Tuesday, May 13, 2025

Liberty!

 Some reading I did today, although not feeling quite in tune with existence.

What are we to think of liberty? I still have on the back burner my paper on the Indiana constitution's natural rights, so liberty catches my eye and holds my attention.

Colin Kidd · Dangerous Chimera: What is liberty? (London Review of Books)

One prominent early critic, the American philosopher Gerald MacCallum, thought that Berlin had mistakenly reified two aspects of a single category, but a later commentator, the Cambridge historian Quentin Skinner, went in the opposite direction, arguing that Berlin had overlooked a highly distinctive version of liberty, which he labelled ‘neo-Roman’. He set out this position in various venues, but most poignantly when he delivered the Isaiah Berlin Lecture at the British Academy in 2001 on ‘A Third Concept of Liberty’ (a version of this essay appeared in the LRB of 4 April 2002). More precisely, Skinner thought he had identified a second type of negative liberty, of which there were ‘two rival and incommensurable theories’. He found in the Roman historians Livy, Sallust and Tacitus and in their early modern reception an emphasis on free citizenship, conceived as the absence of subjection to the will of another. Negative liberty, Skinner argued, can take the form of the liberal conception of non-interference or the Roman idea of non-dependence on the power of someone else.

In recovering this lost Roman concept of freedom, Skinner had, as he warmly acknowledged, an ally in the political theorist Philip Pettit. But there is a subtle distinction between their positions. Whereas Pettit emphasises non-domination as the leitmotif of a tradition of republican freedom, Skinner thinks that the primary feature of this strain of liberty was the absence of dependence, and that adherence to this way of thinking about liberty wasn’t confined to those with overtly republican political commitments. For Skinner, neo-Roman liberty was a kind of status rather than merely a freedom of action.

Roman philosophy underpins the thinking of our Founding Fathers' thinking. It feels me to me there should be a connection to our ideal of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

The review makes a point about a disjunction that buried this concept of liberty.

Despite this, its commanding position in English political culture crumbled with extraordinary rapidity between the 1770s and 1790s. Skinner has identified what must constitute a major turning point in modern history, yet one that has gone largely unnoticed. How can we have failed to spot something of this magnitude? The embarrassing nakedness of the historiography here is disturbing in itself. But then comes a further shock. The reader casually assumes that the displacement of neo-Roman categories by a liberal understanding of freedom must have had something to do with the emergence of the market as the dominant trope in modern political language. But while Skinner thinks it plausible that the ‘new view of liberty’ held some attraction for champions of the market, he traces its provenance back before the 18th-century emergence of commercial society. What’s more, he identifies specific and immediate factors that caused liberty as non-interference to ‘ascend so suddenly to a position of ideological dominance’ from the late 1770s.

You want a conspiracy theory, there is one with meat for you.

 Captives of Desire  (The Hedgehog Review) poses a grimmer view:

6. This academic and yet highly politicized discourse on the role of desire—which became only more persuasive with the growth of consumer society, an increasingly narcissistic culture, and the spread of impulsive and addictive behavior—always contained a fundamental contradiction. While muted to the general public because of its detrimental political implications, impulses and motivations were not regarded by academics and researchers as wholly or even primarily distinctive or unique. Given individual suggestibility and malleability, particularly at early ages, desires were clearly subject to being externally influenced, directed, and even shaped. Liberal thinkers thus boldly and without fear of contradiction insisted that affirming an individual source of desire in the emerging age of vastly expanding mass production and organizational employment ladders would pose no threat to social order. Rather, given the growing demand for status and consumption, consumer behavior and social mobility—though defined as a matter of individual choice—could be effectively directed toward the systemic pursuit of available market options and priorities. Furthermore, supposedly self-interested and even self-serving behavior was structured to serve institutional goals as essentially private and disconnected from significant institutional participation or policy concerns. Such activity could thus be not merely permitted but directly and strenuously encouraged. Such a society, presumably composed of empowered individuals and further bolstered by the liberal inflation of consumer choice as the determining factor in the productive system, would be at once open and insulated from change.

7. This reframing of the individual and its relation to society represented a significant reconfiguration of the liberal paradigm. The result, a distinctive twentieth-century system called organizational liberalism, represented a dramatically attenuated connection to perduring liberal institutions and values. To begin with, this shift effectively reduced active democratic citizens to consumers and careerists subject to elite management and direction. Moreover, by reorienting individual priorities away from a religiously inflected mastering of desire in service of higher ends toward the fulfillment of easily accessible appetites, American liberalism was implicitly acknowledging a turn away from an innovative history of social change and cultural experimentation. The new emphasis on stability, social regularity, privatism, and political complacency directed people away from pursuing new personal and collective aspirations that might challenge the existing system.

8. By grounding the validity of the modern American project in access to personal gratification, liberalism would tether its case for individuality and freedom to continually expanding the pathways to acquisition and fulfillment. At the same time, such an accelerating pursuit of personal objectives, even if directed away from public involvement, was feared by many liberal thinkers and policymakers as an unstable and potentially hazardous foundation for an individualistic social order. Emphasized through the history of both political regimes and political thought—and reaffirmed by Federalist #10—was the threat of anarchy and chaos it posed to political stability. The limited apprehensions of pre–World War II liberalism, as sociologist Robert Nisbet later argued, derived in part from its assumption that earlier cultural norms of the Protestant social ethic remained durable sources of social regulation. A commitment to the larger social good, together with existing limits on material production, would, it was believed, continue to provide effective constraints on appetitive inclinations. Moreover, as the liberal framework grew in prominence during this period, and American intellectuals began to appropriate long-standing English liberal ideas, key thinkers such as John Dewey, in his classic Democracy and Education, emphasized the Lockean notion of the importance of early childhood formation in producing adaptive and regulated individuals.

9. Beset by ideological blinders, American liberalism could not have foreseen the disruptive impact of its turn to another secular English liberal assumption: the post-religious ideal of freedom embraced by Locke and Smith as well as Jefferson in the Declaration. In an increasingly competitive and production-based society, this emerging cultural ideal of freedom from external restraints would weaken the already fraying cultural and institutional disapproval of conspicuous consumption, acquisition, and status seeking. Faced with the boom economy and cultural experimentation of the 1920s, organizational liberals began to sense that more effective controls on individual behavior would be needed. At the same time, to preserve the liberal framework these controls had to appear consistent with not only the popular perception of reduced constraints but also the later organizational-liberal identification of freedom with both the satisfaction of desire and the opportunity to partake in expanding consumption and acquisition.

***

 19. Because society faces a great range of perspectives and deep divisions regarding these complex and troubling questions, a thoughtful assessment of these options lies beyond the scope of the present essay. Many liberal commentators, devoted to a credulous depiction of the United States as the final chapter in Western history, avoid—even while sensing collapse—addressing the crisis of social renewal. Yet as we wrestle with the great advances of the modern and late-modern age, solutions will emerge for humanizing these unprecedented opportunities. The challenge is to ask how society can restore belief in and support for forms of desire that promise genuine meaning for all. How do we achieve personal actualization and empowerment, interpersonal relatedness and communal connection, and equitable norms and facilitative institutions after a century of individual and citizen dispossession and social fragmentation?

I guess we can view MAGA and its ilk as an attempt to defrag liberal society. Ouch.

Prehistory’s Original Sin (The Hedgehog Review) gets even grimmer.
In recent years, a different style of left-wing critique has gained a foothold in the academy. A group of mostly young scholars criticize the postwar liberal consensus, which they charge with propping up global inequality and sanctioning American hegemony abroad. But they are not Old Left holdouts: They recognize that, after Michel Foucault’s unmasking of modern disciplinary techniques, class politics and progressive social reform need new justifications, to the extent they can be salvaged at all. Foucault’s successors in an important sense, they are also critical of him, suggesting his Cold War-era opposition to the state was one form of a tendency that also came in neoliberal guise, underwriting marketization and austerity at home, human rights and the “rules-based order” abroad. The movement is led by historians whose preferred genre is the genealogy: a method of denaturalizing ideas and practices by excavating their contingent pasts. "Post-Foucauldian emancipatory genealogy" is a mouthful—easier to call this tendency “Moynism,” after Samuel Moyn, a leading force in the new critique. The Moynist project, in a nutshell, is to liberate left-liberalism from itself.

