Though peak COVID has now been relegated to the realm of cultural taboo, the malaise which was so emblematic of quarantine days shows no signs of abating. And perhaps that’s not a bad thing—a country can’t, and shouldn’t, lose over a million people in little over a year without negative psychic effects. Politically, the situation is grim, despite superficial indications of normalcy’s return. The memory of Bernie Sanders’ presidential campaigns, quashed without compunction by ruthless Democratic Party apparatchiks, haunts our politics to this day. A profound bitterness lingers in the air—a product of Bernie’s excruciatingly near success at wresting the nomination from the chloasma-dappled hands of the neoliberals’ appointed candidate, and a register of the disquieting knowledge that the far right continues to organize, that January 6 was a harbinger of things to come, that COVID was also a warning which appears to have been largely ignored, and that the planet continues to hurtle towards climate oblivion.
- The Right-Wing Culture Wars Flare in Support of Israeli War Crimes
- Loneliness and Persuasion
- Israel in the Dock
- Murder Thy Neighbor
- Suicide and the Novelist
- Dershowitz for the Defense?
- The Legal Fight to End Genocide in Gaza
- Some Thoughts on American Cinema of the 2000s
- Genocide on the Installment Plan
- So Long, and Thanks for All the Hamburgers
- How the Campaign to Free Political Prisoner Alex Saab Succeeded
- Made in the USA
- The Thirst for Grandeur
- Just a Little Genocide
- The Women of Three Mile Island