Tuesday, December 31, 2019

Review: Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson

Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson by Camille Paglia
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Paglia looks back at the Nietzsche view of a world dichotomy of Apollonian and Dionysian halves to enlarge the Dionysian part to admit a feminine side; mysterious, murky, and moist. This feels like a valid advancement on Nietzsche and even makes old Friedrich seem sexist or at least narrow-minded in retrospect. This also sexualizes Paglia's arguments to extremes that I can't always follow, such as "The beautiful boy is homosexuality’s greatest contribution to western culture" and other sweeping generalizations. While this work came out in 199o it seems rooted in the 18th Century of English literature: Oscar Wilde, Coleridge, Emily Dickinson, etc. While Paglia is obvious aware of popular culture: she mentions The Rolling Stones a few times. This includes with her excitement and extreme adjectives:

Rock music is normally a darkly daemonic mode. The Rolling Stones, the greatest rock band, are heirs of stormy Coleridge.


However, stuck a century ago she misses opportunities to explain girlish hair bands and Mad Max reflecting society's mass fascination with homosexuality.

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Monday, December 30, 2019

Review: Stealing Buddha's Dinner

Stealing Buddha's Dinner Stealing Buddha's Dinner by Bich Minh Nguyen
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Insightful yet even poetic metaphor and memory pervades this memoir from a shining light of a debut book. The author's recollection of life in America following feeling Vietnam features references to copious reading and it seems to have improved the author's prose powers. Aside from the writing quality the life itself is fascinating: the difficulties of individuating toward adulthood under a distant stepmom, cruel schoolmates, and the confusing temptations of American consumerism. Nguyen struggles with understanding herself and putting together an identity from her heritage and her home while unknowingly moving toward an unexpected reunion.

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Friday, December 27, 2019

Review: Christ in Relation to Lucifer and Ahriman

Christ in Relation to Lucifer and Ahriman Christ in Relation to Lucifer and Ahriman by Rudolf Steiner
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Steiner's Christian mysticism bringing Ahriman from antiquity into a relationship with Christ seems a stunning and bold suggestion for today. I believe his ideas are presented in this sculpture. It seems like has a connection to a remote past and draws upon legends and myths more than The Bible. This suggests a fatalistic need for Europe and Asia (Russia, etc.) to meet in predestined struggle. Perhaps at the time, this helped make sense of WW I.

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Monday, December 23, 2019

Review: The Portable Nietzsche

The Portable Nietzsche The Portable Nietzsche by Friedrich Nietzsche
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This is the third time I have read this anthology. That last time was around 1990. It is worth reading again. But now the cover is gone, and the first pages have drifted away. Over the years I have, of course, I have read other Nietzsche in other editions, but nothing has ever risen to the level of translator and editor Kaufmann’s insights, notes, and arrangement. Even this could be improved by me. I would like more help as I read and Nietzsche refers to contemporary events and personages like David Strauss, etc. Also, this particular collection is Thus Spoke Zarathustra with assorted other works. I think that 1883 could have been trimmed down in the excerpt and a few more letters and aphorisms thrown in and that would be better. Speaking of the “aphoristic” (learned that adjective from Kaufmann) over the years I have been moving away from the radical provocations of Thus Spoke Zarathustra and The Antichrist to these insightful, witty aphorisms that I see as a middle period. Those two works I see in the third act with the curtain opening on the Wagner love and the Greek scholar’s dichotomy of the Apollonian and Dionysian.

They are a bit more clearly aimed, while the latter works are not exactly Nostradamus in perplexing obscurity. All that hallucinogenic metaphor probably explains how Nazi theorists and other anti-Semite thinkers believe there is some basis for their worldview here. Kaufmann points out some spots that are quicksand for the deluded despite Nietzsche being overtly anti-anti-Semite (he actually respects Jews for Spinoza and more), anti-party, and anti-nationalistic as in this note:

Being nationalistic in the sense in which it is now demanded by public opinion would, it seems to me, be for us who are more spiritual not mere insipidity but dishonesty, a deliberate deadening of our better will and conscience.

Of course, if his sister had predeceased him, maybe none of that association would have come about:

LETTER TO HIS SISTER
Christmas 1887

…You have committed one of the greatest stupidities- for yourself and for me! Your association with an anti-Semitic chief expresses a foreignness to my whole way of life which fills me again and again with ire or melancholy… It is a matter of honor with me to be absolutely clean and unequivocal in relation to AntiSemitism, namely, opposed to it, as I am in my writings. I have recently been persecuted with letters and AntiSemitic Correspondence Sheets. My disgust with this party (which would like the benefit of my name only too well!) is as pronounced as possible…

I am unable to do anything against it, that the name of Zarathustra is used in every Anti-Semitic Correspondence Sheet, has almost made me sick several times…


Essentially, Nietzsche is furiously individual with warnings for all that fear the individual:

The eulogists of work. Behind the glorification of "work" and the tireless talk of the "blessings of work" I find the same thought as behind the praise of impersonal activity for the public benefit: the fear of everything individual. At bottom, one now feels when confronted with work-and what is invariably meant is relentless industry from early till late-that such work is the best police, that it keeps everybody in harness and powerfully obstructs the development of reason, of covetousness, of the desire for independence. For it uses up a tremendous amount of nervous energy and takes it away from reflection, brooding, dreaming, worry, love, and hatred; it always sets a small goal before one's eyes and permits easy and regular satisfactions. In that way a society in which the members continually work hard will have more security: and security is now adored as the supreme goddess. And now horrors! it is precisely the "worker" who has become dangerous. "Dangerous individuals are swarming all around. And behind them, the danger of dangers: the individual.

- The Dawn (1881)


Or, put more succinctly:

The surest way to corrupt a youth is to instruct him to hold in higher esteem those who think alike than those who think differently.

- The Dawn (1881)


Really eternal recurrence and even ressentiment I find more interesting than profound. The whole beyond good and evil idea I find more worth mulling on, as is alluded to here:

Of all evil I deem you capable: therefore I want the good from you. Verily, I have often laughed at the weaklings who thought themselves good because they had no claws.

- Thus Spoke Zarathustra (1883)


and

What is done out of love always occurs beyond good and evil.

- Beyond Good and Evil (1886)


Then we go onto this meat to chew on:

My demand upon the philosopher is known, that he take his stand beyond good and evil and leave the illusion of moral judgment beneath himself. This demand follows from an insight which I was the first to formulate: that there are altogether no moral facts. Moral judgments agree with religious ones in believing in realities which are no realities. Morality is merely an interpretation of certain phenomena-more precisely, a misinterpretation. Moral judgments, like religious ones, belong to a stage of ignorance at which the very concept of the real and the distinction between what is real and imaginary, are still lacking; thus "truth," at this stage, designates all sorts of things which we today call "imaginings." Moral judgments are therefore never to be taken literally: so understood, they always contain mere absurdity. Semeiotically, however, they remain invaluable: they reveal, at least for those who know, the most valuable realities of cultures and inwardnesses which did not know enough to "understand" themselves. Morality is mere sign language, mere symptomatology: one must know what it is all about to be able to profit from it.