If you have read a book by the prolific Yale law professor and historian, the structure of a Moynist argument is likely familiar. The postwar condition is characterized by an historical amnesia induced by a new collective mythology: The moral imperative of “never again” has bred a politics of “no alternatives.” Yet the just-so story of liberal triumph over totalitarianism misleads in presenting the postwar settlement as morally inescapable and politically incontestable. In fact, everything that matters in our common life has emerged from a contingent and controversial past, a history that could have been otherwise. Genealogy can awaken us to our freedom to live by the values we imagine for ourselves, here and now, without kowtowing to outdated precedents or repeating past mistakes. By piercing the veil of superstition that hangs over contemporary norms and institutions and lends them an aura of authority, genealogy opens new possibilities for action and reminds us that we have always been at liberty to create the world anew. Or so the argument goes.

Moyn, his students, and fellow-travelers, are best known for applying these methods to contemporary human rights discourse in revisionist historical studies that assail its antipolitical, inegalitarian, Christian, and conservative assumptions. In recent years they have deployed similar arguments against everything from liberal humanitarianism and interventionism to the legalism of political life under the U.S. Constitution. More ambitiously, Moyn has turned his sights on liberalism itself. Drawing on recent historiography that privileges civic freedom over individual rights, Moyn depicts the “Cold War liberalism” of thinkers like Karl Popper and Isaiah Berlin as a pessimistic aberration from liberalism’s historic norm. Here Moyn and his band of genealogists finally start to tell us what they like: Their liberalism is comprehensive, not procedural; perfectionist, not value-neutral; emancipatory, not conflict-averse; utopian, not chastened and resigned. Their heroes are neither Locke nor Rawls but Rousseau, Hegel, and the early Judith Shklar.

Well, I certainly prefer Locke and Rawls to Rousseau and Hegel.

What those of who think liberal democracy is the best of all possible governments must find ways to keep it alive. We will even need to make the demos understand what value democracy is to their lives. I think it will mean going back down the road to find out where we took the turn that brought us to Trump and illiberal democracy. The same Romans that inspired our Founders and Framers seem like a good place to start.

 sch 5/10

How The Trump Grift Works

 Trump cons by being loud and insistent, then moving onto something else for him to bellow about.

The Guardian points out the emptiness of Trump's noise: Friday briefing: A big, beautiful trade deal – or a mugging from the school bully?

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Trump praises ‘total reset’ of trade relations with China as talks continue (FRance24)

The Geneva meeting comes after Trump unveiled a trade agreement with Britain, the first deal with any country since he unleashed his blitz of global tariffs.
The five-page, non-binding deal confirmed to nervous investors that the United States is willing to negotiate sector-specific relief from recent duties, but maintained a 10 percent baseline levy on most British goods.

Following the US-UK trade announcement, analysts have voiced pessimism about the likelihood negotiations will lead to any significant changes in the US-China trade relationship.

"It's nice that they're talking. But my expectations for the actual outcomes of this first round of talks is pretty limited," Sheets from Citigroup said.

"I think it's quite possible they'll walk away from Geneva saying how constructive and productive the talks were, but not actually reducing tariffs at all," Hufbauer said.
sch 5/11

Pieces of John Dewey; 11-26-2019

[I am back working through my prison journal. It is out of order. The date in the title is the date it was written.Well, the order is as I have opened boxes. I hope this is not confusing. What you are reading is what you get for your tax dollars. sch 4/24/2025

Some passages I wrenched from today's reading of John Dewey's Democracy and Education (1916; The Free Press/MacMillan Company, 1966), and all I will say about them is to quote Jerry Lee Lewis: "Think about it."

