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Backlash Forever | Dissent Magazine

The Hardhat Riot: Nixon, New York City, and the Dawn of the White Working-Class Revolution by David Paul Kuhn Let them Eat Tweets: How the Right Rules in an Age of Extreme Inequality by Jacob S. Hacker and Paul Pierson Liveright, 2020, 288 pp. When a young Chuck Schumer arrived at Harvard in 1967 as a freshman, he joined the great political stirring of those years—who could resist it? But Abbie Hoffman he was not. “I was faced with what Alexander Hamilton called mobocracy,” Schumer recalled in his coauthored 2007 book Positively American. He became a College Democrat, canvassed for Eugene McCarthy, and eschewed the radicals. Campus members of the New Left’s Progressive Labor faction horrified him, and he felt “sickened” seeing protesters scream at cops. “The police weren’t pigs. They were the people I’d grown up with. They were my neighbors. My friends. They were the Baileys [imaginary Irish-American Long Islanders with whom Schu

The Unfulfilled Promise of Julian Bond

The Unfulfilled Promise of Julian Bond How could someone so telegenic, so witty, and skilled in politics have missed out on higher office? James Palmer/AP/Shutterstock Three years before he died at 75 in 2015, Julian Bond sat down for an interview on his life and work. Asked how he would like to be remembered, Bond replied, with his characteristic alloy of amiable candor and laconic wit: I want a double-sided headstone. On one side, I want it to say, “Race Man” and that means a man who doesn’t dislike other races, but who’s proud of his own and wants to lift it up. The other side is going to say, “Easily Amused.”

The Joe Biden I knew in 1978 — and what it means for the next four years

Rennie Davis, Chicago Seven activist and New Left leader, dies at 80

Rennie Davis, Chicago Seven activist and New Left leader, dies at 80
washingtonpost.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from washingtonpost.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Milestones for Black citizens in Schenectady history, post World War II

Milestones for Black citizens in Schenectady history, post World War II | The Daily Gazette SECTIONS January 31, 2021 The Schenectady Silhouettes pose for a photo in 2001. Founding members include, from left, Eveyln Baird, Marsha Mortimore (background), Minnie Stamper (seated), Hilvan Finch, Corine Sadler and James Stamper. Gazette file photos Shares0 1947: Classie Cox is the first Black teacher hired by the Schenectady City School District. 1949: The Schenectady chapter of the NAACP is established; Gerald A. White, pastor at Friendship Baptist Church, is the first president. 1951: James Stamper is the first Black supervisor at the General Electric Co. 1952: Arthur Chaires becomes the first Black officer for the Schenectady Police Department.

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