- Twilight of the Idols (1888)


And then this which intrigues me as Buddhism has since I was a teen:

That the strong races of northern Europe did not reject the Christian God certainly does no credit to their religious genius-not to speak of their taste. There is no excuse whatever for their failure to dispose of such a sickly and senile product of decadence. But a curse lies upon them for this failure: they have absorbed sickness, old age, and contradiction into all their instincts and since then they have not created another god. Almost two thousand years-and not a single new god! But still, as if his existence were justified, as if he represented the ultimate and the maximum of the god-creating power, of the creator spiritus in man, this pitiful god of Christian monotono-theism! …

I hope that my condemnation of Christianity has not involved me in any injustice to a related religion with an even larger number of adherents: Buddhism. Both belong together as nihilistic religions-they are religions of decadence-but they differ most remarkably. For being in a position now to compare them, the critic of Christianity is profoundly grateful to the students of India.

Buddhism is a hundred times more realistic than Christianity: posing problems objectively and coolly is part of its inheritance, for Buddhism comes after a philosophic movement which spanned centuries. The concept of "God" had long been disposed of when it arrived. Buddhism is the only genuinely positivistic religion in history. This applies even to its theory of knowledge (a strict phenomenalism): it no longer says "struggle against sin" but, duly respectful of reality. "struggle against suffering." Buddhism is profoundly distinguished from Christianity by the fact that the self-deception of the moral concepts lies far behind it. In my terms, it stands beyond good and evil.

- The Antichrist (1888)


The miscellany of Notes and Letters are intriguing insights into Nietzsche the individual. For one thing, while he did eventually go instance, he comes across “off stage” much more collected than his later zany published works. I would like more of this type of insight, as his reading habits:

LETIER TO OVERBECK
Nizza, February 23, 1887

…I did not even know the name of Dostoevsky just a few weeks ago-uneducated person that I am, not reading any journals. An accidental reach of the arm in a bookstore brought to my attention L' esprit souterrain, a work just translated into French. (It was a similar accident with Schopenhauer in my 21st year and with Stendhal in my 35th.) The instinct of kinship (or how should I name it?) spoke up immediately; my joy was extraordinary…


In a lot of this, I couldn’t help but think of Nietzsche alive today as a cable news pundit and with a Twitter account (first three from Twilight of the Idols, 1888):

The sick man is a parasite of society. In a certain state it is indecent to live longer. To go on vegetating in cowardly dependence on physicians and machinations, after the meaning of life, the right to life, has been lost, that ought to prompt a profound contempt in society. The physicians, in turn, would have to be the mediators of this contempt-not prescriptions, but every day a new dose of nausea with their patients. To create a new responsibility, that of the physician, for all cases in which the highest interest of life, of ascending life, demands the most inconsiderate pushing down and aside of degenerating life-for example, for the right of procreation, for the right to be born, for the right to live. To die proudly when it is no longer possible to live proudly. Death freely chosen, death at the right time, brightly and cheerfully accomplished…


and

The value of a thing sometimes does not lie in that which one attains by it, but in what one pays for it-what it costs us. I shall give an example. Liberal institutions cease to be liberal as soon as they are attained: later on, there are no worse and no more thorough injurers of freedom than liberal institutions. Their effects are known well enough: they undermine the will to power; they level mountain and valley, and call that morality; they make men small, cowardly, and hedonistic-every time it is the herd animal that triumphs with them. Liberalism: in other words, herd-animalization.


and

Our institutions are no good any more: on that there is universal agreement. However, it is not their fault but ours. Once we have lost all the instincts out of which institutions grow, we lose institutions altogether because we are no longer good for them. Democracy has ever been the form of decline in organizing power…


And, boy oh boy:

One need only read any Christian agitator, St. Augustine, for example, to comprehend, to smell, what an unclean lot had thus come to the top. One would deceive oneself utterly if one presupposed any lack of intelligence among the leaders of the Christian movement: oh, they are clever, clever to the point of holiness, these good church fathers! What they lack is something quite different. Nature has neglected them-she forgot to give them a modest dowry of respectable, of decent, of clean instincts. Among ourselves, they are not even men. Islam is a thousand times right in despising Christianity: Islam presupposes men.

Christianity has cheated us out of the harvest of ancient culture; later it cheated us again, out of the harvest of the culture of Islam. The wonderful world of the Moorish culture of Spain, really more closely related to us, more congenial to our senses and tastes than Rome and Greece, was trampled down (I do not say by what kind of feet). Why? Because it owed its origin to noble, to male instincts, because it said Yes to life even with the rare and refined luxuries of Moorish life.

- The Antichrist (1888)


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Review: Nothing's Sacred

Nothing's Sacred Nothing's Sacred by Lewis Black
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

The "bonus material added" is largely a play written by Black at the start of his career. I think he is a better comedian than playwright, as I am sure he would agree. This is basically a memoir of growing up in the turbulent '60s, becoming disillusioned with government, college, drama, and well ... becoming Lewis Black as we know him. We basically know him for trademark, sputtering apoplectic fits of incoherent rage at the inanities of life and society. Here tapping away on the tour bus he is calmer and more collected and we have greater insight into this unique view and what made him.

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Thursday, December 19, 2019

Review: The Medieval Reader

The Medieval Reader The Medieval Reader by Norman F. Cantor
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

These selections are arranged topically and not in an overtly chronological fashion. At first, I found this off-putting. However, the march from antiquity to the verge of modernity as we know it is well-laid out in the organized building blocks. The perceptive yet not overly verbose introductions to each section and piece are together an education on key evolution of philosophy, politics, theology, etc. over the time covered. I especially liked the most microscopically focused documents: letters, contracts, diaries, etc.

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Friday, December 13, 2019

Review: Earth at Night

Earth at Night Earth at Night by NASA
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is a fascinating ebook from NASA: educational while easy to follow and with stunning satellite imagery of Earth. It is hard not to think there is implicit commentary in these images, say for the burgeoning Flat Earthers:

A thin yellow-brown band tracing Earth’s curvature at image top is airglow.


And much on the environmental/climate change front that is very subtly stated:


Scientists watched the Arctic with particular interest in the summer of 2012 when the areal
extent of Arctic sea ice set a new record low. The behavior of sea ice following such a low extent
also interests scientists...


I, of course, have heard of melting polar ice, but the Arctic polluting effects of Dakotan drilling was new to me:


Connection Between Gas Flaring and Arctic Pollution—North Dakota

Previous research has suggested that gas flares from oil and natural gas extraction in the Northern Hemisphere could be a key source of black carbon pollution in the Arctic. But since international inventories of industrial emissions have gaps in observations and reporting, they often over- or underestimate the amount of pollutants. Gas flares are an often-overlooked subset in that incomplete dataset. Data from the VIIRS DNB on the Suomi NPP satellite were used to examine gas flare signals from nightlights and the nitrogen dioxide retrievals for four regions around the planet; only the Bakken Formation in North Dakota is shown here. Levels of atmospheric nitrogen dioxide were found to rise about 1.5 percent per year at Bakken. This means the concentration of black carbon produced by those flares was also likely on the rise. Such local or regional nightlight data as are described here clearly show the potential for global consequences.


