Friday, April 1, 2022
Friday, December 3, 2021
On The End of Policing by Alex Vitale
I have this book here, and it’s good.
What’s weird is that it was written in 2017. So, this book
is just a rundown of why we’ve moved past the need for policing and how it is
bad for society in its current form and even in its history it was never good.
It feels like a response to the protests of 2020, but it wasn’t.
Sometimes you read a book and it is really grounded in its
time and place, but this was timely a few years ago and is even more timely
now. It is amazing how you have internalized and normalized the way that policing
happens in this country, the good old United States. You don’t really think
about all the contradictions unless you are at the sharp end of the stick, or
you are paid to study it.
But it’s not good and it doesn’t really keep us safer and is
just more or less designed to protect property over people. It’s sad and even
sadder knowing how entrenched it is so that even the mildest reforms are met
with howls of indignation not just by those who wield the stick, but the oppressed
as well.
Saturday, September 25, 2021
Recent Reads Late September
The Spoils of War – Andrew Cockburn
Reading these essays did remind me of having read them
before, since a couple of them I know I already read in Harpers. But it’s worth
it because what Cockburn does show just so many ways that the foreign policy priorities
of the last 20 years goes against what should be our national priorities.
Mainly it’s an appalling list of how many ways we direct our resources to stupid
priorities and how these resources are poorly spent even with those priorities.
Not only do we spend on the wrong things, but we also don’t even do it well.
Well written and will make you justly angry.
The Souls of Black Folk – Du Bois
Du Boise was writing after the general failure of Reconstruction
and reading this made me want to go deeper on the reconstruction history,
especially the failure of the Freedman’s Bank. It’s just a throwaway paragraph,
but it seems like a real important turning point to me. A lot of the essays are
interesting as history, and there’s the sad thing where a lot of them still
feel relevant and pertinent. However, others feel alien, talking about specific
concerns that may have been forgotten. The style is interesting. It’s almost
uncanny – like the cadences are off for a modern reader, maybe it is based on a
then-current speaking style or something. This book is an important bridge from
the postwar era to the rebirth of the civil rights era.
A World Without Police – Maher
This is one of those books that kind of go into greater
detail on things you already know and just say it more fluently and with
greater detail. The policing and justice system are interrelated with so much
of the current social structure and it’s broken (as is the current political
and economic system). Maher will teach you just how this is broken and calls
strongly for abolition. What’s really important here is that it just isn’t a
utopian idea. What Maher calls for is greater community involvement shows examples
how different places have worked though abolition of this incredibly broken system,
from police on the streets to the broader incarceration system.
Feminist Antifascism – Majewska
I’ve been reading more theory lately, and a lot of it does
do that thing where it is written in a way that feels deliberately obtuse stylistically.
Thankfully, Majewska does not do that here. Her book calls for important third
places against fascism and for feminism (thus the title and subtitle). However,
what this book does do is assume familiarity of the reader for a lot of
different other theorists. There’s a section on 131-2 that just drops the names
of 10 different theorists and though I have heard of most of them she didn’t
really even give a shorthand of the ideas of all of them. Partly on me, but it
makes following along a bit harder. What’s weird is that there’s a chapter on
the Polish Solidarity movement where she goes over the movement’s history and I
think that because she isn’t assuming that people know that history she goes
into detail and though it is more alien to me, it is the most successful essay
of the book. Overall, another interesting offering from Verso but had some
hurdles for me.
Sunday, August 29, 2021
I Read Some Descartes
I dropped my only philosophy class in college because it was one of those huge lecture halls and the professor was not a good lecturer. He spent the lectures talking to the board and the first book in the syllabus was a book on string theory. I get what he was doing now but I wanted Plato.
So, I’ve been circling back around and trying to get a
grounding in some of the foundations of western thought. For that I really like
these thin Hackett books – accessible and not over-whelming.
Some interesting things that I came across here is that the
two things that Descartes is most famous for, the Cogito Ergo Sum and the mind
/ body duality are literally in back-to-back paragraphs in the Discourse. He
seems to be arguing to take everything from first principles, and it is an
interesting path on one hand but on the other seems to deny all prior learning
and feels a bit solipsistic. Only I can determine what is real and true. It’s
whatever the opposite of standing on the shoulders of giants is.
