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Racism

A Century Ago, White Protestant Extremism Marched on Washington

February 7, 2021 by sergneri Leave a Comment

From the Feb. 7, 2021 New York Times: Kelly J. Baker is a writer and scholar of the Ku Klux Klan in the 1920s. She sees frightening similarities between that culture and the violence at the Capitol on Jan. 6. A most interesting essay showing how things have not changed in ~100 years, the rhetoric … [Read more…]

Posted in: Faits Divers, Politics, Racism, Thinking about, Trump Tagged: 1920, American history, anti-immigrant, Catholic immigrants, evangelical movement, extremism, immigrants, Jewish immigrants, Klansmen, misogynistic, Protestant Christianity, The Klan, Trump, White Christianity, white supremacist

Sharon Begley

January 24, 2021 by sergneri 1 Comment

From the New York Times obits: Sharon Begley, a Top Science Journalist, Is Dead at 64 Long at Newsweek, she was regarded as one of her generation’s pre-eminent science writers. An “Enlightenment-era figure,” Jon Meacham said. … Dr. Francis S. Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, wrote on Twitter that Ms. Begley would … [Read more…]

Posted in: Climate Change, Ethical and green living, Faits Divers, Feminism, Future of Work, IT Failures, Obituaries, Pandemic, Politics, Racism, Science, Sea Stories, Thinking about Tagged: Journalism, Journalist, New York Times, Newsweek, STAT, Wall Street Journal

Before Capitol Riot, Republican Lawmakers Fanned the Flames

January 11, 2021 by sergneri Leave a Comment

From the NYTimes: Before Capitol Riot, Republican Lawmakers Fanned the Flames A “1776 moment”: Several of the president’s closest allies in Congress used bellicose language to urge their supporters to attend the Jan. 6 rally that turned into a deadly riot. Just so we don’t forget.

Posted in: Politics, Racism, This Day in History, Trump Tagged: Ali Alexander, Andy Biggs, anti-Christian socialists, Lauren Boebert, Madison Cawthorn, MAGA, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Mo Brooks, Paul Gosar, Pete Sessions, the Capitol

The 147 Republicans Who Voted To Overturn Election Results

January 7, 2021 by sergneri Leave a Comment

Just so we don’t forget: The 147 Republicans Who Voted To Overturn Election Results By Karen Yourish, Larry Buchanan and Denise Lu Updated January 7, 2021 Here are the eight senators and 139 representatives who voted to sustain one or both objections.

Posted in: Politics, Racism, Thinking about, This Day in History, Trump Tagged: lawmakers, Republican, Republican lawmakers, Trump

Business Leaders Condemn Violence on Capitol Hill: ‘This Is Sedition’

January 6, 2021 by sergneri Leave a Comment

From the NYT today – I never thought that we would see this: Business Leaders Condemn Violence on Capitol Hill: ‘This Is Sedition’ The National Association of Manufacturers, one of the country’s largest lobbying groups, suggested that Vice President Mike Pence should consider invoking a provision of the 25th Amendment that allows members of the … [Read more…]

Posted in: Finanace, Politics, Racism, Thinking about, This Day in History, Trump Tagged: 25th Amendment, Business Roundtable, National Association of Manufacturers, sedition, Thomas J. Donohue, Trump, U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Vice President Pence

John Outterbridge, Who Turned Castoffs Into Sculpture, Dies at 87

January 1, 2021 by sergneri Leave a Comment

An obituary from the New York Times. LOS ANGELES — John Outterbridge, a Los Angeles cultural leader and artist who made powerful sculptures from what is usually dismissed as junk or castoffs — a means of exploring loaded social issues as well as celebrating a history of African-American resourcefulness — died here on Nov. 12. … [Read more…]

Posted in: Faits Divers, Obituaries, Racism, Thinking about Tagged: African-American, arts educator, assemblage, Compton, Compton Communicative Arts Academy, Containment, John Outterbridge, Los Angeles, Mark di Suvero, Pasadena Art Museum, rags, rusted metal, Sculpture, Simon Rodia, Watts Towers, Watts Towers Arts Center, wood

The Ghosts of Segregation

November 30, 2020 by sergneri Leave a Comment

Hidden in Plain Sight: The Ghosts of Segregation is a NY Times photo essay by Richard Frishman. At far right, the onetime “Colored” window at Edd’s Drive-In, in Pascagoula, Miss. After being tipped off by a contributor to a website called Preservation in Mississippi, I verified the history of the window at Edd’s Drive-In with … [Read more…]

Posted in: Politics, Racism, Slavery, Thinking about Tagged: New York Times, photo essay, Segregation, Slavery, Times, travel

Patrick Gathara – The final throes of the Trump presidency exposed America as the bad joke

November 15, 2020 by sergneri Leave a Comment

… and danger to the world it has certainly become In the Guardian, an essay by Patrick Gathara, a Kenyan political cartoonist, satirist and writer gives a timely and honest view of how Trump makes America look to the rest of the world. It is shameful and funny. The media did not feel it necessary … [Read more…]

Posted in: Ethical and green living, Politics, Racism, Thinking about, Trump Tagged: brash, downright stupid, Election, entitled, Iraq, overconfident, Rich, satire, schadenfreude, shithole countries, Trump, Vietnam

Diane di Prima, Poet of the Beat Era and Beyond, Dies at 86

October 28, 2020 by sergneri Leave a Comment

A NY Times Book section obituary Diane di Prima, Poet of the Beat Era and Beyond, Dies at 86  and an Associated Press obituary were published today, 10/28/2020. From the New York Times: Ms. di Prima often spoke of the influence of her maternal grandfather, Domenico Mallozzi, a tailor and ardent anarchist who had immigrated … [Read more…]

Posted in: California History, Ethical and green living, Faits Divers, Feminism, Flying, Obituaries, Politics, Racism, Sea Stories, Thinking about, This Day in History Tagged: Activism, autobiographical, Beat Era, Ezra Pound, Greenwich Village, heresies, Hidden Religion, Liberation News Service, Loba, Memoirs of a Beatnik, poet laureate of San Francisco, Poetics Program, Poetry, San Francisco, the Diggers

The preexisting conditions of the coronavirus pandemic

October 18, 2020 by sergneri Leave a Comment

Over on Ars Technica, a link to an essay summarizing the data found in a new report from the Global Burden of Disease project based at the University of Washington – An enormous new data set peers into the health of the world’s population before 2020. Adam Rogers, wired.com – 10/18/2020, 4:07 AM Try to … [Read more…]

Posted in: Ethical and green living, IT Failures, Pandemic, Politics, Racism, Science, Thinking about Tagged: cardiovascular disease, Coronavirus, coronavirus pandemic, essential workers, Global Burden of Disease, metabolic disorders, pandemic, people of color, poor, report, risk factors
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