We can recall the tragedy of mishandled disasters and see its vivid evidence:


Lights Out—Puerto Rico

Hurricane Maria struck Puerto Rico with devastating force in September 2017. Flooding, downed trees, and toppled power lines made many roads impassable. Most of the electricity grid and telecommunications network were knocked offline, leaving 1.5 million people without power. For many locations power wasn’t restored for weeks and even for up to 11 months in some locations. The long power outages, in part, led to the historic property, economic, and life losses in the storm’s aftermath. While 64 people died from direct storm impacts (i.e., via structural collapse, flying debris, floods, and drownings), an estimated 700 to 8400 excess deaths were associated with long-duration disruptions to essential services.


..and the effect of war:


Conflict in the Middle East—Syria

Six years of war in Syria have had a devastating effect on millions of its people. One of the most catastrophic impacts has been on the country’s electricity network. The left and middle images (below) were created using two separate nightlight datasets from the VIIRS DNB on the Suomi NPP satellite for 2012 and 2016...


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Review: The Residents: Freak Show

The Residents: Freak Show The Residents: Freak Show by Brian Bolland
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A whole gallery of graphic artists present vignettes of Residents' imagined "freaks" separated out into chapter through an introducing ringmaster. These are gritty, earthy tales with backstories and tragedy. The comic came packaged in a Freak Show Special Edition.

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Wednesday, December 11, 2019

Review: Untamed Alaska

Untamed Alaska Untamed Alaska by Steve Kaufman
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A beautiful book of mostly images by Kaufman. These landscape and wildlife full-color photos generally take up a whole page or two and are a feast for the eye. Text is by long-time Fairbanks resident Margaret Murie with wistful recollection of a quaint city and awe-inspiring environment. Maybe ten pages of text with the rest photography.

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Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Review: Map of the World: An Introduction to Mathematical Geodesy

Map of the World: An Introduction to Mathematical Geodesy Map of the World: An Introduction to Mathematical Geodesy by Martin Vermeer
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

...Finland often gets special attention in this work based on a 2014 Finnish edition which has a good translation.
Leaving the bounds of this world, significant content stretches to the astronomic: “Precession, nutation, and the torques exerted by the Sun and Moon on the Earth’s equatorial bulge.” This includes sidereal time and an entire chapter on “The orbital motion of satellites”

[Look for my entire review at MAA Reviews]



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Review: The Discogs Guide To Record Collecting

The Discogs Guide To Record Collecting The Discogs Guide To Record Collecting by Discogs
My rating: 3 of 5 stars



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Review: Patti Smith at the Minetta Lane

Patti Smith at the Minetta Lane Patti Smith at the Minetta Lane by Patti Smith
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is a warm and comfortable audio record of Smith entertaining an audience with readings, music, and remembrances from her life (particularly with Fred "Sonic" Smith and Mapplethorpe). Punctuating the history are performances and song.

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Sunday, December 8, 2019

Review: Creative Quest

Creative Quest Creative Quest by Questlove
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I don't honestly know if I have heard any of Questlove's music, however I have seen positive things about this book to the extent that I felt compelled to read it. It is an excellent, approachable, and insightful consideration of creativity of value to all: not just any form of artist, but any one. F. Scott Fitzgerald said:

"...let me make a general observation– the test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in the mind at the same time, and still retain the ability to function.

One should, for example, be able to see that things are hopeless and yet be determined to make them otherwise. This philosophy fitted on to my early adult life, when I saw the improbable, the implausible, often the "impossible," come true.”


This approach is a theme in Questlove's approach. Exercises include re-writing a review of your work to say the opposite, believe the opposite of one of your beliefs, etc. This makes me think of The Marshmallow Test. He also has interesting insights into how the Internet Age is making us focus on detail and lose the big picture, etc.

As a general music fan, I appreciate his regard for Clyde Stubblefield, Stevie Wonder, etc.

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Monday, December 2, 2019

Review: The Life of Charlemagne

The Life of Charlemagne The Life of Charlemagne by Einhard
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I read an excerpt in The Medieval Reader that so interested me that I sought the full text. Of the ones I found, this was easy to read (well-translated for modern readers) and has over fifty elucidating footnotes. As a math teacher, I often get the "When I am going to use this?" question. My answer is generally around the "When you use your brain" type of response as I believe studying math makes for better thinking. In this recreational reading by an author also called Einhard I came across this observation of the famous Emperor of the Franks:

He was ready and fluent in speaking, and able to express himself with great clearness. He did not confine himself to his native tongue, but took pains to learn foreign languages, acquiring such knowledge of Latin that he could make an address in that language as well as in his own. Greek he could better understand than speak. Indeed, he was so polished in speech that he might have passed for a learned man.

He was an ardent admirer of the liberal arts, and greatly revered their professors, whom he promoted to high honors. In order to learn grammar, he attended the lectures of the aged Peter of Pisa, a deacon; and for other branches he chose as his preceptor Albinus, otherwise called Alcuin, also a deacon, - a Saxon by race, from Britain, the most learned man of the day, with whom the king spent much time in leaving rhetoric and logic, and more especially astronomy. He learned the art of determining the dates upon which the movable festivals of the Church fall, and with deep thought and skill most carefully calculated the courses of the planets. Charles also tried to learn to write, and used to keep his tablets and writing book under the pillow of his couch, that when he had leisure he might practice his hand in forming letters; but he made little progress in this task, too long deferred and begun too late in life.

I think it is interesting that he learned to calculate motions of the planets without ever becoming truly literate we are told. (Footnotes here also doubt complete illiteracy.) Why would he even invest so much time as "with deep thought and skill most carefully calculated the courses of the planets"? I think he felt it improved his mind, if only to impress visitors to court with this acumen. (How else would we know? Did he show of his calculated orbits and periods with pride?)

It is interesting to see the apotheosis of this expansionist and politically astute rule who became a "Holy Roman Emperor" and nearly deified in retrospect even by Otto III who strongly aspired to be the successor of Charlemagne. In 1000, he visited Charlemagne's tomb in Aachen, removing relics from it and basically worshipping the corpse, as detailed in the final footnote here.

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Sunday, December 1, 2019

Review: A Warning

A Warning A Warning by Anonymous
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Library shelves now groan under the weight of insider analysis of who I feel confident future historians will rate as among the worst of U.S. presidents. Nothing here strictly feels new in the specifics or generality of a toxic, dysfunctional workplace at the White House. Much has been said about the considered self-immolation of the core staff by mass resignation to bring attention to Trump's mismanagement. So why not follow through? Such questions would resolve this enigma outlined here:

While it is indeed disturbing that we’ve elevated someone so ill-informed as Trump to the nation’s highest office, what’s depressing is how many people around him and in the Republican Party are remaining quiet when their voices are needed to make the difference between poor policy and good government. They don’t necessarily need to speak out publicly against the president to have an impact. They just need to speak up in his presence, in the meetings that count, or among fellow administration officials. Silent Abettors should realize saying something is in their self-interest because, if they don’t, they’ll be the next ones at a microphone defending an unconscionable decision.


I didn't really understand the Section 4: Vice Presidential–Cabinet declaration constitutional option explained here. (Section 4 is the only part of the Twenty-fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution that has never been used.)

