This and that for your Sunday reading.
- David Sirota
interviews Thomas Frank about the U.S. Democrats' obsession with educational achievement as a cure-all - and their consequent loss of touch with the large numbers of citizens suffering from economic policies which left them behind:
Sirota: What do you think that the Democrats didn't
do right in the election, and even more importantly, what are they not
doing right right now?
Frank: Look, you can talk
about the tactical blunders and the things that brought them down: email
scandal, or the premium increase in Obamacare, and all that stuff
matters. The way I look at it is that this is a long-term problem. This
is a culmination of a very long-term problem with the Democrats very
gradually, but definitely, abandoning the interests of working-class
voters, identifying themselves instead with a more affluent group, with
the affluent white-collar professionals.
It starts in the 1970s
with the Democrats removing organized labor from its structural position
in the Democratic party, and then it goes up through Bill Clinton
getting NAFTA done, the free trade deals that the Democrats have ... By
the way, in my opinion, free trade or the trade agreements, I should
say, was probably the issue that if there was one issue that really did
Hillary in, I think that's what it was: the trade deals under the
Clinton administration, Obama sort of dropping the ball on labor's
various issues, doing these incredible favors for Wall Street while he
blew off the concerns of union.
The ultimate evidence is what's
happening with inequality. It gets worse and worse and worse every year.
It's very easy to show how the Democrats have forgotten about organized
labor, but what is really striking is the passion that they show for
the knowledge industries, which includes Wall Street, Silicon Valley,
big pharma, that sort of thing.
- Carole Cadwalladr
interviews Al Gore about the connection between worsening climate change and big-money oil-sector propaganda. And Patrick Radden Keefe
discusses the lack of consequences for financial elites even when caught in corrupt activities.
- Norman Farrell
examines
how B.C. policy under Christy Clark's Libs was designed solely to enrich her
corporate benefactors - to the point where the natural gas industry was
paid hundreds of millions of public dollars to extract resources for its
own profit. But Martyn Brown
points out how a Lib-friendly media is trying to saddle John Horgan with the blame both for Clark's failings, and
economic realities far beyond provincial control.
- Upstream's
submission on a national strategy to fight poverty emphasizes the importance of prevention - both in addressing poverty and its health consequences.
- Finally, Noah Smith
discusses how the payday lending industry serves only to make matters worse for the people already facing the most precarious financial circumstances. And Faiza Shaheen
notes that in food as in financial services, sustainable options are becoming increasingly unavailable to residents of poorer neighbourhoods while unhealthy ones are proliferating.