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When the networks called the 2020 presidential election for Joe
Biden on Saturday, November 7, 2020, people from coast to coast
exhaled--and danced in the streets. This quick-turnaround volume, a
collection of 38 personal essays from writers all over the
country--"many of America's most thoughtful voices," as Jon Meacham
puts it--captures the week Trump was voted out, a unique juncture
in American life, and helps point toward a way forward to a nation
less divided. An eclectic lineup of contributors--from Rosanna
Arquette, Susan Bro and General Wesley Clark to Keith Olbermann,
Stewart O'Nan and Anthony Scaramucci--puts a year of transition
into perspective, and summons the anxieties and hopes so many have
for better times ahead. As award-winning columnist Mary C. Curtis
writes in the lead essay, "Saying you're not interested in politics
is dangerous because, like it or not, politics is interested in
you." Novelist Christopher Buckley, a former speechwriter for Vice
President George H.W. Bush, laments, "The Republican Senate, with
one exception, has become a stay of ovine, lickspittle quislings,
degenerate descendants of such giants as Everett Dirksen, Barry
Goldwater, Howard Baker and John McCain." Nero Award-winning
mystery novelist Stephen Mack Jones writes, to Donald Trump,
"Remember: You live in my house. 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue is my
house. My ancestors built it at a cost of blood, soul and labor. I
pay my taxes every year to feed you, clothe you and your family and
staff and fly you around the country and the world in my
tricked-out private jet. If you violate any aspect of your
four-year lease--any aspect--Lord Jesus so help me, I will do
everything in my power to kick yo narrow ass to the curb." As
Publisher Steve Kettmann writes in the Introduction: "The hope is
that in putting out these glimpses so quickly, giving them an
immediacy unusual in book publishing, we can help in the mourning
for all that has been lost, help in the healing (of ourselves and
of our country), and help in the pained effort, like moving limbs
that have gone numb from inactivity, to give new life to our
democracy. We stared into the abyss, tottered on the edge, and a
record-setting surge of voting and activism delivered us from the
very real threat of plunging into autocracy."
Greedy corporate interests have been lying to us for centuries.
Here’s an illustrated, entertaining road map for navigating
through their hypocrisy and deception From praising the health
benefits of cigarettes to moralizing on the character-building
qualities of child labor, rich corporate overlords have gone to
astonishing, often morally indefensible lengths to defend their
profits. Since the dawn of capitalism, they’ve told the same lies
over and over to explain why their bottom line is always more
important than the greater good: You say you want to raise the
federal minimum wage? Why, you’ll only make things worse for the
very people you want to help! Should we hold polluters accountable
for the toxins they’re dumping in our air and water? No, the free
market will save us! Can we raise taxes on the rich to pay for
universal healthcare? Of course not—that will kill jobs!
Affordable childcare? Socialism! It’s always the same tired
threats and finger-pointing, in a concentrated campaign to keep
wealth and power in the hands of the wealthy and powerful.
Corporate Bullsh*t will help you identify this pernicious
propaganda for the wealthiest 1 percent, and teach you how to fight
back. Structured around some of the most egregious statements ever
made by the rich and powerful, the book identifies six categories
of falsehoods that repeatedly thwart progress on issues including
civil rights, wealth inequality, climate change, voting rights, gun
responsibility, and more. With amazing illustrations and a sharp
sense of humor, Corporate Bullsh*t teaches readers how to never get
conned, bamboozled, or ripped off ever again.
With the hedge of protection broken against the Wilds, the white
wolves are vulnerable. They have failed to carry out the commission
given to them by the Great Wolf, but unknown to them, and the
animals of the Wilds, the stolen cubs and animals are entrenched in
a struggle of their own. Being schooled with the black wolves,
Tristian and Challenger combat the ideas of morphism, fight against
the myths of fear created against the white wolves and their
beliefs, and give healing to, the greatest fighter ever to live
among the black wolves. There are many dragons to defeat. It is not
just a physical fight the white wolves are up against, but a war of
ideologies. Both the kingdoms of the white and dark wolf are
divided. Treachery in the black wolf's court leads Snuffer and
Warrior to battle for control of the eastern fortress. The dark
wolves have tried to destroy the Way since it was handed down from
the House of Alexander, but now Khoa has pledged to destroy the
black wolves and in the process may lose himself and tear apart his
kingdom. Though the adults have failed to reach out and spread the
Way, it is the cubs that manage to bridge the gap between species
in a subtle but dramatic way. Is it enough to hold back the
approaching war, and to change the path of history for the white
and dark wolves? Can the cubs survive and make it back to the
Wilds?
