Dear Joe:
The experiences Bob relates in "Schools are the root of classist
society" -- and your comments on them -- echo some of my own memories
of learning how things really work and who is served in the school
systems. In my case it was parochial schools. In the spring semester of
my fifth grade year – maybe late February, early March, 1957 – I moved
from one Catholic school in Portland, Maine to another parochial school
in Baltimore, Maryland. Both were run by the Sisters of Mercy.
Continue reading "One good teacher can make a big difference" »
My father and I didn't see eye to eye on most things, and in my
scholastic endeavors we really hit hard snags. After he retired from
the army he taught middle school in the Washington, DC area (Silver
Spring, Maryland) and my mother became a school secretary near our home
in Annandale, Virginia. They both loved school in their younger days,
regarded teachers as demigods, principals as awesome creatures of near
legend, almost too powerful and awful to be gazed directly upon. That
changed some when they actually got into the system. More than some,
actually. They were willing to concede that I may have had a scintilla,
a micron, just a glimmer of a reason for my hatred of school.
Continue reading "Schools are the root of classist society" »
Dear Joe:
Regarding Amazon's reprehensibility regarding labor unions, I can't
help but ask: Even though I admire your helping your pals in Belize,
why you did not choose to direct the book monies toward something
closer to home? Like, f'rinstance, the chronically messed up Katrina
survivors -- I mean the old and sick ones that cannot seem to find
jobs, the kind that send good ole white boys not like yourself into a
lather of fear and loathing.
Continue reading "Why Belize instead of Katrina victims?" »
Joe,
I'm reading through your posted columns, and had to pause to express my
appreciation. If you think small town Virginia is small-minded and
mean, try Birmingham, Alabama, where I grew up. Thanks for putting into
words what has been lurking in the back of my mind for decades now. I
like to recommend books, and I have a few you might enjoy.
Continue reading "Birmingham, Alabama: Small-minded and mean" »
Joe,
First of all I want to tell you that I think you are the best, most
informative and entertaining writer on the net at this time. (I know
this sounds like sucking up, but it is true.) The first article I read
by you was "The Covert Kingdom". Unfortunately, it was after the 2004
election and I could not forward it to anyone to try to change their
vote. Anyway, the article "Madmen and Sedatives: Inside the Iron Theater"
was just incredible. The first few paragraphs said what I have been
feeling with such clarity that I think you were in my mind and were
able to articulate it. My wife has told me that I am not much fun to
live with anymore because I am such a "gloomy Gus" of late. I sent her
the first five paragraphs and said "this is why I am the way I am". She
now understands.
Continue reading "Health care system is evidence of class war" »
Hello Joe,
I've just read "Inside the Iron Theater" and I think I will translate
it into German. It is a great way in which you deal with your inner
screaming self. The iron theater is everywhere, although I tend to
believe that in the US it is showing its most perfected face. But the
people addicted to commodity are about everywhere. (I am a German
living in Spain.) They are also in the third world and the most
oppressed parts of this planet. They were and are in the concentration
camps. In Auschwitz and Dachau they were called kalfactors. They traded
privileges for being a tool for the system. Sometimes they even did
good and helped others to survive. But evidently they chose the wrong
side. Well, some of them didn't exactly choose, did they?
Continue reading "Stockholm Syndrome and trusting government" »
Hello Joe,
I'm writing from Geneva, Switzerland and I want to say how much I
sympathize with your impressions of the disaster called life in
America. I've been living outside the states since the early 70's
because I just couldn't stand what I saw in Vietnam (I was with the
American Red Cross on a kind of "social worker" do-gooder for the
morale of "our troops" program).
Continue reading "Problems in Europe, but life is sweet" »
Dear readers:
Below is the latest email from my friend, Rambling Rick, who by day is
an expert on mortgaqes and finance. By night he rightly obsesses on the
meaning and ramifications of Peak Oil, later delivering his much needed
insights and big picture views to the rest of us by occasional email.
Thanks for the letter Rick. Whether you want it or not, you now hold
the JoeBageant.com School of Hard Knocks Peak Oil Studies Chair.
Payment is in beer, and later, after the oil crash, cow dung for your
cooking fire.
Continue reading "US competing with Thai slave girls" »
Joe,
I recently discovered your site and have enjoyed many of your essays.
Regarding education, have you read anything by John Taylor Gatto? He
was a teacher for 30 years in NYC, then quit, and began speaking and
writing about the problems of American public education. I am midway
through his book "The Underground History of American Education"
(available online).
Continue reading "We need an alternative education system" »
Joe,
I just read "Poor, White, and Pissed." I'm the guy you are trying to
reach. Went to Stanford, quit a software career to do good (in my own
unusual way), now live in Ridgeland, South Caroliina next door to
people who work at auto parts stores. And I've got some questions. You
want a living wage? Can't have that. Automation and globalization have
made it impossible, at least without a massive revolution of some kind.
So what kind of revolution should we have?
Continue reading "Free air and water, how about free food?" »