I don't think concluding material around Trump what-ifs are helpful. There is enough facts than imagining a pro-Al Qaeda stance.

Mentioned here is The Road to Serfdom and the feel is Conservatives Without Conscience and The Authoritarians would also be good complementary reading. I don't know that I was a never-Trumper, yet the documented and exposed Trump behavior is increasingly making me never-GOP. The old cliché has it that "Republicans fall in line,” seems to mean even more so than in Nixon's time that means even falling in line behind an impulsive, megalomaniac, fasticitic wanna-be-autocrat. Aren't we past the warning stage to the action stage? This author hopes Democratic votes will solve the GOP's issue.

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Saturday, November 30, 2019

Review: Nostalgia! ...lifestyles of "old" New Orleans

Nostalgia! ...lifestyles of Nostalgia! ...lifestyles of "old" New Orleans by Marvin J. Perrett
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

An easy, one-sitting read of sing-songy doggerel and B&W pics of FDR-era NOLA at the daw of the Radio Ago: watermelon boats, evening walks, Roman candy, etc.

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Friday, November 29, 2019

Review: Canyon of Dreams: The Magic and the Music of Laurel Canyon

Canyon of Dreams: The Magic and the Music of Laurel Canyon Canyon of Dreams: The Magic and the Music of Laurel Canyon by Harvey Kubernik
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

From my 2010 interview with Bill Mumy:

...In the last few months, a friend of mine loaned me the book Canyon of Dreams .

BM: Oh, yes. Harvey Kubernik's book.

Yes.

BM: Yes, with Henry Kubernik's photos and stuff. Yes, that's a great book.

And you're the subject of nearly an entire chapter.

BM: Yes. Well, you know? That happens when you live in the same place for 35 years. I'm just one of the old men in the canyon, I guess. Well Laurel Canyon's a great place to live. It's a wonderful artistic community. And certainly, if you're going to live in the middle of Los Angeles, which I have done all my life, it's very nice to come home and have this country kind of feeling. I mean, I got a mountain so to speak, and ten acres behind my house with deer and all sorts of creatures strolling by. It's very cool.


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Review: Mick Jagger

Mick Jagger Mick Jagger by Philip Norman
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

It seems like a lot of biographies in this class focus on the seminal, important earliest years and fade out with nothing to say later, as in Life. (That autobiography gets pilloried as full of lies, such as Richards cuckolding Jagger with Marianne Faithfull.) As cannot be avoided, this is basically a Rolling Stones biography covering individual albums and tours. Along with also painting Mick as a heartless womanizer and ruthless business partner this goes deep into non-music parts of Mick's life, such as the Redlands bust and convincing arguments that it was an FBI-MI5 orchestration involving later New Wave impresario David Jove as the mysterious Acid King. There is much dirt on the philandering and infidelities and Jagger children. Mick's solo career gets coverage, though not as much details as the elusive acting career. The book goes up to 2010 and the formation of SuperHeavy.

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Tuesday, November 26, 2019

Review: Touchstone Anthology of Contemporary Creative Nonfiction: Work from 1970 to the Present

Touchstone Anthology of Contemporary Creative Nonfiction: Work from 1970 to the Present Touchstone Anthology of Contemporary Creative Nonfiction: Work from 1970 to the Present by Lex Williford
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

"The poet presents his thoughts festively, on the carriage of rhythm: usually because they could not walk." - The Portable Nietzsche

It appears from the bios that "Creative Nonfiction" means poets writing elliptically about the saddest and darkest of topics: death, mental and neurological disorders, a pederast father, an assaulting pet, the after effects of promiscuity (Cheryl Strayed) and more. That certainly covers the bulk of the book. Toward the end, there are some exceptions like John McPhee seeking the "Marvin Gardens" from Monopoly. Don't get me wrong. This is affecting, moving material. Just apparently, at least to this editor, there is not much room for joy in contemporary creative nonfiction. Also, I keep hearing great things about David Foster Wallace, but his reportage of a Maine lobster festival dwelling on crustacean nociception left me "meh".

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Monday, November 18, 2019

Review: When You Are Engulfed in Flames

When You Are Engulfed in Flames When You Are Engulfed in Flames by David Sedaris
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Another great collection from witty and melancholy Sedaris covering more life in France, quitting smoking, avoiding responsibility, and Engrish (whence cometh the title). This audiobook has a performance feel for being read by the author, featuring sound effects, and including some recordings from live reading events with audience reaction.

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Review: Wicked Bugs: The Louse That Conquered Napoleon's Army and Other Diabolical Insects

Wicked Bugs: The Louse That Conquered Napoleon's Army and Other Diabolical Insects Wicked Bugs: The Louse That Conquered Napoleon's Army and Other Diabolical Insects by Amy Stewart
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

Most of this short work is the Latin names of a pest, a witty paragraph of its pestilential effects that could fit on a gum wrapper and then a "Meet the Family" section with overview of related bugs. The overall feel is a compendium of trivia: unsynthesized knowledge on the Insect world and similar "bugs" from arthropods to earthworms. Longer pieces are more interesting, such as the origin of over-rated brown recluse fears, the actuality of urticating hairs in tarantulas and the most insidious of parasites and poison arrow compounds.

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Friday, November 15, 2019

Review: The Bloody White Baron: The Extraordinary Story of the Russian Nobleman Who Became the Last Khan of Mongolia

The Bloody White Baron: The Extraordinary Story of the Russian Nobleman Who Became the Last Khan of Mongolia The Bloody White Baron: The Extraordinary Story of the Russian Nobleman Who Became the Last Khan of Mongolia by James Palmer
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

A really quite interesting biography of a Russian that arose in Mongolia in the violent reverberations from white "White" side of the Russian Civil War as doomed, cruel, and tragic proto-fascistic despot warlord betwixt China and the Soviet union. Here in the 1920s he favored the swastika as part of anti-semitic policy and cultivated occult trappings.

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Sunday, November 10, 2019

Review: The Queen: Aretha Franklin

The Queen: Aretha Franklin The Queen: Aretha Franklin by Mikal Gilmore
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This biography of The Queen of Soul feels weighted toward the Aretha's earliest years: pre-career to recording debut. Wow, a mother at 12 and again at 14 in a broken home. How did all this help form The Queen? That is not explored as much here, then the subsequent decades from crowning to death are briskly covered without analysis as if the author needed to quickly wrap up the project.

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Saturday, November 9, 2019

Review: Great Expectations

Great Expectations Great Expectations by Charles Dickens
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I always find Dickens it seems too long of a read, yet a great read nonetheless. Pips twisted and tragic tale is a shaggy dog story of a love story. The unexpected twists cartoonish characters drew me into also enjoying a couple of BBC serial adaptations: 1981 and 1999.