...Democratic society is peculiarly dependent for its maintenance upon the use in forming a course of study of criteria which are broadly human. Democracy cannot flourish where the chief influences in selecting subject matter of instruction are utilitarian ends narrowly conceived for the masses, and, for the higher education of the few, the traditions of a specialized cultivated class. The notion that the "essentials" of elementary education are the three R's mechanically treated, is based upon ignorance of the essentials needed for realization of democratic ideals. Unconsciously it assumes that these ideals are unrealizable; it assumes that in the future, as in the past, getting a livelihood, "making a living," must signify for most men and women doing things which are not significant, freely chosen, and ennobling to those who do them; doing things which serve ends unrecognized by those engaged in them, carried on under the direction of others for the sake of pecuniary reward. For preparation of large numbers for a life of this sort, and only for this purpose, are mechanical efficiency in reading, writing, spelling and figuring, together with attainment of a certain amount of muscular dexterity, "essentials." Such conditions also infect the education called liberal, with illiberality. They imply a somewhat parasitic cultivation bought at the expense of not having the enlightenment and discipline which come from concern with the deepest problems of common humanity. A curriculum which acknowledges the social responsibilities of education must present situations where problems are relevant to the problems of living together, and where observation and information are calculated to develop social insight and interest.

Chapter Fourteen: The Nature of Subject Matter; p. 192

***

...Recreation, as the word indicates, is recuperation of energy. No demand of human nature is more urgent or less to be escaped. The idea that the need can be suppressed is absolutely fallacious, and the Puritanic tradition which disallows the need has entailed an enormous crop of evils. If education does not afford opportunity for wholesome recreation and train capacity for seeking and finding it, the suppressed instincts find all sorts of illicit outlets, sometimes overt, sometimes confined to indulgence of the imagination. Education has no more serious responsibility than making adequate provision for enjoyment of recreative leisure; not only for the sake of immediate health, but still more if possible for the sake of its lasting effect upon habits of mind. Art is again the answer to this demand.

***

...Intelligent insight into present forms of associated life is necessary for a character whose morality is more than colorless innocence. Historical knowledge helps provide such insight. It is an organ for analysis of the warp and woof of the present social fabric, of making known the forces which have woven the pattern. The use of history for cultivating a socialized intelligence constitutes its moral significance. It is possible to employ it as a kind of reservoir of anecdotes to be drawn on to inculcate special moral lessons on this virtue or that vice. But such teaching is not so much an ethical use of history as it is an effort to create moral impressions by means of more or less authentic material. At best, it produces a temporary emotional glow; at worst, callous indifference to moralizing. The assistance which may be given by history to a more intelligent sympathetic understanding of the social situations of the present in which individuals share is a permanent and constructive moral asset.

 Chapter Sixteen: The Significance of Geography and History; p. 217

***

...Knowledge is humanistic in quality not because it is about human products in the past, but because of what it does in liberating human intelligence and human sympathy. Any subject matter which accomplishes this result is humane, and any subject matter which does not accomplish it is not even educational.

Chapter Seventeen: Science in the Course of Study; p. 230

***

...There are adequate grounds for asserting that the premium so often put in schools upon external "discipline," and upon marks and rewards, upon promotion and keeping back, are the obverse of the lack of attention given to life situations in which the meaning of facts, ideas, principles, and problems is vitally brought home.

Chapter Eighteen: Educational Values; pp. 235 -36

***

...Sometimes it appears to be a labored effort to furnish an apologetic for topics which no longer operate to any purpose, direct or indirect, in the lives of pupils. At other times, the reaction against useless lumber seems to have gone to the extent of supposing that no subject or topic should be taught unless some quite definite future utility can be pointed out by those making the course of study or by the pupil himself, unmindful of the fact that life is its own excuse for being; and that definite utilities which can be pointed out are themselves justified only because they increase the experienced content of life itself....

 Chapter Eighteen; p. 243

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[4/25/2025: Indiana Republicans take aim at public universities with last minute budget additions (Axios Indianapolis) reads as an attack on democratic education; controlling what people learn and know for gain and maintenance of political power instead of educating citizens regardless of partisan politics:

State of play: Provisions eroding tenure and shared governance — the concept by which governing boards, administrators and faculty members share responsibility for decision-making at higher education institutions —  were added to the 215-page bill 24 hours before it was set to be voted on by the Indiana General Assembly.

