Link to an article by Jeffrey St. Clair:
The Panama Papers
Link to The Panama Papers
Bonus Links: “The Panama Papers Problem,” “Explaining the Panama Papers, or, Why Does a Dog Lick Himself?,” “Laundering Havens for War Budgets,” “The Corruption Revealed in the Panama Papers Opened the Door to Isis,” and “Iceland Names New Prime Minister in Wake of Panama Papers”
Kristine Mattis – The Cult of the Professional Class
Link to an article by Kristine Mattis:
Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Live Seeds
Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Live Seeds Mute CDSTUMM122 (1993)
Live Seeds, like most offerings from Nick Cave’s middle period, is an uneven affair. “Ship Song”, “Papa Won’t Leave You, Henry”, “From Her to Eternity” and “New Morning” are all fantastic, but elsewhere Cave and company lean far too heavily on his songwriting to do all the heavy lifting. In a way, that saps all the energy out of the songs. Maybe it’s a common trick artists use to regroup during a live set. But that doesn’t help the album at all.
In short, Live Seeds is an improvement over some of Cave’s previous few studio albums, but it pales in comparison to his earliest solo albums and the best material he produced about a decade later.
Johnny Cash – The Mystery of Life
Johnny Cash – The Mystery of Life Mercury 848 051-2 (1991)
By the early 1990s, it seemed like the world had given up on Johnny Cash. Well, at least his record labels had all given up on him. In an autobiography, he later claimed Mercury pressed only 500 copies of The Mystery of Life (Cash mistakenly called it The Meaning of Life), though it did scrape the bottom of the country charts. That’s a shame, because Cash was clearly interested in recording. His vocals sound clear and impassioned in a way that was totally lacking on most of his recordings from the late 1970s through just about all of the 1980s. If Water From the Wells of Home was supposed to be his comeback, then it says something that this album is a step up. It’s no winner. It’s still a rather middling affair. Producer “Cowboy” Jack Clement burdens this with heavy-handed production values that make all the instruments sound synthetic and artificial. But on top of Cash’s strong vocals, the band plays well enough (if you can look past the way they are recorded). Although the standard narrative is that Cash’s career was on the skids for decades before Rick Rubin revived it with American Recordings, this album is worth a look for fans to see that Cash was still in good form as a singer, but was always held back by everything else dumped into his records and a lack of promotion. That is to say Rick Rubin didn’t change much when he came along, he just recorded Cash without the other clutter and otherwise let Cash himself do basically exactly what he was doing here — particularly for Unchained — and actually promoted him. This one’s an interesting curio for those who’ve already heard Cash’s more acclaimed efforts and want to go back and fill-in some of the gaps to round out the picture.
A Conversation With Noam Chomsky on Organizing for a Next System
Link to an interview with Noam Chomsky:
“A Conversation With Noam Chomsky on Organizing for a Next System”
Jo Freeman – The Tyranny of Structurelessness
Link to the classic essay by Jo Freeman:
“The Tyranny of Structurelessness”
This essay leads rather directly to the more generalized sociology of Pierre Bourdieu.
Michael Hudson – The Inversion of Classical Economics
Link to an interview of Michael Hudson by Chris Hedges:
“The Inversion of Classical Economics”
Bonus link: “Traumatized Worker Syndrome”
Boaventura de Sousa Santos – Brazil: Democracy on the Edge of Chaos and the Dangers of Legal Disorder
Jacob Levich – Obey the Cookie Monster
Link to an article by Jacob Levich:

