Base and Superstructure

Thoughts on production, alienation, and ideology

Page 37 of 113

Manny Bañuelos: Part 2

Almost 3 years ago, I wrote a post about a baseball prospect named Manny Bañuelos. The story of Bañuelos illustrates a lot about what happens with young baseball players. He started as a very promising young prospect. But then he went through various cycles of injuries, trades, and so on.

By the end of the story, Bañuelos was in his late 20s and no longer a major prospect. It illustrated one of the many ways a baseball career can go the wrong way.

But I’m pleased to note that the Bañuelos story has taken a more positive turn in the last 3 years. Since 2019, he seems to have rebuilt his pitching skills and prospects. He played in both Chinese and Mexican baseball leagues, and he even worked himself all the way back to another stint with the New York Yankees.

As I write these words, Bañuelos just recorded his first major league save with the Yankees. Congrats! And then, after I wrote these words, the Yankees traded him to the Pirates. Thus is the life of a baseball player.

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Edward Linsmier, The New York Times

4 Lessons From Local Activism

So, I’ve taken part in a ton of activist groups in Iowa City over the last 15 years. A couple of months ago, I wrote some reflections on the good and bad of Iowa City activism. I kept most of that rather local to Iowa City. In this post, I’d like to extend this to broader lessons.

With that in mind, here are 4 lessons from local activism!

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Housing Commission and Housing Ideas

Some of you who know me might know I spent the last three years serving on the Iowa City Housing and Community Development Commission (HCDC). And I’ve been the chair of HCDC since July 2021. As I finish up my 3-year term, I wanted to write a bit about all that and about housing in Iowa City (and elsewhere!).

The short version: HCDC does great work on community problems, but it’s not built for solutions to deep or structural problems.

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Happy Juneteenth!

Hi all – just posting briefly to wish readers a Happy Juneteenth!

For anyone not aware, the U.S. government just last year recognized Juneteenth as a federal holiday. It commemorates the ending of legal slavery in the U.S. While the official day is June 19 (i.e., yesterday), many workplaces take off the following Monday or preceding Friday when it falls on a weekend. In line with that, my workplace gave everyone the day off today.

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