  • The bill requires "tenured faculty member productivity reviews," which creates pathways to dismissal for tenured faculty members that don't meet productivity requirements set by the institution's governing board.
  • It requires faculty to post a syllabus online for each course taught.

Threat level: "It runs the risk of not just eroding tenure but destroying it," said Mark Criley, senior program officer in the department of academic freedom, tenure and governance with the AAUP.

Another provision asserts that actions taken by faculty governance organizations, such as faculty councils and senates, are advisory only.

  • Those groups traditionally make decisions around hiring and promotion processes, curricula and other academic issues.

The latest: The budget bill passed the House, 66-27, and the Senate, 39-11, a little after midnight.

What they're saying: Democrats were critical of the language and the way it was introduced outside the usual legislative process.

  • "For provisions of this magnitude to come up with no notice, no opportunity for public hearing, in a budget bill, which everybody knows is a must pass bill ... it's an outrage," said Rep. Matt Pierce, D-Bloomington. "They've calculated an end-run around the public to get these provisions in."
  • The House's budget writer, Rep. Jeff Thompson, R-Lizton, said the language was added because universities, like all of state government, needs to get more efficient. They're taking a 5% budget cut during the next two years.

 Efficiency in education as if schools were factories?

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Monday, May 12, 2025

I Can't Get Close to Michel Houellebecq

Granta published part of Houellebecq's Benoît. Unfortunately, I am too broke to get past the paywall.

I do like the opening:

I’m getting old, and of course my friends are getting old, and there are now quite a few people whose death I’m afraid to wake up to, but Benoît wasn’t one of them. I just didn’t see it coming. The news of his death plunged me into a state of horrified shock, and deep down I still can’t really believe it. I’m often about to call him to ask if he wants to do something together, visit a monument, eat in a restaurant, see a show, before reality catches up with me. This must be what the shrinks call denial. It’s strange because I don’t go in much for denial; I usually take tragic news on the chin, without my mind assembling the slightest escape. In the end, I don’t think you ever come to terms with the death of someone you love all at once; you have to come to terms with it over and over again, sometimes many times. The last people I had to mourn died after long illnesses, and you gradually resign yourself to it with each visit to the hospital. But with a sudden death it’s afterwards that you have to kill them inside yourself, and even then you can only kill them little by little.

Not constrained by a paywall is Jeffrey Meyers's Michel Houellebecq: power and perversity ( The Article).

Michel Houellebecq (pronounced “Welbeck”), born in 1956 on the French island colony of Réunion in the Indian Ocean*, is the wildly popular star and caustic celebrity of contemporary French literature.  His novel Submission (2015) has sold an astonishing 950,000 copies; Sérotonine (2019) sold 450,000.  He portrays the alienation and anger that many readers feel but can’t express.  Rancorous, misanthropic and propelled by savage indignation, he goes out of his way to shock readers and create an unpleasant persona.  His best novel, Platform (2001), is a forum for his outrageous yet perversely appealing ideas.  Anglo-American critics in the Guardian and the New York Times have offered moralistic and politically correct condemnations, but it is surely wrong to equate the fictional “Michel” with the author of this impressive novel.

Unlike narcissistic and superficial contemporary novelists, Houellebecq (whom I shall call MH) boldly and seriously questions the human condition.  He has a similarly bleak vision to Franz Kafka and Samuel Beckett.  Platform combines ecstatic descriptions of sex with savage satire on modern life.  MH doesn’t like the world he lives in and doesn’t believe in the humane values of western civilisation.  He thinks “man is clearly not intended to be happy” and that “ultimately everyone returns to his original nothingness.”  Platform is a brilliant, powerful, sometimes toxic mixture of Louis Ferdinand Céline’s Journey to the End of the Night with the sexual athletes in Lawrence’s Lady Chatterley’s Lover and Henry Miller’s Tropic of Cancer.  MH transforms the essence of these books into his own disturbed and distressing vision.