The thing that strikes me is if he does that, it seems he doesn’t
go far enough. There are multiple assumptions built into Cogito Ergo Sum, basically
what the singular is, what thinking is, what being is, and what causation is.
You really need to define all these before you stop at thinking. I could be
missing something, or it could just be that the bar was way lower back then.
The other thing is that a huge part of the second book is
trying to prove the existence of God, but it really feels to me like he
basically makes an assumption about what God’s nature is like and then says it
must be so. I wasn’t convinced.
Friday, August 6, 2021
Recent reads 8.6.2021
The Relentless Moon
The Relentless Moon is the third in a series of alternate
history books that basically look at what would happen if sometime in the 1950s
a giant asteroid hit the earth and wiped out most of the eastern seaboard of
America. What the combined governments
of the nation decide to do is create a space race to get to space and get on
the moon and get on Mars. They do this because they have a theory that the aftereffects
of the asteroid impact which first created essentially nuclear winter will turn
around and become a runaway greenhouse effect. I don't know if the science
behind this is true. But will take that precipitating event at face value.
For me of all the series it's those first 50 pages that are
most interesting. For some reason I still don't really buy the idea that they
would turn around a create a space race when there was no real existing
technology for it. Even now with the technology we have over half a century
later colonizing the moon or Mars seems like a huge effort. So, in the book
they're spending huge amounts of resources on an effort that sounds like a
really wouldn't save a lot of people. What's interesting is that there is
within the text of the book a group of people who are fighting against this project
because it is a waste of resources and they'd rather spent the effort of the
governments on earth. The other part that really doesn't seem to work is that
after the after impact everyone starts working together. On a country-to-country
basis for me it would seem to be agree catastrophe would be something that
pushes us towards conflict and not word unity, which she was especially
prevalent in the face of the pandemic. I think the author may have wanted to
use this as a metaphor for global warming writ large, but we've had a more
concentrated global emergency that kind of throws away the foundation of her
thought in the book.
The thing is this is the third book that I have read the
series. So, what I'm thinking about the book and the series itself I think “Hey
why am I attracted to this series?” because normally if I had these kinds of
qualms about the basis of a story I probably wouldn't keep reading. And the
more I think of it I think what really drives my interest is the characters. Kowal
creates characters very well and they're interesting they have flaws. It's a
very feminist book so there's still fighting against a lot of gender and racial
norms that existed. The other thing is that this book focuses on a different
character than the previous two books do so as a reader it took a minute to get
into it since you had to get the grounding with these main characters in her
life. Overall though she tells good stories and I keep reading the books so I
have to say there's something good going on there even if I can't fully
articulate it.
The Last Man Takes LSD
I went to Graduate School in English about 20 years ago. Somehow,
I didn't have to read much Foucault. I think I read Discipline and Punish but
only on my own time. We may have read
some sort of excerpts in a larger theory class. But that doesn't mean I'm not
kind of familiar with the concepts of the man because the postmodern, post-structuralist
thinking, that he helped engineer was everywhere at the Academy at that time. Even
if you were more structural, Marxist or something that wasn't as grounded in
French theory you still had to deal with that environment.
That basically means that I don't have the full context to
completely judge this book because it is somewhat of a biography and somewhat
of an intellectual biography but also a criticism of his work. So, reading this
I learned a lot about Foucault and his thought and the things he was involved
in. But I can't say where the authors got it right where they got it wrong how
much he was involved in the creation and strengthening and dissemination of
what we now call neoliberalism. What I can say is that the subtitle means more
to the structure of the book than the title. There is sadly very little about
LSD and it's more about the fizzling out of revolutionary potentials. I'm glad
I read this book and I think I learned a lot from it.
Wednesday, August 4, 2021
Recent Reads 8.4.2021
Red State Revolt
The Jacobin and Verso partnership published a book based on
the Chicago teachers strikes a while back. And then after 2018 they published a
book about the broader teachers strikes that struck the nation. This is that
book.
I really liked what Eric Blanc does mainly because even
though he gets up close to the people who really worked with the strikes he
doesn't over invest in them which for me would be very easy to do as a non-journalist.
But you still do get a lot of empathy for the people. What makes this strong is
his comparison of the strikes in West Virginia and Arizona versus the ones in
Oklahoma. It makes it like points of comparison which could be useful as a
handbook for future work.
