The New York Times has an article exploring the tensions wrapped up in Harvey Pekar’s last days and final work. It seems fitting, even in its frustration.
Category Archives: Well Worth Reading
And They Wonder Why There’s No Loyalty
“He said we’re a commodity like soybeans and oil, and the price of commodities go up and down,” Mr. Budd recalled. “He said there are thousands of people in this area out of jobs, and they could hire any one of them for $14 an hour. It made me sick to have someone sit across the table and say I’m not worth the money I make.”
With their article, “In Mott’s Strike, More Than Pay at Stake,” the New York Times details the efforts of Dr Pepper Snapple Group to squeeze its workers to increase already-rising corporate profits.
The workers are doing the right thing in organizing for their own self-interest. I think it’s crucial for consumers to pressure manufacturers and stores to favor workers. I’m not sure what the best path for action is, though. I try to patronize local businesses, but maybe they just apply the same squeeze, with a friendly face.
Facing the End
Atual Gawande has an excellent article in the New Yorker about end-of-life decisions. “Letting Go” explores how medicine should engage people who are going to die. It explores the successes of hospice care, which, surprisingly, is shown to extend lifespan even as it reduces suffering. It also highlights the changing role of doctors, who are being encouraged to extend a more realistic view of the time that remains instead of fighting a series of scorched-earth battles against new, compounding ailments.
Most importantly, the article is a strong prompt to consider and share your own end-of-life plans. Toward that end, I publicly plead: please don’t have me stuffed or place my brain in a monkey.
Rubbing Ross Douthat’s Face in the Dirt
The Phil Nugent Blog is one of my favorite reads at the moment, offering excellent analysis of movies and triple toe loop–triple axel caliber takedowns of political blatherers. Today’s piece, “Ugh! or, What Do You Mean ‘We,’ Straight Man” is dedicated to eviscerating New York Times columnist Ross Douthat for his recent column arguing that allowing gays to marry would, like, totally degrade the privileged status of heterosexual marriage.
But as the heterosexual possessor of a working penis, I have to tell you, I really, really hate it when guys cite the supposedly Darwinian inevitability that men can’t control their libidos and their dicks as a reason to fuck over women and gays. I hated it during the great “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” circle jerk of the early ’90s, when a conga line of military hacks took the position that, if gay men were allowed to serve alongside “regular” men, every barracks would turn into a bar scene from Cruising. And I didn’t like it any better a few years later, when there were a string of scandals related to women in the military being harassed and worse by some of those clean straight male servicemen, and the conga line started up again, this time with the hacks insisting that this is what just happens when men are forced to be in the same vicinity as women–it’s not as if their superiors could ever get them to control themselves.
Falling Down
Alexis de Tocqueville, the great French chronicler of early America, was once misquoted as having said: “America is the best country in the world to be poor.” That is no longer the case. Nowadays in America, you have a smaller chance of swapping your lower income bracket for a higher one than in almost any other developed economy – even Britain on some measures. To invert the classic Horatio Alger stories, in today’s America if you are born in rags, you are likelier to stay in rags than in almost any corner of old Europe.
Another good “death of the middle class” piece, this time in the Financial Times. The people profiled don’t seem blameless, but it looks like their biggest mistake was believing that a rising tide lifts all boats.