Thoughts on production, alienation, and ideology

Month: April 2021 (Page 1 of 2)

Political Argument and Wealth: Fallacy or Not?

political argument wealth

People often talk about money or class standing in a political argument. But I’m not referring in this post to liberal elitism. Nor am I talking about the even more brazen, ‘I have more money than you, therefore I’m better’ kind of thing.

Rather, I want to focus on more subtle ideas. And ones found primarily on the political left. Leftists will appeal to money or class status when discrediting certain kinds of views or people.

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Work Won’t Love You Back

Many readers know I like to set a common theme for the year. For this year’s theme, I chose value and the corporate workplace, a topic I’ve also written about in prior years. So far, I’ve hit this theme in a number of ways. But one way I might summarize it all? Work won’t love you back.

Imagine my surprise, then, when I found out labor journalist Sarah Jaffe recently wrote a book called Work Won’t Love You Back.

Let’s take a look at Jaffe’s book.

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COVID-19 Immunity Tomorrow

I’ve written posts about both my first and second shots of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine. I’ll follow up on that a bit. Tomorrow’s the big day: two weeks since my second shot!

I’m excited to finally be at what feels like the ‘end’ of at least a major phase in the pandemic. I have a long list of things I’d like to do. But, first, I’m going to visit my parents tomorrow!

How about you?

What’s the Worst Political Issue for Each Party?

Political parties in the U.S. are huge. They put together large coalitions with enormous platforms. As a result, they take on many popular issues and a few unpopular ones. Given these facts, we might think each party has a worst political issue. You know, something that drags them down and prevents them from building larger coalitions.

That’s what I’ll look at in this post. What’s the worst political issue for each party? I think the question has an answer, and I’ll defend one for both Republicans and Democrats.

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2021 Baseball and the Pandemic

In past seasons – 2019 and the rather odd 2020 season – I’ve always looked forward to watching baseball. But the 2021 season is already underway, and so far I haven’t paid much attention to it. I ignored almost all of spring training.

Oh, I’ve thought about driving to Cedar Rapids to watch Minor League baseball. I even mentioned it in my post on getting my second COVID-19 shot. So, baseball never totally left my mind. But it’s different this season. I went from looking at box scores and stats every day in 2020 (2019, 2018, 2017, and so on) to maybe checking them once or twice a week in 2021.

Why? I don’t know. Despite writing a post on 2020 baseball silliness, I’m not angry with Major League Baseball for choosing to play last year. Given that people play baseball outdoors in a fairly light contact environment, I thought the decision made sense. I’m not angry with MLB for opening stadiums to fans in 2021, thought I thought the Texas Rangers went overboard.

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