-
Recent Posts
-
Categories
artificial intelligence autocracy biodiversity birds book review book reviews books capitalism carbon dioxide carbon emissions clean energy climate climate change democracy ecology Economics elections Environment fiction forest global warming greenhouse gas emissions growth internet law review leadership mathematics nature nonficnov nonfiction personal development philosophy psychology racism religion rights science SCOTUS Supreme Court sustainability technology thinking tree trump tyranny
Archives
Recent Comments
Meta
Category Archives: Politics
White Fragility
White Fragility By Robin DiAngelo Beacon Press, Boston, 2018 “White Fragility” sounds like a paradox. How can whites be fragile when we’re supposed to be the largest and smost dominant segment of US society? As author Robin DiAngelo explains it, … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Law and justice, Politics
Tagged book reviews, justice, nonfiction, race, racism, robin diangelo, white fragility
1 Comment
So you want to talk about race
So you want to talk about race By Ijeoma Oluo Seal Press, New York, 2018 In the wake of the murder of George Floyd by a white police officer in Minneapolis, and the nation-wide protests that followed, many white people, … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Law and justice, Politics
Tagged book reviews, ijeoma oluo, nonfiction, race, racism, social justice
4 Comments
Gorsuch Surprises, Alito Spews, Scalia Haunts in Bostock v. Clayton County
On Monday, June 15, 2020, the United States Supreme Court ruled in a 6-3 decision that the Civil Rights Act of 1964 protects homosexual and transgender individuals from job discrimination. This decision has been hailed as a major victory for … Continue reading
Posted in Law and justice, Politics
Tagged Bostock, civil rights, law review, LGBTQ, SCOTUS, sexual orientation, Supreme Court, transgender
Leave a comment
Supreme Court Upholds Limits on Attendance at Church Services
At about midnight last night the United States Supreme Court, in a 5.4 decision, upheld California’s restrictions on the number of people who can attend church services during the coronavirus emergency. Scotusblog has posted the written decision. The South Bay … Continue reading
Posted in Law and justice, Politics
Tagged constitution, coronavirus, COVID-19, religion, SCOTUS, Supreme Court
Leave a comment
The Storm Before the Calm
I can’t decide whether George Friedman is a genius or a crackpot. Friedman has made a career of geopolitical forecasting. He’s founded a couple of consulting companies that specialize in the field. He’s the author of several bestselling books including … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Economics, History, Politics
Tagged book review, forecasting, government, nonfiction, US history
5 Comments
How To Be An Antiracist
How To Be An Antiracist By Ibram X. Kendi One World, New York, 2019 Donald Trump says he’s not racist. In fact, he claims to be the “least racist person that you have ever met.” In his latest book, How … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Law and justice, Politics
Tagged antiracism, book review, book reviews, how to be an antiracist, ibram kendi, kendi, nonfiction, racism
8 Comments
Diversity Explosion
In 2011, more minority babies were born in the United States than white babies for the first time. In 2015, 24 of the largest 100 metropolitan areas in the US were already minority white. By 2040 there will be no … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Politics
Tagged book review, demographics, diversity, diversity explosion, frey, minorities, nonfiction, population, race relations, united states
3 Comments
Fast Train to Mordor: Trump v. Hawaii
Reading through the Supreme Court’s decision in Trump v. Hawaii – the Muslim travel ban case – is like drifting off to sleep on an ordinary commuter train headed for home and then being jolted awake when it shudders to … Continue reading
Posted in Law and justice, Politics
Tagged Establishment Clause, First Amendment, law review, SCOTUS, Supreme Court, travel ban, trump, Trump v. Hawaii
2 Comments
Carpenter v. United States
Today, instead of a book review, I’m going to take a plunge into law review. I want to look at the decision of the United States Supreme Court in a case called Carpenter v. United States announced on June 22. … Continue reading
Posted in Law and justice, Politics
Tagged cell phone, Fourth Amendment, law review, privacy, rights, SCOTUS, Supreme Court
Leave a comment
Fascism: A Warning
When she spoke to an adoring, packed house at Seattle’s Paramount Theater on the evening of April, 24, 2018, former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright stated clearly that she was not accusing President Donald Trump of being a Fascist. But, … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Politics
Tagged book review, democracy, Donald Trump, fascism, foreign policy, Madeleine Albright, nonfiction, trump
1 Comment