Skip to main content

Our new free speech hero: Mary Trump


Mary Trump Books Breaks Sales Records as She Speaks Out | PEOPLE.com

As POTUS has recently tweeted, he's a book-of-the-month club onto himself.

That, unlike so much that comes from his thumbs, is a truth.

But the guy who is the subject of this club keeps trying to use the power of his office to stop the presses, or stop up the mouths of anyone who challenges the narratives he wants to feed us.

One great piece of good news is that he has been regularly failing at that.

One of the good things about Mary Trump's new book, released to the world after a court fight, is precisely that it is outselling the last one. John Bolton is an unreconstructed imperialist.

I used to call him a neocon, but I repent of that. The neocons want the US engaged in nation building, which involves some blank checks for violence, but at least in principle they generally think that the nations CAN be built to a point where they could stand on their own and handle their own affairs, so the US can and presumably would under their sayso withdraw.

Bolton pretty clearly doesn't think so or doesn't care. He simply wants US hegemony on the planet, presumably forever.

Anyway, forget about him. The new free speech hero is here. Go get the book, campers!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Too_Much_and_Never_Enough

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

A Story About Coleridge

This is a quote from a memoir by Dorothy Wordsworth, reflecting on a trip she took with two famous poets, her brother, William Wordsworth, and their similarly gifted companion, Samuel Taylor Coleridge.   We sat upon a bench, placed for the sake of one of these views, whence we looked down upon the waterfall, and over the open country ... A lady and gentleman, more expeditious tourists than ourselves, came to the spot; they left us at the seat, and we found them again at another station above the Falls. Coleridge, who is always good-natured enough to enter into conversation with anybody whom he meets in his way, began to talk with the gentleman, who observed that it was a majestic waterfall. Coleridge was delighted with the accuracy of the epithet, particularly as he had been settling in his own mind the precise meaning of the words grand, majestic, sublime, etc., and had discussed the subject with William at some length the day before. “Yes, sir,” says Coleridge, “it is a maj...

Searle: The Chinese Room

John Searle has become the object of accusations of improper conduct. These accusations even have some people in the world of academic philosophy saying that instructors in that world should try to avoid teaching Searle's views. That is an odd contention, and has given rise to heated exchanges in certain corners of the blogosphere.  At Leiter Reports, I encountered a comment from someone describing himself as "grad student drop out." GSDO said: " This is a side question (and not at all an attempt to answer the question BL posed): How important is John Searle's work? Are people still working on speech act theory or is that just another dead end in the history of 20th century philosophy? My impression is that his reputation is somewhat inflated from all of his speaking engagements and NYRoB reviews. The Chinese room argument is a classic, but is there much more to his work than that?" I took it upon myself to answer that on LR. But here I'll tak...

Recent Controversies Involving Nassim Taleb, Part I

I've written about Nassim Taleb on earlier occasions in this blog. I'll let you do the search yourself, dear reader, for the full background. The short answer to the question "who is Taleb?" is this: he is a 57 year old man born in Lebanon, educated in France, who has been both a hedge fund manager and a derivatives trader. He retired from active participation from the financial world sometime between 2004 and 2006, and has been a full-time writer and provocateur ever since. Taleb's writings for the general public began where one might expect -- in the field where he had made his money -- and he explained certain financial issues to a broad audiences in a very dramatic non-technical way. Since then, he has widened has fields of study, writing about just about everything, applying the intellectual tools he honed in that earlier work. As you might have gather from the above, I respect Taleb, though I have sometimes been critical of him when my own writing ab...