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Tough Guys

Kenyon Gradert Dissent Magazine
The author enlivens a type of working-class society where capitalism compensates poor men with the role of tough guy, all in the writer's effort to "bring the left to life."The End of Eddy does so in a style both plainspoken and visceral, using Louis's own childhood trials--like his protagonist much abused as a gay kid in a dead-end factory town --as a window onto the pathologies of a cloistered working-class existence.

Willing to Be Reckless

Ange Mlinko Poetry Magazine
This new edition of the poetry of early 20th Century modernist poet Marianne Moore will be welcomed by all who love her formally innovative, humorous, and deeply humanist verse.

Beyond the Dossier: Look at Trump Bank Records

Glenn R. Simpson and Peter Fritsch The New York Times
Kremlin domes being spun like tops
Trump and his organization worked with a wide array of dubious Russians in arrangements that often raised questions about money laundering.

Erica Garner and How America Destroys Black Families

Kashana Cauley The New York Times
One way to describe Erica Garner’s last few years is to say she spent them fighting against police brutality. Another way is to say she fought against the forced separation and destruction of black families by the state.

Seymour Melman and the New American Revolution

Jonathan Feldman CounterPunch
Seymour Melman believed that both political and economic decline could be reversed by vastly scaling back the U.S. military budget which represented a gigantic opportunity cost to the national economy. He believed in a a revolution in thinking and acting centered on the reorganization of economic life and the nation’s security system.  The core alternative to economic decline was the democratic organization of workplaces.

‘I Hope I Can Quit Working in a Few Years’: A Preview of the U.S. Without Pensions

Peter Whoriskey The Washington Post
The way major U.S. companies provide for retiring workers has been shifting for about three decades, with more dropping traditional pensions every year. The first full generation of workers to retire since this turn offers a sobering preview of a labor force more and more dependent on their own savings for retirement.

Goodbye, Erica Garner

Matt Taibbi Rolling Stone
Erica was a rare person whose honesty far outweighed her self-interest. In a life full of tragedy, she died too soon.