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Review: 23 Things They Don't Tell You About Capitalism

23 Things They Don't Tell You About Capitalism 23 Things They Don't Tell You About Capitalism by Ha-Joon Chang
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Nicely done. I am not sure of the specific "liberals" this author is trying to school. Whoever they may be they must be highly idealistic. Chang covers why things are more complicated than they seem and sweeping economic generalizations open to debate if not ridicule. "Duh?" What I like is the different point of view so that many of his example are from his native South Korea. Also, there is a nice summary of how widespread banking deregulation in Iceland led to ruin. In the end the author suggests liberal welfare state policies to life the working poor of the First World as well as significant financial aid to the Third World marking him as much more of a liberal perhaps than I had presumed.

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Review: Stories from the Storm: Hurricane Katrina Survivors, In Their Own Words

Stories from the Storm: Hurricane Katrina Survivors, In Their Own Words Stories from the Storm: Hurricane Katrina Survivors, In Their Own Words by Audible Studios
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

These interviews were captured just a few months after the event; really while recovery was still happening. There are two first-person accounts from my Northshore area: Covington and Lacomb. It feels like interviews or prompters were present to keep the recollection moving and coherent and were then edited out. The result is compelling, personal oral history about caring for horses, the repugnance of liquefying chicken, house-crushing toppled trees, and more.

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Sunday, November 3, 2019

Review: "I Heard You Paint Houses", Updated Edition: Frank "The Irishman" Sheeran & Closing the Case on Jimmy Hoffa

"I Heard You Paint Houses", Updated Edition: Frank "The Irishman" Sheeran & Closing the Case on Jimmy Hoffa by Charles Brandt
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Read this new edition in prep for seeing The Irishman

The extensive added backmatted further deepens support for the author's contention of Sheehas as Hoffa's killer, with extensive ties to the Kennedy assassination:

“Each of Frank Sheeran’s major confessions now has been validated: Gallo by the New York Times eyewitness and Detective Joe Coffey; Hoffa by Frank Pavlico and Billy D’Elia and the FBI subpoena of my tapes; and finally “Dallas” as a Mafia Commission conspiracy by Carlos Marcello at Texarkana and Tony Provenzano’s participation on behalf of the Genovese family.”


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Review: 1861: The Civil War Awakening

1861: The Civil War Awakening 1861: The Civil War Awakening by Adam Goodheart
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

So much out there about the Civil War... Goodheart makes is different and engaging enough by highlighting such angles as:

1. The zouave craze
2. The outsized impact on the 1860s mind of Ellsworth becoming the first Union officer to die in the Civil War and the doomed defense of Ft. Sumter.
3. The role of former president Tyler and the shaping worldview of future president Garfield
4. The galvanizing effect of the conflict leading to mass-produced and displayed U.S. flags, etc.
5. The details of the individual fleeing slaves first met by Gen'l Butler and how the fact of these "contrabands" was considered in the press and in Lincoln's directions, etc.

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Friday, November 1, 2019

Review: Buried Beneath the Boarding House: A Shocking True Story of Deception, Exploitation and Murder

Buried Beneath the Boarding House: A Shocking True Story of Deception, Exploitation and Murder Buried Beneath the Boarding House: A Shocking True Story of Deception, Exploitation and Murder by Ryan Green
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I really enjoyed this Halloween read (as it turned out) taking us into the Dorothea Puente spider lair and the drugger semi-consciousness or her cocooned, plastic-wrapped victims. I was first concerned with the short length yet in the end I felt I heard the complete story or dysfunctional, abused youth transmogrified into wicked boarding house proprietor. The only thing I would have liked to have had was some insight (maybe juror interview?) into how a jury deadlocked over responsibility for this unearthed graveyard of victims.

Also, very good job by Steve White (Narrator)

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Wednesday, October 30, 2019

Review: Malcolm X: A Life of Reinvention

Malcolm X: A Life of Reinvention Malcolm X: A Life of Reinvention by Manning Marable
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This book is a very updated look at the life so many know from The Autobiography of Malcolm X. Indeed, it rather disputes or amends the material that came out in that book published after Malcolm X's death and co-authored by "liberal Republican" Alex Haley. For my part, I see this life as having an arc reaching back to Marcus Garvey and a terrorizing Klan through his parents to some parallels I see with Thomas Paine. See, Paine was a revolutionary intellectual eventually shunned by his own fellow rebels and went international while moving from championing the right of his group to demanding human rights and finding himself shunned. For Malcolm X that shunning led to a public execution with the apparent complicity of at least local police. This tragic ending feels foreshadowed by violence from the 1962 Los Angeles Police shooting of seven members of the Nation of Islam (one in the back while his hands were up) to eventual firebombing, beatings, etc. from NOI actors as Malcolm X broke away and stood up his own organization. His own success -- better than that of the NOI -- of building ties to traditional Islam and connecting to the a post-colonial Pan-African movement surely led to loathing from the envious.

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Sunday, October 27, 2019

Review: Visiting Mrs. Nabokov and Other Excursions

Visiting Mrs. Nabokov and Other Excursions Visiting Mrs. Nabokov and Other Excursions by Martin Amis
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This is an easy fast read covering sports from poker to darts and many pieces on various writers. It is these writer pieces that I felt the most interesting. They range from Saul Bellow (about More Die of Heartbreak), Madonna (Sex), Asimov, Salman Rushdie, the tile piece, etc,

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Saturday, October 26, 2019

Review: The Origins of the Second World War with a Reply to the Critics

The Origins of the Second World War with a Reply to the Critics The Origins of the Second World War with a Reply to the Critics by A.J.P. Taylor
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

It seems this book is in three acts:

I: Origins of WW II hardly matter really since ultimately all it did was confirm the Treaty of Versailles since little changes to borders and sovereignty actually happened due to WW II

II: Instead of origins, we really are talking about a chronological order of foreign policy preludes in granular detail making up the bulk of the book. (Basically, Hitler was a whining paper tiger unable to back up threats while accepting all offers of conciliation)

III: A rebuttal to critics. Apparently Nazi apologists found grist here? Well, Taylor dismantles that while going on a lengthy dismantling of the Hossbach Memorandum.

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Tuesday, October 22, 2019

Review: The Broken Road: George Wallace and a Daughter’s Journey to Reconciliation

The Broken Road: George Wallace and a Daughter’s Journey to Reconciliation The Broken Road: George Wallace and a Daughter’s Journey to Reconciliation by Peggy Wallace Kennedy
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

[I received a DIGITAL Advance Reader Copy of this book from #NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.]

This memoir by George Wallace's daughter covers an arc from an unaware child to an adult woman coming to grip a segregationist family legacy remembered shaped by these six words: "Segregation now! Segregation tomorrow! Segregation forever!" and other lines attributed to Wallace (some worse) recalled here. The picture I get is over that man's long life his views evolved while his views appeared actually irrelevant. I had the feeling he would have ascribed any viewpoint from segregationist to integrationist if it would have got him to be governor. This author's life is overtly tied to the right wing wise in American politics from a witness to a similar upswell a half century ago. She is a lucid and valuable primary source on the American political mind.

