Pope Francis is a Marxist. Yup, he is. He talks a lot about the poor. He has criticized untempered capitalism. He doesn't support trickle-down economics (A Fox News commentator actually made this claim!). Truth be told, Francis merely is repeating the Gospel of Jesus, which overwhelmingly preaches against avarice and greed. Don't like Francis? Well then you don't like Jesus. Continue Reading...
Sebastian Bennett
Sebastian Bennett is a foreign affairs officer in the nation’s capital. He has held a number of jobs in government, including as an aide to a Senator on Capitol Hill and as a presidential management fellow at a major federal department. Sebastian has also worked for think tanks, both in the nation’s capital and in Madrid. He was also a White House Intern. Sebastian has a post-graduate degree in international relations. Due to the sensitive nature of his current position, he is writing for The Daily Dissident, which he co-founded, under an assumed name.
The Next Genocide
The Holocaust was fueled by deep-seated antisemitism. True. But it was also fueled by a panic over resources, according to Timothy Snyder, a Yale academic. Hitler sought to ensure living space and access to agricultural goods for the German people, which required territorial conquest and the elimination of lesser peoples like Slavs and Jews - the latter, in particular. Climate change threatens additional resource panics, as arable land Continue Reading...
Why it pays to be a Jerk
Does it pay to be a jerk? Apparently so. A coterie of management theorists have posited that magnanimity actually off in the corporate suite. Nice guys, so it goes, finish first. Not true, according to others. We're wired to defer to aggressive traits that we might make many of us cringe but otherwise pay off in business and other status-critical domains. Alas, is all lost. Maybe. Continue Reading...
Inside Amazon: Wrestling Big Ideas in a Bruising Workplace
The biggest retailer in the world is Darwinian monstrosity - at least for many of its employees. Amazon.com is a juggernaut, but its managerial ethos is Dickensian, demanding that its employees toil in inhumane work conditions. Some thrive in this cutthroat environment and are well-compensated as a result. But many others are crushed by it. Is this work in the 21st century? Continue Reading...
The Surge Fallacy
The Iraq War, ill-conceived of not, was won in the wake of the so-called Surge in 2007. The insurgency wracking the country effectively was over. Then the Obama administration, by not leaving behind a residual force, snatched defeat from the jaws of victory. So goes the GOP narrative. It's bogus. The Surge, as laid out by its architects, was supposed to provide some breathing room for political reconciliation in Iraq. That never happened, Continue Reading...
The Really Big One
The ruinous quake is coming. Seismologists say that the chances are one in three over the next 50 years, and one in 10 that it'll be truly enormous. Where exactly is this Fault Line? Running up the spine of California, i.e., the San Andreas? Close. The Cascadia Fault Line just off the the coast in the Pacific Northwest, precisely, and it's primed to shudder violently. Be afraid. Be very afraid. Continue Reading...
Don’t mess with Grace Mugabe – she could be the next president of Zimbabwe
Pity Zimbabwe. Once the breadbasket of southern Africa, the long-suffering nation is now a basket case after decades of misrule by Robert Mugabe, a cold-blooded tyrant. The good news is that Mugabe is 91-years-old and, though in remarkably good health for his age, he can't last forever. The bad news is that his Lady Macbeth-like wife, Grace, appears to harbor political ambitions. Continue Reading...
Revenge Killing
The US, unlike most developed countries, practices capital punishment, having decided that it is not "cruel or unusual." Supreme Court Justice Steven Breyer has hinted that he would like the high court to review the legality of capital punishment in the next term. Whether that happens or not, and whether it would make a difference anyway given the court's conservative orientation, is another matter. But here's a great primer of how flawed our Continue Reading...
Homegrown Radicals More Deadly Than Jihadis in U.S.
What's breed of violent extremist has carried out the most deadly attacks since 9/11? Muslim? Nope. Since the attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon (and, nearly, the White House), nearly twice as many people have been killed by white supremacists and antigovernment fanatics in the US than radical jihadists. Funny, though, the perception prevails that the greatest emanates from Islamic fundamentalism. Curious. Worth thinking about Continue Reading...
Five myths about why the South seceded
Why did the South attempt to secede from the Union? States' rights, of course. Wrong. And wasn't the Civil War about high tariffs? Not at all. These and other bogus myths persist as convenient subterfuge; in actuality, the right to benefit from the unpaid labor and servitude of a lesser race was also behind the South's move to establish independence. Plain and simple. Yet the myth persists. Continue Reading...
Johann Hari on the War on Drugs
After 100 years and a $100 trillion, what, precisely, do we have to show for the so-called war on drugs? Cocaine? It's as cheap and accessible as ever. Heroin. Same. Pot? Yup, that too. We've also got 2.4 million people in jail, many on non-violent drug offenses. Seldom has a public policy gone so catastrophically wrong, and yet we keep at it. Maybe, just maybe, we should re-think things. Decriminalization is the way forward. Continue Reading...
I Escaped Hasidic Judaism and Went From Living on the Streets to Being a Hollywood Actor
What's the difference between an established religion and a faddish cult? It's not clear. Both oftentimes brainwash their members, invoking the specter of terrible harm if they even dip their toes in the world of non-adherents. This applies to orthodox Judaism, which is all-to-often cloistered and cult-like, promising God's fury (and social isolation) to those who deviate from the pious straight and narrow. Scary. Continue Reading...
Fringe Festival
A large portion of the Republican electorate is, well, insane. Does that sound partisan, unfair? It's not. Just look at the cavalcade of loons that are running for the GOP presidential nomination? We're not talking one or two. On the contrary, only a handful or the dozen-plus that have announced their intentions to run are what could be fairly called sane. Continue Reading...
Democrats embrace the logic of ‘Citizens United’
What constitutes political corruption? The Supreme Court defines it in absurdly narrow terms: only when a quid pro quo exists. That is anachronistic and demonstrably simplistic (and dangerous) in an age when super-wealthy backers can, single-handedly, change the course of the body politic. Republicans, in general, have subscribed to this notion; now Democrats might have to tacitly endorse it given the revelations surrounding the Clinton Continue Reading...
David Simon: ‘There are now two Americas. My country is a horror show’
Why are Baltimore residents rioting? Sure, police brutality is the proximate cause, but the real reason is that large sections of the city's population - the the country's population - have no place in the economic order. So says David Simon, creator of the widely acclaimed series, The Wire. He's right. The urban underclass and chunks of other parts of this country are surplus labor. They're not needed. This cannot continue. Continue Reading...