Sunday, May 31, 2026

May 2026 Acquisitions

Books:
Jeph Loeb et al, Superman/Batman, 2025.

Movies:

Music:
Black Keys, Peaches!, 2026.
Gorillaz, The Mountain, 2026.
Graham Bond Organisation, The Sound Of '65/There's A Bond Between Us, 1999.
Social Distortion, Born to Kill, 2026.
Paul Weller, Weller at the BBC (Vol. 2), 2026.

"Any Billionaires Who Pay the Tax Will Earn It Back in Just a Few Months"

"Billionaires' taxes amount to zero. So long as they don't sell any of the shares that made them rich, they're not actually forced to pay taxes on the skyrocketing value of those shares. A 'wealth tax' worthy of the name would ensure they pay the same as the rest of us, around 40%. That would not prevent them from amassing fortunes. Their $1 million would still grow to $190 million over 20 years—which is colossal, just not as colossal as $3.3 billion."

Stephen Land at the Los Angeles Times explains "[w]hy billionaires shouldn't fuss over the wealth tax."

And Jonathan Last at The Bulwark writes, "As the saying goes: Capitalism is too important to be left to the capitalists."

"PBS-ification"

"But it is noticeable that as the folk memory of punk and of the mid-Sixties and rock'n'roll, has faded,  so too is that distrust of art that Marcus wrote about approvingly, that Drummond enacted, that Bangs took for granted...
Gradually there has been a growing resignation towards the very thing that Nik Cohn found intolerable–the division between industrialised chartpop, brainless if entertaining trash, and a separate zone of 'fine music', which is totally comfortable with seeing itself as art."

Simon Reynolds presents a transcript of a talk he made at Harvard University in 2012.

"Probably Did More Than Any Organization to Expose the Society's Dark Side to the World"

"No smear campaign, this was an exposé. The covert program ginned up negative press and made the society toxic in the eyes of most Americans. The exposure neutered the ability of violent, conspiratorial, white-supremacist elements associated with the society to win elective office or dominate either the Democratic or the Republican party. And the ADL's campaign forced Birchers to spend time, energy, and resources fending off charges of extremism or bigotry. The incessant public conversation about Birchers as a hate-filled group generated the impression that the organization must be tainted and ought to be shunned."

Matthew Dallek at The Bulwark discusses how the Anti-Defamation League challenged the John Birth Society.

"Calls This Period of Economic Growth One of the 'Two Pillars' Supporting That Era's Anomalously High Marriage Rates"

"Free-market conservatives toppled one pillar, and feminism toppled the other, bringing us to our current era of record high inequality and singlehood. The conservatives trying to revive midcentury marriage patterns place the blame squarely on feminists, even though the regressive economic agenda enacted by conservatives themselves made it all but inevitable that marriage would become what Coontz and other social scientists call 'a luxury good.'"

Anna Louie Sussman at The New Republic reviews Stephanie Coontz's For Better and Worse: The Complicated Past and Challenging Future of Marriage.

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

"Lest We Forget the Horrors" Part II

"Now that Trump has returned to office, amid civil rights, humanitarian, economic, and constitutional crises, we felt it critical to make an inventory of this new round of horrors."

As with Donald Trump's first term, the editors of McSweeney's present "An Unending Catalog of Trump’s Cruelties, Collusions, Corruptions, and Crimes."

Sunday, May 24, 2026

Attention Politics

"'Politicians are recruited in lots of different ways, but let's say that now we have reached an era in which part of the recruitment process is based on their ability to engage with new social media platforms,' says Stuart Soroka, a professor in the departments of communication and political science at UCLA." 

While discussing the Los Angeles mayoral race, Lorraine Ali at the Los Angeles Times writes about "reality TV- and social media-made politicians who've moved into politics."

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

"A Luminous Quality That Can Be Almost Blinding"

"You can hardly blame Monroe for being overwhelmed by her own image. In her lifetime, she was far and away the most photographed woman in the world, which is another way of saying that she was the most desired. Marilyn Monroe became a movie star in the years following World War II and died just before the social movements of the 1960s permanently altered the face of the nation. Her career was almost exactly contemporaneous with the '50s, that decade of unparalleled American prosperity and power."

Moira Donegan at Bookforum reviews Marilyn Monroe 100: The Official Centenary Book.

