Thanks for the links. I saved them to read tomorrow. I've worked on homework all day and am brain dead at the moment lol
Heard this on the radio today. It's about 11 minutes, and includes a push for Sasha Abramsky's book, but I think they do a good job of identifying a problem in our domestic politics.
The Politics Of Anger : NPR
It can be streamed or downloaded as an MP3
The "Look Ahead in Anger" article is here: Look Ahead in Anger - The Chronicle Review - The Chronicle of Higher Education
Yet while the rage in some ways transcends politics, in important ways it is deeply rooted in contemporary conservatism. Indeed, if Islamic terrorism is the outward manifestation of a civil war within Islam between modernists and advocates of a notional, romanticized "purity," as is frequently posited, the season of rage that American domestic politics has entered is to a large extent the externalization of a battle of ideas inside one part of the polity. Within the conservative movement—which has, in many ways over the past 40-plus years, provided the intellectual backdrop against which American political discourse has developed and the linguistic tools with which we now define and debate our political choices—there is a growing schism over the role of government in American life. As a result, anger over big government and the incumbents alleged to have brought it into being is sweeping across party lines.
Thanks for the links. I saved them to read tomorrow. I've worked on homework all day and am brain dead at the moment lol
ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION is not a new problem...Natives Americans use to call it WHITE PEOPLE.
Pathetic JoJo ~ Dr Sampson
Headline: Koran Burning Canceled Due To Act Of God ~ Boontito
"Those who begin by burning books will end by burning people.” ~ Heinrich Heine
ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION is not a new problem...Natives Americans use to call it WHITE PEOPLE.
Pathetic JoJo ~ Dr Sampson
Headline: Koran Burning Canceled Due To Act Of God ~ Boontito
"Those who begin by burning books will end by burning people.” ~ Heinrich Heine
What is that saying about no rest for the wicked?!
BTW, did you get a chance to read the article or listen to the NPR segment?
Is it just me or does this remind you of the Khmer Rouge? They were very anti-intellectual and xenophobic too.I do believe that American democratic institutions are particularly durable and resilient. But it is at least possible to envision a scenario in which, after years of high unemployment and declining living standards, the Tea Party essentially takes over the GOP. And it is possible to see how, over a series of election cycles, that movement could plant a brand of extremism in the center of American politics that would fundamentally change America's identity. It would very likely be characterized by a series of negatives: being anti-intellectual, anti-foreign, blustering in its assertion of an increasingly fragile American superiority, unwilling to engage with the rest of the world on environmental policy, nuclear disarmament, or human rights. A tapestry of rage defined by what its practitioners oppose rather than support.