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Tag Archives: Politics-CivicInterest
Diary of a Psychosis
Tom Woods is a historian and podcast host with a daily newsletter which (in part) analyzes issues of the day from a libertarian point of view. From February 2020 forward, both the podcast and the newsletter were largely oriented toward … Continue reading
Posted in history, Politics and Civic Interest, Reviews
Tagged coronamania, health/wellness, history, memoir, Politics-CivicInterest
3 Comments
Short rounds: C.S. Lewis and the anthropology of sanitation workers
First up, C.S. Lewis’ The Pilgrim’s Regress. Lewis dashed this off immediately after converting to Christianity in 1933, and it’s a fictional and fantastical rendering of his own journey throughout the twenties as he fell away from his childhood faith, … Continue reading
Posted in Politics and Civic Interest, Religion and Philosophy, Reviews
Tagged CS Lewis, fantasy, on the job, Politics-CivicInterest, religion, waste
1 Comment
With Good Intentions? The Myth of Progress
Wait, wait, wait. Before I comment on this book, I want to say first that patience is a virtue, and so is persistence. I stumbled on Bill Kauffman nine years ago, possibly via Front Porch Republic, and was immediately taken … Continue reading
Posted in Politics and Civic Interest, Reviews
Tagged Bill Kauffman, essays, Politics-CivicInterest
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Racism, medieval feasting, and housing
Between work and school projects my list of read-but-unreviewed titles is growing, so…alas, it’s short rounds time. First up, The Color of Law, on how housing segregation was purposely pursued, not merely tolerated, by the federal government — primarily through … Continue reading
Posted in Politics and Civic Interest, Reviews
Tagged history, housing, Politics-CivicInterest, race
4 Comments
How Social Media Rewired Our Minds
One of my core beliefs is that we live in a world which we made for ourselves, and yet which is not fit for ourselves. Our eyes expect to see what they do not see, our arms reach for which … Continue reading
The Heinlein Interview
I am closing in on the end of Astounding, which bills itself as a history of golden-age SF, and so far the most interesting aspect of it was the largely-uncommented-on political history of Robert Heinlein. We meet him as an … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews
Tagged anarchism, J Neil Schulman, libertarianism, Politics-CivicInterest, Robert Heinlein, science fiction
10 Comments
“Look at us,” my buddy chuckled. It was the halfway point of a 3-hour night class, and we’d been given a fifteen minute break to hydrate, caffeinate, and evacuate. Four people immediately flowed into the student common area and occupied … Continue reading
Posted in history, Reviews
Tagged digital world, history, Politics-CivicInterest, social media, Technology and Society
3 Comments
September 2023 in Review
September was a quieter month for leisure reading than the last have been, in part because of grad school — I’m constantly reading articles related to information science for class, both the assigned pieces and those I can find connected … Continue reading
Posted in General
Tagged horror, Monthly Recap, Politics-CivicInterest, science fiction, thriller
5 Comments
Selected quotes from “41: A Portrait of my Father”
41 is a biography of George H.W. Bush by his son, George W. Bush, and is written with affection, not objectivity. Bush offers that as a disclaimer at the very beginning. This is a tribute, written by a man who … Continue reading
The Last Republicans
I was interested in reading this book even before my unexpected presidential reading tangent of this last month, in part because of my age: George H.W. Bush was the first president I remember, and holds that title somewhat fixedly in … Continue reading