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Review: Biohazard: The Chilling True Story of the Largest Covert Biological Weapons Program in the World--Told from the Inside by the Man Who Ran It

Biohazard: The Chilling True Story of the Largest Covert Biological Weapons Program in the World--Told from the Inside by the Man Who Ran It Biohazard: The Chilling True Story of the Largest Covert Biological Weapons Program in the World--Told from the Inside by the Man Who Ran It by Ken Alibek
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

A bit dated, this insider story from a defector high up in the Soviet biological weapons program details his career and Soviet advances with anthrax, plague, glanders, etc. Most dramatic moments come around a lethal hot zone infection and an Aral sea island where chained monkeys proved unfortunate test subjects. Most interestingly to me was the insider's view of the 1991 Soviet coup d'état attempt and the disruption of the Soviet state that followed, ultimately leading to the Kazakh's informal emigration to the U.S.

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Wednesday, October 16, 2019

Review: Elementary Mathematical Models: An Accessible Development Without Calculus

Elementary Mathematical Models: An Accessible Development Without Calculus Elementary Mathematical Models: An Accessible Development Without Calculus by Dan Kalman
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

...Presuming only a background of exposure to high school algebra, the text introduces students to a cogent methodology of mathematical modeling building up from raw, sequential data and employing difference and ratio equations. Sequences lead off in an effective and engaging manner. The reader is drawn easily into a working knowledge ramping up through number patterns in visual and instructive puzzles. Real-world examples abound with multiple contemporary environmental and life science topics: sea ice extent, atmospheric carbon dioxide, infectious disease spread, repeated medication doses, and more. These emphasize the power and utility of quantitative methods which is the aim here, rather than a rigorous, technical mastery. Encompassing a wide spectrum of quantitative models and touching on chaos theory, this is a broad and coherent introduction to basic, predictive data modelling....

[Look for my entire review at MAA Reviews]

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Sunday, October 13, 2019

Review: Hi Bob!

Hi Bob! Hi Bob! by Bob Newhart
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is a really enjoyable review of the history of comedy and America with Newhart interviewing several comedias. This includes Will Ferrell, Jimmy Kimmel, Conan O'Brien, Sarah Silverman, and several others. It is all edited topically so the serial interviews sound like group conversations. The only issue I had was the programming order. I heard once a good comedy program is B, C, then A, material. (If I remember this right.) That is, open strong, put the risky, experiments in the middle the finish with the best most memorable bits. Well, this is ABC then. Also, the final and extensive two pieces ( one, with Conan suggesting ripping off children's' charities and then one with Ferrell mocking a sorry stalker) are longer than any others and so unlike Newhart material as to end the thing on a wrong note.

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Review: Boss: Richard J. Daley of Chicago

Boss: Richard J. Daley of Chicago Boss: Richard J. Daley of Chicago by Mike Royko
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

The first third of this book compiles so much detailed growth of the bossism "Machine" that I thought I would not like it at all. It really gathers steam in the identification of Chicago P.D. corruption, especially with the Summerdale scandals and building to a "police riot" (as described in the Walker Report) as the 1968 Democratic National Convention. A point is made that journalists were targeted. This is portrayed as a natural consequence of his public shoot-to-kill and -maim orders running up to the "first police riot" during the April 27, 1968 peace march to the Civic Center in Chicago.

Daley did nothing about the first police riot, although he was bombarded with complaints from victims and people who had seen it, including some from conservatives, who, while not sympathetic to the marchers, were appalled by the police attack. By doing nothing, Daley permitted the police to take of both gloves. The first had come off after theo shoot-to-kill order []


The Black Panther raid is used to imply the malicious use of police violence continued under Daly.

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Friday, October 11, 2019

Review: At the Center of the Storm

At the Center of the Storm At the Center of the Storm by George Tenet
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I acquired this during a period of time I was interested in Bush-era foreign policy. Disgust enabled disinterest, then I decided to read this anyway from that place. I find Tenet forthcoming, reflective, humble, and circumspect in describing a tenure over an area of foreign policy that has public failures and necessarily private successes. I am surprised he expresses such continued admiration of both "dubya" and Cheney even when he has to admit the possibility he was offered up as a scapegoat by Bush.

Among the public failures, there is an analysis of the 1999 Bombing of the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade and how the explicit unwillingness of the Dept. of Defense to should any of the blame caused it all to fall onto the CIA. This foreshadows the "Sixteen Words" controversy in 2003 State of the Union where similarly the CIA was out on a limb due to a lack of admission from inside the White House.

Tenet disparages Israel for single-issue negotiating while he himself refused to budge on releasing Jonathan Pollard who spied for and providing top-secret classified information to Israel. The issue of his imprisonment has sometimes arisen with Israel. Benjamin Netanyahu has been particularly vocal in lobbying for Pollard's release, visiting Pollard in prison in 2002. He raised the issue with President Clinton during the Wye River peace talks in October 1998. In My Life, Clinton wrote that he was inclined to release Pollard, but the objections of U.S. intelligence officials were too strong:

For all the sympathy Pollard generated in Israel, he was a hard case to push in America; he had sold our country's secrets for money, not conviction, and for years had not shown any remorse. When I talked to Sandy Berger and George Tenet, they were adamantly opposed to letting Pollard go, as was Madeleine Albright.

Seems to me if it could really have materially advanced the cause of peace in the Middle East, it would be worth it.

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Review: Codex Gigas

Codex Gigas Codex Gigas by Dom Lawson
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Publisher BMG and author Lawson did a bang-up job here with a core of interviews with Mantas, Cronos and Abaddon reflecting back, disagreeing, and marveling on their work as a band that formed a genre (black metal). There is plenty of pics and a nice tribute afterword from Voïvod's Michel Langevin.

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Wednesday, October 9, 2019

Review: Managing in Turbulent Times



Managing in Turbulent Times by Peter F. Drucker
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Drucker's career as a business thinker took off in 1942, when his initial writings on politics and society won him access to the internal workings of General Motors (GM), one of the largest companies in the world at that time. The resulting book, Concept of the Corporation, popularized GM's multidivisional structure and led to numerous articles, consulting engagements, and additional books. While GM, however, was hardly thrilled, I became enamored of Drucker’s scholarship as a GM employee in the late 90s. This is one of the books that has lingered unread in my collection since leaving GM. I decided to dive in and see if I was still impressed by his cognition. In the first, I would say quarter or so, I thought the work was filled with meaningless platitudes that I could see little value in and felt this was headed to a 2-star review and my final Drucker reading.

The after fifty pages or so, my interest was piqued my his foresight of the internet and information age:

A major impact is going to be in communications. Until now, electronic communication has largely adapted itself to the traditional definition of voice, vision, and graphics as distinct separate kinds of communication. From now on, electronics will increasingly produce total communications. By the middle of 1980 the Business Communications Satellite (a joint venture of IBM, Xerox, and the American satellite company Comsat) should be in operation in the United States. It will make possible simultaneous and instantaneous electronic transmission of voice, of vision, and of graphics (such as documents or charts). This will enable people in twenty-five places anywhere on the face of the globe to be in one visual place where they can talk to each other directly, see each other, and if need be share the same reports, the same documents, the same graphs simultaneously, without leaving their own office or home. The equivalent communications capacity is available in a number of different systems—for instance, in the new telephone exchanges that are being pioneered by the British Post Office and by competitors to the Bell Telephone System in the United States.

