A Time to Listen

It’s been nearly a month since my last post.  Did you miss me?  I suppose I could say I was side-tracked by the continuing pandemic, the racial and political mayhem encircling us, or the calamitous outbreak of wildfires in our neighborhood here in the Bay Area of Northern California.  But none of that would be […]

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A Modest Proposal: Men, Please Step Aside

For eliminating the scourges of racism, misogyny, nationalism and materialism, and for making our institutions of governance, education, the economy, and religion fundamentally more beneficial to the public:  MEN, STEP DOWN! Thought Experiment Albert Einstein unraveled the theory of relativity as a brilliant thought experiment, not experimentally in a high-tech lab utilizing the scientific method.  […]

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John Lewis Said, Love Thine Enemies…..Even Donald Trump?

On July 17, the US lost Congressman John Lewis (D-GA), one of the real giants in the American Civil Rights Movement for 60 years.  As a young man, Lewis stood fiercely at the fulcrum of the strife between those demanding equal rights for all Americans and those who fought tooth and nail to preserve a […]

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How Could We Not Have Known? White Baby Boomers and Race

There is simply no excuse for White Baby Boomers’ collective ignorance about race in America. We had all the information we needed to fully grasp the depths of structural racism in the US and its continuing and devastating impact upon people of color. The Long History of Racism in America Did anyone among us not […]

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The End of the Cold War–Seeing Gorbachev in His Bathrobe

 Cold War Perhaps the most significant feature of international relations that shaped how baby boomers viewed their place in the world was the Cold War between the US and the USSR. This conflict between nuclear armed behemoths was an existential threat and the principal organizing principle for most of the world’s countries and people from […]

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Murder Most Foul, by Bob Dylan

Perhaps no historical event had more influence on early baby boomers (those born, let’s say, between 1946 and 1955) than the tragic and brutal assassination of President John F. Kennedy in Dallas, Texas in November 1963.  And no doubt the most influential cultural icon for these same boomers than poet/folk-rock singer Bob Dylan.  His first […]

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