That is quite a combination. I have read Céline’s Journey to the End of the Night and  Lady Chatterley’s Lover. The former made more sense to me than the latter; I have never quite understood's D.H. Lawrence. I missed out several opportunities to read Henry Miller’s Tropic of Cancer when I was younger; getting no closer to him than the movie Henry and June. All-in-all, I get the sense of grimy reality meets a lot of sex. Moistly, I like the idea of upsetting American thinking.

My people do not go out in the world as tourists, although I have a friend who has gone on cruises, but none of us think of going to Thailand.

The travel brochures advertise warm welcoming friendly people who are actually quite hostile and see tourists “purely as wallets on legs.”  MH observes, “the great thing about Discovery Tours: you can subject tourists to horrible conditions.”  In an ecological-paradise resort the guests’ excrement flows straight from a hole in the floor into the river where the local people bathe and do laundry.  Instead of breeding tolerance, travel reinforces or creates racial prejudice.  Women on holiday crave sexual adventures and are drawn to the more “laid-back and virile” dark races.  MH wittily observes, “white people want to be tanned and to dance like Negroes; blacks want to lighten their skin and straighten their hair. . . . All humanity instinctively tends toward miscegenation.”

There you go with what I think is an exotic writer, one who might have something to teach us Americans.

sch 5/10 


Austerlitz - 11-16-2019

 [I am back working through my prison journal. It is out of order. The date in the title is the date it was written.Well, the order is as I have opened boxes. I hope this is not confusing. What you are reading is what you get for your tax dollars. sch 4/24/2025

This note concerns not the battle but W. G. Sebald's novel, Austerlitz (Random House, 2001; Anthea Bell, translator). I finished reading the novel last night. This morning, Steve Link asked me what I thought, and I told him it was a wild ride. It is a mystery novel and a Holocaust novel, and it is the kind of novel where a paragraph can run for pages upon pages, where the musicality of the language obscures the experiments and the sparse action and sparser plot.

There is a narrator who meets Austerlitz, then tells Austerlitz's story. Oh, yeah, no quotation marks. Not it really matters.

Toward the end of the nineteenth century, Austerlitz began in reply to my question about the hisotry of the Antwerp station, when Belgium, a little patch of yellowish gray barely visible on the map of the world, spread its sphere of influence to the African continent with colonial enterprises, when deals of huge proportions were done on the capital markets and raw-materials exchanges of Brussels, and the citizens of Belgium, full of boundless optimism, believed that their country, which had been subject so long to foreign rule and was divided and disunited in itself, was about to become a great new economic power - at that time, now so long ago although it determines our lives to this day; it was the personal wish of King Leopold, under whose auspices such apparently inexorable progress was being made, that the money sudenly and abundantly available should be used to erect public buildings which would being international renown to his aspiring state....

 p 9

Yes, that is one sentence. I picked it at random, looking for an example of Sebald's dialog. I wish I could show this to my teachers, who told me I put too much into my sentences.

 Oh, yeah, it is also a quest novel - which is tied up with the mystery aspect. The mystery has to do with Austerlitz's identity.

Sebald makes me think of José Saramago and Laszlo Kraznahockai. I categorize them as fire hose writers - they shoot out a strong, broad stream of words. They make not think of Henry James, but of Marcel Proust - I feel an emotional energy, a baring of emotions, that is to me Proustian than Jamesian. Hm. This could also be me exercising my vocabulary. I do not see how I could write a whole novel in this style - I do not have the energy for the job. Read them and see what you think.

If nothing else, let American writers create as wildly as Europeans! That's how to make America great.

One more bit of business about the book: it has photos. It is in a very non-cheesy way illustrated. There lies an idea.

Thanks to Cherry Hill Public Library, 400 N. Kings Highway, Cherry Hill, NJ for lending this novel to the Fort Dix Federal Correctional Institution through the inter-library loan program. You have helped my continuing education. 

I have passed the novel to Max G. Now, I go back to John Dewey.

