 1950. And Republicans are still not happy. They will pretend that this crisis they created will require “sacrifices,” gutting services poor Americans desperately need, like health care. The poor and disadvantaged will die.

Meanwhile, those in power will celebrate how much they deserve their wealth and how little anyone else deserves. And they will grab for more. You’d think they’d be happy: America now has the highest income inequality in the industrialized world. But even that is not enough. The greed is insatiable. And it is a greed not just for wealth but for domination—for permanent entitlement. What they want is to be served. At restaurants. On golf courses. In corporate offices. There is no form of protest they will respect: loud or silent, formal or spontaneous, civil or rude. Written petitions or marches on the streets. They don’t care. Those in power have been very clear about what they do care about. “We have more money and more brains and better houses and apartments and nicer boats,” Trump said Wednesday in a speech to his supporters, because he cannot help but say what he really means. “We are the elite.”</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>politics america trump racism</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:1155d0affe7b/</dc:identifier>
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	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:trump"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:racism"/>
</rdf:Bag></taxo:topics>
</item>
<item rdf:about="https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2019/11/why-dont-i-see-you-anymore/598336/">
    <title>Judith Shulevitz: Why You Never See Your Friends Anymore (The Atlantic)</title>
    <dc:date>2019-11-03T04:45:12+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2019/11/why-dont-i-see-you-anymore/598336/</link>
    <dc:creator>matthewmcvickar</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<blockquote>Our unpredictable and overburdened schedules are taking a dire toll on American society.

---

When so many people have long or unreliable work hours, or worse, long and unreliable work hours, the effects ripple far and wide. Families pay the steepest price. Erratic hours can push parents—usually mothers—out of the labor force. A body of research suggests that children whose parents work odd or long hours are more likely to evince behavioral or cognitive problems, or be obese. Even parents who can afford nannies or extended day care are hard-pressed to provide thoughtful attention to their kids when work keeps them at their desks well past the dinner hour.

[…]

What makes the changing cadences of labor most nepreryvka-like, however, is that they divide us not just at the micro level, within families and friend groups, but at the macro level, as a polity. Staggered and marathon work hours arguably make the nation materially richer—economists debate the point—but they certainly deprive us of what the late Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter described as a “cultural asset of importance”: an “atmosphere of entire community repose.”

[…]

Even if you aren’t asked to pull a weekend shift, work intrudes upon those once-sacred hours. The previous week’s unfinished business beckons when you open your laptop; urgent emails from a colleague await you in your inbox. A low-level sense of guilt attaches to those stretches of time not spent working.

[…]

Wall Street demands improved quarterly earnings and encourages the kind of short-term thinking that drives executives to cut their most expensive line item: labor. If we want to alter the cadences of collective time, we have to act collectively, an effort that is itself undermined by the American nepreryvka. A presidential-campaign field organizer in a caucus state told me she can’t get low-income workers to commit to coming to meetings or rallies, let alone a time-consuming caucus, because they don’t know their schedules in advance.

Reform is possible, however. In Seattle, New York City, and San Francisco, “predictive scheduling” laws (also called “fair workweek” laws) require employers to give employees adequate notice of their schedules and to pay employees a penalty if they don’t.

Then there’s “right to disconnect” legislation, which mandates that employers negotiate a specific period when workers don’t have to answer emails or texts off the clock. France and Italy have passed such laws.

It’s a cliché among political philosophers that if you want to create the conditions for tyranny, you sever the bonds of intimate relationships and local community. “Totalitarian movements are mass organizations of atomized, isolated individuals,” Hannah Arendt famously wrote in The Origins of Totalitarianism. She focused on the role of terror in breaking down social and family ties in Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union under Stalin. But we don’t need a secret police to turn us into atomized, isolated souls. All it takes is for us to stand by while unbridled capitalism rips apart the temporal preserves that used to let us cultivate the seeds of civil society and nurture the sadly fragile shoots of affection, affinity, and solidarity.</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>labor work america capitalism</dc:subject>
<dc:source>https://pinboard.in/</dc:source>
<dc:identifier>https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/b:17ead5c6fdf5/</dc:identifier>
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	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:work"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:america"/>
	<rdf:li rdf:resource="https://pinboard.in/u:matthewmcvickar/t:capitalism"/>
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