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

"What Went Wrong?"

"Some portion of the book's confusion about capitalism, and its author's refusal or inability to stand by its claims about capitalism, is symptomatic and shared. In 2014, Seth Rockman, one of Beckert's colleagues in the new history of capitalism, announced that the field had 'minimal investment in a fixed or theoretical definition of capitalism.' That was a virtue, Rockman claimed, not a vice. If they 'let capitalism float as a placeholder,' scholars would be freed to do 'the empirical work of discovery' and find 'ground-level evidence of a system in operation.' Twelve years—and 1,325 pages—later, free time is over, and judging by the results in hand, scholars of the new history of capitalism have no more sense of a system now than when they began." 

Corey Robin at The Nation reviews Sven Beckert's Capitalism: A Global History.

Thursday, April 30, 2026

April 2026 Acquisitions

Books:
Brian Michael Bendis, Goldfish, 2022.
Amanda Conner and Jimmy Palmiotti, Harley Quinn: Wild at Heart, 2025.
Anthony O'Hear and Judy Groves, Introducing Jesus: A Graphic Guide, 2015.
Frank Norris, McTeague: A Story of San Francisco, 1899, 1964.

Movies:
M, 1931.

Music:
Bangs and Talbot, Smokin' Aces, 2026.
British Electric Foundation, Music Of Quality And Distinction Volume One, 1982, 1991.
Dr Feelgood, Sneakin' Suspicion, 1977, 2025.
Hot Chocolate, An Introduction to Hot Chocolate, 2017.
Steve White Trio, Soul Drums, 2026.

Friday, April 24, 2026

"Trump Has Met His Match in Pope Leo"

"It's surely no exaggeration to say that Trump embodies the very worst of us. He brims over with flaws–we used to call them sins–most people try to tame within themselves. Though the self-regard and vanity is beyond egregious, we've somehow grown used to it. This is the man who took a memorial to a young president gunned down in his prime, and slapped his own name on it: behold, the Trump-Kennedy Center. This is the man who plans to build a gold victory arch, an Arc de Trump, so gargantuan at 250ft tall that it will loom over Washington DC. This is the man who posted an image of himself as a Jesus-like figure"

At The Guardian, Jonathan Freedland writes that "the US president represents the polar opposite of Christianity."

Sunday, April 19, 2026

"The Economic Mess We're in Is Entirely of Trump's Own Doing"

"It always sounds a bit earnest to deplore corruption, but one of the practical reasons for eschewing corruption is because at best it acts like an invisible tax on economic growth. At worst, it corrodes the economic engine to the point that it doesn't properly function any longer. Before Trump, the United States was a world leader in combatting corporate and political corruption abroad for the unapologetically realpolitik reason that American companies could win on a level playing field. Under Trump II, the DOJ has explicitly stopped enforcing the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, and we're now in a grubby race to the bottom.

David Kurtz at Talking Points Memo writes that "[n]ot only are Trump's second term attacks on economic growth hard to reverse, let alone quickly, they're deeply wired into who he is and what he’s about."

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

"Pro-Worker, Pro-Family, Pro-America"

"We have no complaints and feel fortunate to have had a place to regularly publish our political and policy ideas since 2020. Hopefully, TLP's insights and arguments made some difference in the Democratic Party's strategic discourse and in wider political debates—or at least got people to look at matters in a different light and reconsider some of their positions."

John Halpin at The Liberal Patriot winds the site down, alongside articles from various writers:





Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Let's Dance

"That's what birthed punk rock. Not anarchy but ennui. The energy had to go somewhere. It went into a fast, urgent 'One, two, three, four…'"

Jonathan Eig at AudioPhix marks the fiftieth anniversary of Ramones.

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

March 2026 Acquisitions

Books:
David Avallone et al, Elvira in Monsterland, 2024.
David Avallone et al, Elvira Meets H.P. Lovecraft, 2024.
Bertolt Brecht, The Good Woman of Setzuan, 1999.
Garth Ennis et al, Punisher: Welcome Back, Frank, 2026.
Jonathan Hickman et al, Ultimate Spider-Man Vol. 2: The Paper, 2025.
Jane Hope and Borin Van Loon, Introducing Buddha: A Graphic Guide, 2008.
Jim McCarthy and Kevin Cross, Living for Kicks: A Mods Graphic Novel, 2016.
Kim Ostrow and Tim Jessell, Harrison Ford: A Little Golden Book Biography, 2025.