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[4/24/2025. I did not think through the implications of King Leopold in the question. All the Belgian wealth came from the barbarities visited upon the people of Congo while Leopold ruled it. This is the background to Joseph Conrad's The Heart of Darkness. I have not read King Leopold’s Ghost, but have read about the book; it brings the story back into the light.

I also found The Obsessive Fictions of László Krasznahorkai by Dustin Illingworth on The Paris Review Blog, something I had not read before, which diverted for too much time on day when time is short but was too entertaining not to see through to the end, and which says something along the same lines as I hinted at above:

...His novels—equal parts artful attenuation and digressive deluge—suggest a Beckettian impulse overwhelmed by obsessive proclivities. The epic length of a Krasznahorkai sentence slowly erodes its own reality, clause by scouring clause, until at last it releases the terrible darkness harbored at its core. Many of his literary signatures—compulsive monologue, apocalyptic egress, terminal gloom—are recognizably Late Modern. But the extravagant disintegration and sly mischief of the work make him difficult to mistake for anyone else. There are the sudden, demonic accelerations; the extraordinary leaps in intensity; the gorgeous derangements of consciousness; the muddy villages of Mitteleuropa; the abyssal laughter; the pervasive sense of a choleric god waiting patiently just offstage. Here is fiction that collapses into minute strangeness and explodes into vast cosmology....

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Small Accomplishments; Waking to Rejection

Sunday was church and a trip to the convenience store in the afternoon. I decided to just dump a lot of emails into trash. I spent the rest of the day working on "Road Tripping" and "The Dead and the Dying". I finished off the night reading a bit of Gore Vidal. It feels like I am close to be on track.

Up on time, only to find this in the email:

Thank you for sending us "Desperate Men Committing Desperate Acts". We appreciate the chance to read your work. Unfortunately, it is not for us at the moment.

Thanks again. Best of luck placing it elsewhere.


Sincerely,


Jose Rodriguez

riverSedge: A Journal of Art and Literature

Maybe comedy is not my thing.

Some reading from yesterday. 

 It Isn’t Left And Right (Sheila Kennedy)

Politics is right and left (which is not always a correct fit, either), but the dispute between those think they have all the answers and those needing less rigid intellectual/spiritual/political rules is existential.

The Fate of the Public Library (Thornfield Hall) 

I have long thought (if the last 30 years is long) that the Republicans were a party of sociopaths; it should have been evident with George W. Bush's administration. Attacking public libraries evidences their sociopathic tendencies. Also, take a look at the Sheila Kennedy piece above.

My cousin, the late Paul Finholt, got me interested in architecture, so I had a look at The Alienation Effect by Owen Hatherley review – meet the brutalists (The Guardian)

The Englishness of English Art sounds like something a parish-pump little Englander might like to bang on about, but it is in fact the title of an arresting study by the German Jewish émigré Nikolaus Pevsner. “Neither English-born nor English-bred,” as he put it in his foreword, he nevertheless pinned down with startling precision the qualities that characterised English art and architecture: a rather twee preference for cuteness and compromise, for frills and fripperies.

***

The Alienation Effect is a collective biography of the central Europeans who washed up on British shores between the wars. In the decades that followed, Hatherley argues, they exerted a colossal influence on British cultural life. Sometimes the influence manifested itself transparently, as when Thatcher whipped out a copy of Hayek’s The Constitution of Liberty from her handbag and said to her party colleagues: “This is what we believe!” At others, it hid in plain sight, as in the iconic moquette used for London Transport, designed by the Czech Jacqueline Groag, or in films such as Get Carter, where brutalist Newcastle deserves joint billing with Michael Caine; it is through the Viennese lens of the cinematographer Wolfgang Suschitzky that we see this unforgiving landscape. 

I spent some time listening to Scottish history because the presenter is a hoot:


Lemmy does Buddy:


Lots of errands this afternoon. I need an easy, short day of washing pans.

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Sunday, May 11, 2025

The Eulogy For The American Century

 Donald J. Trump has killed America's world leadership and American prosperity. This is the eulogy for our end:


sch 5/10