As a result, business travel on the airlines has probably passed its peak. Such travel was one of the growth industries of the post-World War II period. It should increasingly become less important, although its place may well be taken (and taken with a vengeance) by travel for vacation, learning, and sheer curiosity, defined as non-business travel. But business travel should become less and less necessary. It will be possible for executives to get together without moving that heavy, inert object, the human body, and inflicting upon it stupefying hours of vibration in stale air. Increasingly, we will be able to meet "in person" without having to move the person.

An equal or more important change will be the ability to substitute electronic transmission of graphics for the shipping of heavy paper. Marshall McLuhan made the headlines in the sixties by predicting that the electronic "message" would replace the old traditional "medium," the printed word, the graphic information. This has not happened and it will not happen. On the contrary, electronics are becoming the main channel for the transmission of graphic, printed information. Until today, we had to put a few grains of ink on half a pound of heavy cellulose through a printing process, and then to transport the inert mass of cellulose over long distances, to be finally hand-carried to the individual audience, slowly and at great cost. But today almost everyone has two printing plants in his home, the telephone and the television set…


Of course, he foresaw the turbulence due to come:

The examples given above are not a listing but a sample. What is clear is that the tremendous amount of new knowledge produced in the last thirty years since the end of World War II is now beginning to have an impact on technology. Knowledge is becoming performance, and this means rapid change. The technological change is only a part of the story; social change and social innovation should be equally important. It is highly possible that we can anticipate a period of rapid change in a great number of areas, regardless of the attitude of the public toward technological change. Resistance to change may make it more expensive but is unlikely to slow it down. Resistance to change may mean that economic leadership tomorrow passes from old to new countries, and from old to new industries. In the late nineteenth century Great Britain lost her leadership, which passed to Germany and the United States. And in the period after World War II the Japanese, precisely because they were in many ways technologically backward, could gain leadership in an area that traditional Western industry had largely neglected— high-technology consumer goods. Such shifts may happen again, are indeed likely to happen again. But this does not alter the fact that technology is changing rapidly and that innovation, both technological and social, is speeding up and is likely to change the structure of economy and society.
And the blogosphere would not have surprised Drucker:

In publishing, one trend is clearly toward very large systems: a national or worldwide system for the electronic communication of graphics would be very big indeed. At the same time, the conversion of every telephone or television set into a printing plant offers unlimited opportunity for a truly small publication, such as the specialized magazine for the beekeeper that cannot count on more than 10,000 subscribers in the United States, and maybe not more than 25,000 worldwide. If transmitted over the television set, such a magazine might well become economically viable.
This may be pointing out the obvious or maybe “too soon”, but Drucker does it so well. But is he an overly optimistic Cassandra:
There is only one country left where a migration will still continue: the United States. America can expect large-scale migration from Mexico, a very poor country with one of the largest labor surpluses and one of the highest unemployment rates, yet located next to the richest country and one of its richest areas, the Southwest, with a very low supply of indigenous young people for traditional jobs.

There is no way to prevent mass migration from Mexico over an open 2,000-mile border into the United States, both into the Southwest from San Diego to Denver and into the metropolitan areas of the East and Midwest—New York, Philadelphia, and Chicago—with their already large Hispanic populations. Indeed, the Reconquista of southern California by Mexican immigrants has already begun. By the year 2000, Hispanic-Americans should account for some 50 million of an American population of 250 million; they are about 15 million now. Whether they are officially "legal," "illegal," or "quasi-legal" is immaterial. In any event, the Southwest of the United States may be the only region in the developed world to show a sizable growth in traditional manufacturing industry over the next twenty or twenty-five years.

Socially and culturally, a mass migration of Mexicans to the United States will exacerbate racial and ethnic tensions. With a near-majority in America becoming Roman Catholics in a country of the "Protestant ethos," religion might become a political issue again. There might even be a "black backlash" as the "Chicanos" from Mexico threaten to displace the American black as the officially "disadvantaged" and thus officially privileged "minority." But these are exactly the problems the United States is used to and has handled—or mishandled—throughout all her history. Economically, the mass migration from Mexico, whatever the labor unions might say, should be beneficial and should in fact endow American manufacturing with competitive strength such as it has not known for quite some time.
The modern concept of globalism arose in the post-war debates of the 1940s in the United States. Drucker often refers to that era as the germination of much contemporary economics and sociological trends. I think he expresses a perceptive and advanced understanding of globalist worldview and deservedly employs different adjectives to talk about “integrated trade” and “transnational.”

We are about to enter the stage of integrated trade, for this is what production sharing means. Yet economists, theoreticians, and policymakers are totally unprepared for the challenge. In fact, the lack of concepts and of measurements is a serious problem. Our concepts cannot as yet handle production sharing.

A government statistician will record the export of hides from America as "exports" and the import of shoes as "imports"; his figures will nowhere relate the two. The American cattle grower does not even know that his livelihood depends on the sale of foreign-made shoes in the American market, for hides represent the margin between breaking even and making a profit for the livestock grower in Nebraska. Nor, conversely, does the Haitian manufacturer of the soles for these American shoes realize that he depends on hides grown in the United States. No one yet perceives the relationships. And when shoe workers' unions in the United States or shoe manufacturers in North Carolina agitate for a ban on the importation of "cheap foreign imports," no cattle grower in the Great Plains realizes that they are actually agitating to ban the export of American hides on which his livelihood depends. When the American tanning industry—as it does— asks for a ban on sending hides abroad, American shoe retailers (let alone American consumers) do not realize that this would mean having no shoes to sell in American shops. They do not know that there are not enough American workers available to do even a fraction of the tanning needed.

I wonder if that shoe manufacturing analysis still holds? This resonated with me since the US government announced last week a 25% tariff on all single malt scotch whisky imports as part of a wider set of tariffs aiming to punish the European Union. Well, I know making Scotch requires the oak barrels from manufacturers of American bourbon. Especially in this day of so many small business craft spirits, what of artisan distillers whose margins require selling of their barrels to scotch makers selling to the American market?

This book contains history lessons the development of the nation concept and how the current changes may be redefining that in a thought-provoking section “The End of Sovereignty”.

The modern national state was built on the theorem that political territory and economic territory must be congruent, with the unity of the two forged by governmental control of money—a startling heresy when it was first propounded in the sixteenth century. The code word for this new politico economic unit was the term "sovereignty/' Prior to the late sixteenth century, economic and political systems were quite separate. Money was basically beyond political control except insofar as the Prince made a substantial profit by reserving to himself the right to mint coins. Commerce before the seventeenth century was either transnational or purely local. In the Europe of 1500, before the long inflation of the sixteenth century destroyed the economic system of the time, long distance trade was carried out by trading cities, the sixteenth century equivalent of the multinational corporation of today, and equally controversial, equally criticized, equally reviled. The domestic economy was organized around a market town, which was the center of a self-sufficient agrarian economy in which money, while used to calculate, was only in very limited circulation. And long-distance trade and local market town economy were almost completely insulated from each other, the former with free-market prices, the latter with rigid price controls.