The thing that makes me sad reading this is thinking about
all the promise that we had based on Bernie’s run in 2016 and then the teacher
strikes in 2018 and then it felt like a letdown as a member of the left that we
didn't get more progress especially considering the pandemic. Reading it just
felt as if we had something within our grasp that slipped away a moment in time
in the ebbs and flows where you hope you could strike wear the iron is hot, but
you miss. And it's not missing that's sad.
Puppy Dog Ice Cream
I don't normally buy a book that would be a biography of a
band. But when I was a little bit younger Japanther became my favorite band.
The problem was that the time that I was becoming a big fan of them it was at
the very end of their cycle. I saw them at Riot Fest and then once later and
then I had tickets for a show in the spring of 2014 and then I got an email
that said they weren't going to do that tour. It made me very sad, and I didn't
know why it happened.
So, the thing was getting this book and seeing it offered -
I was excited at long last to see an explanation about what happened. My hope
was that I would get an entire view of the whole arc of the band. Which is
pretty much what this book’s got so that's good. The problem is that as a
reader and a story once most interesting is the conflict period and what we
have here is Ian's side of the whole thing and we don't really get mad side. So,
the subtitle is the story of Japanther, but it's only half the story. I enjoyed
reading it was a quick read, but I would like the sequel if it were Matt story
of Japanther.
I don't mean to disparage what Ian did because the book
itself is very well written and I think he is introspective and insightful
about his own experience. I think if you were a fan of the band, you would
enjoy this book.
The Secret to Superhuman Strength
I have been reading Allison Bechdel’s work for a while. It
started with Fun Home, but I also circled back and read her comics. I think
especially in her books Bechdel isn't necessarily just writing about the
subject matter at hand. What she's really writing about is herself and her own
inner journey. Nominally it could be about her mom or her dad or her lifelong
exploration of different kinds of exercise, but really, it's just a journey
inward looking at the self. Overall, it's not a bad journey and there's a very
good reason that she is an award-winning author and artist -- it's that she
really touches the soul, or the nub, she gets to the root of the problem. I
don't know. Whatever it is that she does she's very good at it. If you like
graphic novels and you like memoirs you are going to like The Secret to Superhuman
Strength.
The only quibble I have is that I read the whole thing and I
don't think I found what the secret was. But I do have to admit to sometimes
being an inattentive reader, so perhaps it's in there and I just missed it.
Friday, June 18, 2021
Recent Reads 6.18.2021
Fear and Trembling
Okay so here's the thing I really can't tell what Kierkegaard is going on about here. I read the whole book and thankfully it's a short book because there's all the stuff about Abraham and there's a bit about a merman and the ethics of listening to God to kill your own son.
Reading this made me think less about Abraham and more about both the directions given by the deity and the son who would have been the sacrifice. I want to learn more about that position and a universe that accepts that as formally true and accepts it as a question of faith and not as fundamental Brokenness to the entire edifice of the mythology. Overall it was an interesting and worthwhile read but if you really ask me exactly what I'd read and could synthesize a summary I probably couldn't.
Revolutionary Suicide
I really like reading this book because I got to learn more about the Black Panthers from Huey's perspective. I knew they were really interesting and had some good policies. I didn't realize just how awesome they were. But I think what Huey really covers is how much the white power structure goes against anyone who might push back against that power structure.
So it was interesting to read but also kind of depressing because you saw how it all played out in the 60s. And you're reading it and you go oh wow this is very similar to how the world is today and hasn't changed that much. And that's the not fun feeling to have.
I'd say that the only thing that really dragged about this book is the last 80% where he really covers his trials to the minute detail. It seems as if it was probably recent to the writing so it was well within his mind but I think it kind of goes against the broader structure and it's not as effective as some of the earlier chapters. Overall it made me want to learn more about the Black Panther Party and the history of Huey and his companions and how Eldridge Cleaver did him wrong.
Planet on Fire
This was a hard book to read Because I probably agree with all the descriptions of the problems they look at in the book. I agree that there is a emergency that we need to deal with on the climate front and that's embedded in an entire social and political structure that is fundamentally broken and will not fix the emergency on its own accord.
The problem is that this book is written like a very well-written undergraduate paper. It talks about the problems and I kept wanting to say “well okay what is the mechanism that we use to fix these problems?”. Because to really address them as you mentioned earlier we have to fundamentally reshape the political and economic structures. So I'm reading it and I see at the very end of the kind of hand-wave towards it but even then I already made my decision about this book and so it didn't really strike me as a good strong mechanism for change.
