***THIS IS A MUST READ***
Clearly, any institution that makes a claim to literacy, critical dialogue, informed debate, and reason is now a threat to a political culture in which ignorance; stupidity, lies, misinformation, and appeals to the common sense have become the only currency of exchange. And this seems to apply as well to the dominant media. How else to explain the widespread public support for politicians in the United States such as Herman Cain, who is as much of a buffoon as he is an exemplary symbol of illiteracy and ignorance in the service of the political spectacle. If fact, one can argue reasonably that the entire slate of presidential Republican Party candidates extending from Rick Santorum to Rick Perry and Michele Bachmann embody not simply a rejection of science, evidence, informed argument, and other elements associated with the Enlightenment, but a deep seated disdain and hatred for any vestige of a critical mind. Ignorance now replaces knowledge and impotence with power. Almost every position they take harks back to a pre-Enlightenment period when faith and cruelty ruled the day and ignorance became the modus operandi for legitimating political and ethical impotence. . . the value of higher education is now tied exclusively to the need for credentials. critical thinking has been devalued as a result of the growing corporatization of higher education. . . critical thinking has been devalued as a result of the growing corporatization of higher education. . . The current right-wing politics of illiteracy, exploitation, and cruelty can no longer hide in the cave of ignorance, legitimated by their shameful accomplices in the dominant media.
Category Archives: Writing
Mason Crumpacker and the Hitchens Reading List
When Christopher Hitchens got the Dawkins Award in Houston, I posted the following report from Chron.com: Though [Hitchens] was asked a variety of questions from the audience, none appeared to elicit more interest than the one asked by eight-year-old Mason Crumpacker, who wanted to know what books she should read. In response, Hitchens first asked where her mother was and the girl indicated that she was siting beside her. He then asked to see them once the presentation was over so that he could give her a list.
As the event drew to a close, Mason and her mom, Anne Crumpacker of Dallas, followed him out. Surrounded by attendees wanting a glance of the famed author, Hitchens sat on a table just outside of the ballroom and spent about 15 minutes recommending books to Mason.
Book Recommendation: War is a Racket: The Profit Motive Behind Warfare, By Major General Smedley Butler
Christopher Hitchens Night: A Review
“I’m not as I was,” Christopher Hitchens poignantly remarked recently. Afflicted by oesophageal cancer and, now, pneumonia, Hitchens, who I interviewed for the New Statesman last year, was too ill to appear in conversation with Stephen Fry at the Royal Festival Hall in London last night. But rather than cancelling the event, the organisers assembled an extraordinary selection of Hitchens’s comrades and friends to pay tribute to the great essayist and polemicist.
Read more . . .
Quote: Unknown
A politician is defined as a person who receives votes from the poor and money from the rich on the promise of protecting each from the other.
Quote: Peter Alexander Ustinov
Peter Alexander Ustinov (16 April 1921 – 28 March 2004)
English Actor, Writer, Dramatist, Intellectual, Diplomat. Served as a Goodwill
Ambassador for UNICEF, and President of the World Federalist Movement
In America, through pressure of conformity, there is freedom of choice, but nothing to choose from.
Who Killed Che? How the CIA Got Away with Murder
Publication November 15th 2011
• 160 pages with b/w illustration throughout paperback ISBN 978-1-935928-49-2
• ebook ISBN 978-1-935928-50-8
http://www.orbooks.com/our-books/who-killed-che/
Atheists Do Not Need to Have All the Answers
. . . [H]ow ridiculous it is to assume that god must be the default answer for every unknown. I used to wonder why so many Christians seemed unable to understand this. I suspect now that these Christians did not want to think because doing so might jeopardize their faith.
Read more . . .