The modern national state was born with the assertion that money and credit have to be controlled by the sovereign and that the economy has to be integrated into the political system, if only to provide the Prince with the means to recruit and pay his mercenaries. The modern national state created national markets within which both long-distance commerce and local trade were unified. "Sovereignty" reached its logical climax in Keynes's theories of the late twenties and early thirties which, in effect, proclaimed that a country—or at least a major country such as the Great Britain of his day—could manage its economy irrespective of the world economy, and largely independent of economic fluctuations and business cycles, by managing and manipulating money and credit.

This leads to descriptions new to me of the Eurodollar and wonder how Drucker would opine on cryptocurrency.

In another intriguing section “The Employee Society”, Drucker suggests a employee-driven socialistic First World that is a point of view I have never considered. It rings as true as it is contrarian when I read it.
In the social sphere, management in the developed countries faces its greatest opportunity and its greatest danger in the next few years. Society in the developed countries has become an employee society. This offers management the opportunity to establish its legitimacy on a new, strong, and permanent basis. It also threatens management with the loss of both legitimacy and autonomy. The labor union is threatened with loss of function, but the power vacuum left by management gives it one last chance of perpetuating its power even though it no longer can serve its original social purpose. In every developed country, employees through their wages and salaries receive most—almost all—of the national product.

In every developed country, between 85 and 90 percent of the economy's product is being paid out in the form of wages and salaries. And most of the rest is in effect also salary; the compensation of the self-employed, whether professionals (such as physicians) or shopkeepers, is not "profit" and surely not "return on capital," but compensation for labor service rendered. Even the bulk of the reported "earnings" of American business are actually also employee income, that is, deferred wages. They are primarily used to build up employee retirement funds or are being paid to such funds as dividends on the securities they hold; together, these two items account for something like two-thirds of the post-tax earnings of American business. There is very little actually left to cover the costs of capital and to form capital for the future.
This leads Drucker to consider a difficult path forward for classic labor unions.
The emergence of the employee society also creates a new
center of turbulence in the labor union. Its very survival is
endangered by the fact that our society is an employee society,
in which businesses exist primarily for the employees' benefit,
and in which the employees are the only "capitalists," the only
true "owners." Once 85 percent of national income goes to
employees, the labor union has lost its original rationale: that of
increasing the share of the national income that goes to the
"wage fund." All one labor union can do is increase the share
of its members at the expense of other employees. The unions
thus become representatives of a special interest that holds up
the rest of society through the threat of power, rather than the
representatives of a "class," let alone the representatives of an
"oppressed majority."
Federalist No. 10 is an essay written by James Madison as the tenth of The Federalist Papers. No. 10 shows an explicit rejection by the Founding Fathers of the principles of direct democracy and factionalism. In that spirit Drucker attacks the narrowly focused, fanatic activists in “The Power of the Small Minority”.

Such a process is doubly important in a pluralist society in which small, single-minded, often paranoid groups have attained a power out of all proportion to their actual size. The theory of the modern state presumed that there would be a "majority" and a "minority/* and that out of their interplay a national "general will" would emerge. It assumed further that both, majority and minority, would be concerned with the entire spectrum of social and political decisions. Everything else was considered to be "faction," evil and nefarious. The modern political party arose as a means of integrating "factions" into the general good and the general will, and of converting "factions" into "programs." Since Edmund Burke in England first opposed the integrating power of party to the factional extremism of the French Revolution, the concept of the integrating party has been central to modern political theory and modern political practice. The change back from integrating party to confrontational faction began in the early years of this century. One agent of the change was the labor union…

Any individual or group that believes in one supreme value, other than a revealed supernatural truth, is by definition paranoid. The rest of us are sane precisely because we know that the world is complex and that there is no one ultimate value…

 The small group with its single-minded dedication to one absolute can be called "paranoid" also in a different meaning of the term. It refuses to admit that it could possibly be wrong or could possibly use the wrong means to its end. If the results are not what it expected, that is only additional proof of the powers of evil. It is never taken as an indication that the group might have been wrong, let alone that its efforts were misdirected. No American prohibitionist could ever admit, for instance, that all the Prohibition Amendment did was make drinking fashionable, despite the overwhelming evidence to that effect.

What this oracle saw developing was a pervasive politicization of the business landscape. It really feels like today from Facebook rants to Mattel’s first gender-neutral doll, that his has come to pass.

The demands of the new political environment may sound like "big company stuff." But the politicization of all institutions makes demands for leadership and activism on the management of all businesses, including the medium-sized and even the small ones. In fact, medium-sized and small businesses often have to devote more time to issues that are not directly concerned with economic performance, and often have to give more, and more effective, leadership. Where the big company, whose chief executive may sit at the Business Round Table, deals with national and international issues, the medium-sized or small company may find itself dealing with local or state matters. It might have to work indirectly through a trade association or an industry association rather than directly with the top people in government. But the demands on time, policy, and character remain the same. Equally, the managers of non-profit public service institutions face the same demands and have to take on similar tasks.

Whether a business is very large or quite small, it operates and lives in a society in which the main needs of the community are being discharged through institutions that were originally designed for single-purpose performance only. No matter whether the business—or hospital or university—is large or small, management will have to accept that society looks to its institutions to attain ends unrelated to the institutions' own purposes, such as preferential employment for "minorities" on the university faculty regardless of scholarship and teaching ability. Managers will have to learn Managing in Turbulent Environments 221 to operate in a political environment, in which the dynamics have shifted to small, single-minded confrontational minorities that can veto, and away from majorities that represent a consensus and can act…
Well, now I see five stars.

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Sunday, October 6, 2019

Review: Oscar Wildes most famous novel The Picture of Dorian Gray

Oscar Wildes most famous novel The Picture of Dorian Gray Oscar Wildes most famous novel The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I finally got around to reading this and liked it much more than I expected. It is much more than a morphing painting. The descent into self-destructive mania experienced by the title character recalls the best Edgar Allan Poe and even more modern. The festishistic adoration of youth recalls to me Death in Venice. Some period thing? Now I want to see some film adaptations...

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Saturday, October 5, 2019

Review: Man's Rise to Civilization: The Cultural Ascent of the Indians of North America

Man's Rise to Civilization: The Cultural Ascent of the Indians of North America Man's Rise to Civilization: The Cultural Ascent of the Indians of North America by Peter Farb
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Ostensible a popular work of anthropology covering the arc of cultural development among North America's aboriginal peoples, I found this a deeper, more enlightening, and even more ambition work. Generally, the historical analysis of the varied peoples from Inuit to Aztec suggests the diverse and varied peoples of N.A. survived through a combination of moieties and exogamy in band/tribal scenarios that fostered strength through cooperation and diversity.

Some interesting things were compelling indictments of the scholarship of Patterns of Culture, further eroding my believe in the simplistic Apollonian-Dionysian model.

I found the analysis of Cortes vs. the Aztecs also interesting - the hated and cruel Aztec empire tottering under intrigue, fear, and loathsome human sacrifice collapsed under the weight of smallpox and a lack of central authority.

Generally the history of the decline of this most genetically homogenous of races (undercutting many racial purity arguments) into phases such as nativism and religious fanaticism to too-late violence resulting in accomodation and evaporation can be painful and important lessons from the human experience.

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Review: King Lear

King Lear by William Shakespeare My rating: 4 of 5 stars View all my reviews