Which is unfortunate because so many of these books are able to diagnose the problem and we can fall back on that world. That's like the quote we attributed to Jameson where it's easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism. If we don't end capitalism as we know it there's going to be a major dislocation in the political and economic social structures anyway in the later part of the century. It's very scary and depressing and it's something we need to do something about and I think I'm of the same boat as the authors here and not knowing exactly what we can do about it
Existentialism is a Humanism
This book serves as a pretty good introduction to the philosophy of existentialism. The core of it is a speech that Jean-Paul Sartre gave with the same title. It's interesting because it's a short book anyway but the speech itself was so short that they had to wrap it up in an introduction, the Q&A of speech, and a separate commentary on The Stranger. It even includes something like a 10-page question from some other dude. It strikes me as the most exemplary example of the “This is more of a comment than a question" style question that you will ever see. In spite of all that it's still like 100 page book. So if you're interested in existentialism like I am it's not a bad thing to look up. I wouldn't be surprised if there is a PDF of the speech itself somewhere that you can just read. It might really do exactly what you need instead of this presentation format that I have from Yale.
The Antifa Supersoldier Cookbook
Matt Lubchansky Is a National Treasure. They're probably the third or fourth best left-wing political cartoonist working today, at least in my opinion. I usually see their work through the neighborhood so it's nice that I was able to get this long-form version where we get to see help water a narrative Arc. It's really a smart look at the ongoing conflict between the citizens of America and the police we pay. That makes you laugh but also makes you a bit sad because it also shows the ongoing escalation that's not really necessary and it shouldn't be necessary but we kind of live in a police state which isn’t fun.
Diaspora Boy
I'm a fan of Eli Valley. What his art is able to do is really make you uncomfortable. And it makes you uncomfortable because he's telling you the truth and he's showing you things as they are.
I think it's a skill a lot of cartoonists don't really have. I think the other thing that I really like about him is his drawing style - that real heavy dark line work I'm sure has the name but it reminds me of old school woodblock prints. So they're also very visually interesting.
The book itself is actually kind of hard to read. And it's not because of subject matter but because of the very physicality of the book. It's printed as if they were printing a broadsheet page but it's much heavier than a broadsheet page so I had to lay it out on the table to thoroughly read it. The other piece about this specific text is that it is really focused on Jewishness and the Jewish experience as a left-wing American Jew and how to deal with the state of Israel and how it goes against so many of your ideals. Something I really like that Valley does here is that he includes short essays to give context to what was going on both in his career and World politics of the time because there's a lot of deep cuts that if you're not hyper conscious and aware of what's going on within that specific context you'll only miss it.
Unfortunately the conflicts that Valley writes about are daily ongoing and they don't seem to have any resolution so that even though this book was published 4 years ago it still feels very timely I would recommend that you read it.
Let Us Now Praise Famous Men
There's a line from the preface to this book we're James Agee says but he's going to take his subject matter seriously.
It Is hard to find the cogent words to talk about this book.
It's not a novel, but it is novel.
See if you go look up the reviews you'll find confusion about what it is that Let Us Now Praise Famous Men was supposed to be about. And I have the same confusion. Ultimately I think this book is often lumped in with Grapes of Wrath not because they're stylistically the same or did they really kind of hit on the same subject matter or even though that's more parallel. But what I think Steinbeck has in common with James Agee is that they both took that subject matter seriously. If I could compare this book to anything in literature I think it is those interstitial chapters to Grapes of Wrath that aren’t specifically about the Joad family but that are trying to set the scene.
Because ultimately what this book is more than anything “about” it's not about the sharecroppers it's nominally covering but I would say it's more a close reading of the land of the objects and the clothes and the things that they touch. More than anything it reminds me of that mid century literary criticism before the French broke everything but it's a literary criticism that applies to the physicality of the world. So it's kind of like a precursor to Barthes looking at the semiotics, the laundry detergent or whatever.
So It's a really interesting book but it's impossible to read cover-to-cover because it is like a kind of pastiche of bringing together notes and clipping. You don't get any kind of narrative arc but it's as if you're looking at a world from one inch away. I tried to understand it like that. I think it's a rightfully celebrated text but you have to understand it on its own terms and not try to see it as something else that you wanted to be.