Imaginary adventures with Indians, wild animals, and outlaws keep a little cowboy busy.
A CLEAR-EYED, COGENT CLARION CALL FOR ENDING THE DIVISIVE CLASS
WARS THAT THREATEN THE AMERICAN MIDDLE-CLASS DREAM
In "What's the Matter with White People? "Walsh argues that the
biggest divide in America today is based not on party or ideology
but on two competing explanations for why middle-class stability
has been shaken since the 1970s. One side sees an America that has
spent the last forty years bankrupting the country by providing
benefits for the underachieving, the immoral, and the
undeserving--no matter the cost to the majority of Americans. The
other side sees an America that has spent the last forty years
catering to the wealthy while allowing only a nominal measure of
progress for the downtrodden.
Using her extended Irish-Catholic working-class family as a case in
point and explaining her own political coming-of-age, Walsh shows
how liberals unwittingly collaborated in the "us versus them"
narrative and how the GOP's renewed culture war now scapegoats
segments of its own white demographic.
Part memoir, part political history, "What's the Matter with White
People? "is essential reading to combat political and cultural
polarization and to build a more just and prosperous multiracial
America in the years to come.
WITH A NEW AFTERWORD
""In this wonderfully insightful book, Joan Walsh shows how
America built a large and vibrant (although mostly white) middle
class that fueled the greatest economic boom in history and made a
reality of the American dream. Hers is the story of postwar America
told through a working class New York Irish Catholic family whose
political divisions mirrored the nation's. Moving and powerful, her
account will help people of all races think through how we can
build a just and prosperous multiracial America."" --Robert B.
Reich
""A brilliant and illuminating book about America since the
upheavals of the '60s and '70s. "What's the Matter with White
People? "is about the heart and soul of America, from our Founding
Fathers to Hillary and Barack.It's about our middle class, which so
recently flourished, and how it has been injured and diminished
almost beyond repair by greed and racist fear-mongering. It's about
America's greatness and delusion, the betrayal of the working
class, and the fragmentation of the Democratic party. It's about
how Walsh's own Irish Catholic family from New York was treated,
responded and fared in the years between Richard Nixon and Barack
Obama Walsh writes with passion, precision, and insight into how
racism has made such a bold public comeback. Her book was heaven
for a political junkie like me, somehow managing to be painful and
exhilarating at the same time."" --Anne Lamott
""Joan Walsh's reflections and observations from her personal
journey as an Irish Catholic daughter of a Northeastern blue collar
family provide a unique window into the hearts, aspirations,
anguish, anger, fears, and pride of white working class voters
during the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. No one can
properly understand current class politics and race relations in
America unless they've read this book."" --Dr. Clarence B.
Jones
The size and stability of the American middle class were once
the envy of the world. But changes unleashed in the 1960s pitted
Americans against one another politically in new and destructive
ways. These battles continued to rage from that day to now, while
everyone has fallen behind economically except the wealthy.
Right-wing culture warriors blamed the decline on the moral
shortcomings of ""other"" Americans--black people, feminists, gays,
immigrants, union members--to court a fearful white working- and
middle-class base with ever more bitter ""us vs. them"" politics.
Liberals tried, but mostly failed, to make the case that we're all
in this together.
In "What's the Matter with White People?," popular "Salon"
columnist Joan Walsh argues that the biggest divide in America
today is not about party or ideology, but about two competing
narratives for why everything has fallen apart since the 1970s. One
side sees an America that has spent the last forty years
bankrupting the country providing benefits and advantages to the
underachieving, the immoral, and the undeserving, no matter the
cost to Middle America. The other sees an America that has spent
the last forty years bankrupting the country providing benefits and
advantages to the very rich, while allowing a measure of cultural
progress for the different and the downtrodden. It matters which
side is right, and how the other side got things so wrong.
Walsh connects the dots of American decline through trends that
began in the 1970s and continue today--including the demise of
unions, the stagnation of middle-class wages, the extension of the
right's ""Southern Strategy"" throughout the country, the victory
of Reagan Republicanism, the increase in income inequality, and the
drop in economic mobility.
Citing her extended family as a case in point, Walsh shows how
liberals unwittingly collaborated in the ""us vs. them"" narrative,
rather than developing an inspiring, persuasive vision of a more
fair, united America. She also explores how the GOP's renewed
culture war
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