Movies:

Music:
Beatles, 1967-1970, 1973, 2023.
Brigitte Calls Me Baby, Irreversible, 2026.
Cast, Yeah Yeah Yeah, 2026.
Chosen Gospel Singers, The Lifeboat, 1992.
Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, Jessi Colter, Tompall Glaser, Wanted! The Outlaws (1976-1996 20th Anniversary), 1996.
World Party, Egyptology, 1997.

Sunday, March 15, 2026

"He Refuses to 'Let Defeatism Have the Last Word'"

"Later, he said he wouldn't have found his way into philosophy and social theory if he hadn't experienced confronting the reality of Nazi crimes as a young man. He recalled that 'you saw suddenly that it was a politically criminal system in which you had lived'." 

At The Guardian, Donna Ferguson and Philip Oltermann report the death of Jürgen Habermas.

Sunday, March 08, 2026

"Two Hundred and Fifty Years After the American Colonists Broke Free of Empire, It's Time for a British Declaration of Independence"

"Iran desperately needs a fresh start. The theocracy symbolised by its assassinated supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, has long ago had its day. Many, probably most, Iranians yearn passionately for an open, freer, more prosperous, pluralist, pro-western society. But this destructive, un-thought-through US-Israeli regression into the worst excesses of imperialist vandalism crushes hopes of peaceful change–the only kind that lasts–and hastens a collapse into warring camps. What may emerge is not a reborn, friendly Iran but a fractured country held hostage by a more brutal, paranoid, ever-threatening hardline rump regime embroiled in endless conflict with its people and the west."

Simon Tisdall at The Guardian writes that "Britain's enemy now is Donald Trump."

And Martin Gelin discusses the conclusion by the Varieties of Democracy Institute at Gothenburg University "that the US is hurtling towards autocracy at a faster rate than Hungary and Turkey."

"We Continue to Live in the Wake of Mid- to Late-60s Developments"

"It's easy to look back at the Johnson administration, with the benefit of hindsight, and see little possibility for the revitalization of the New Deal coalition. But it's important to remember just what a moment of political sea change the mid-1960s was. With the exit of the Dixiecrats, the Democratic Party was in the midst of a profound transformation wherein its base did substantively shift. That [Bayard] Rustin saw an opening for the civil rights and organized labor coalition to take a driving seat within the party was not that fanciful, yet it was treated that way by a curious number of people on the Left then and still on the Left today. It's worth asking why that was and is. His critics on the Left are fine pillorying Rustin for his comments on anti-war protest tactics. But where are the similar condemnations of the New Left for sitting out the fight for the Freedom Budget for All Americans, arguably the last off-ramp from an imminent neoliberalism?"

Damage Magazine runs Benjamin Y. Fong's introduction to the new book Rustin's Challenge.

Thursday, February 26, 2026

February 2026 Acquisitions

Books:
Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid's Tale, 1985.
David Avallone and Kewber Baal, Elvira in Horrorland, 2023.
Malcolm Croft. The Little Book of John Lennon, 2020.
Malcolm Croft. The Little Guide to the Beatles, 2019.

Music:
Shirley Caesar and Rev. James Cleveland, The King and Queen of Gospel Volume 1, 2002.
Claude Debussy, Greatest Hits, 2001.
English Beat, The Beat at the BBC, 2025.
Faces, Early Steps, 2025.
Terry Hall, The Collection, 1992.
Tina Turner, Simply the Best, 1991.

"They Sense That Behind Them Is the Same Old Democratic Party with the Same Old Elites and the Same Old Cultural Priorities"

"Working-class voters are acutely aware that the professional-dominated educated upper middle class who occupy positions of administrative and cultural power is overwhelmingly Democratic. For the working class, the professional upper middle class may not be the super-rich but they are elites just the same. These voters harbor deep resentment toward the cultural gatekeepers who they feel are telling them how to live their lives, even what to think and say, and incidentally are living a great deal more comfortably than they are."

Ruy Teixeira at The Liberal Patriot argues that Democratic candidates "need a strong dose of cultural populism" along with economic populism.