Full Dissidence Quotes
Full Dissidence: Notes from an Uneven Playing Field
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Howard Bryant405 ratings, 4.44 average rating, 65 reviews
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Full Dissidence Quotes
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“I’m not looking to overthrow the American government,” he said. “The corporate state already has.”
― Full Dissidence: Notes from an Uneven Playing Field
― Full Dissidence: Notes from an Uneven Playing Field
“Finally, these wars have been largely paid for by borrowing, part of the reason the US went from budget surplus to deficits after 2001,” according to the Costs of War report. “Even if the US stopped spending on war at the end of this fiscal year, interest costs alone on borrowing to pay for the wars will continue to grow apace. . . . Future interest costs for overseas contingency operations spending alone are projected to add more than $1 trillion to the national debt by 2023. By 2056, a conservative estimate is that interest costs will be about $8 trillion unless the US changes the way it pays for the wars.”
― Full Dissidence: Notes from an Uneven Playing Field
― Full Dissidence: Notes from an Uneven Playing Field
“No president since World War II has contributed more to the militarization of the United States than President Bush,” wrote intelligence expert Melvin A. Goodman in 2013. “Under his leadership from 2001 to 2009, the United States fought two unsuccessful wars, experienced a financial crisis, initiated irreversible tax cuts that burden the US economy and compromised the rule of law at home and abroad. President Bush’s militarization of foreign and national security policy included the creation of an entrenched national security state.”
― Full Dissidence: Notes from an Uneven Playing Field
― Full Dissidence: Notes from an Uneven Playing Field
“The Costs of War Project at Brown University reports that from 9/11 through 2018, the United States waged war or maintained a military presence in seventy-six nations. That’s 39 percent of the world’s countries.”
― Full Dissidence: Notes from an Uneven Playing Field
― Full Dissidence: Notes from an Uneven Playing Field
“I suggested that instead of his abstinence disqualifying his say on the American situation, perhaps he had gone “full dissident” and recognized the accepted framework of sociopolitical involvement—the ride-alongs with cops, the listening to candidates owned by money, the insistence that deliberate, institutional racism is just a misunderstanding still unsorted—and found them useless. I further argued that if he saw an unredeemed, corrupt system as the problem, there was no reason for him to trust in it and even less reason to expect him to participate in it.”
― Full Dissidence: Notes from an Uneven Playing Field
― Full Dissidence: Notes from an Uneven Playing Field
“The historical arc of black triumph followed by harsh white response was not only instructive in understanding the big issues, such as Reconstruction or the half century of mobilized white response to Brown v. Board of Education, but it also felt very much a part of a menacing present marked by the throaty and effusive rejection of history itself.”
― Full Dissidence: Notes from an Uneven Playing Field
― Full Dissidence: Notes from an Uneven Playing Field
“To be black is to be a dissident.”
― Full Dissidence: Notes from an Uneven Playing Field
― Full Dissidence: Notes from an Uneven Playing Field
“The National Center for Women and Policing reported in 2014 that 10 percent of American families experience domestic violence, but for police officers’ families, the number is two to four times higher, one of the highest rates in the nation, though given the issue’s national coverage a first guess would be that the highest rate involves black football players.”
― Full Dissidence: Notes from an Uneven Playing Field
― Full Dissidence: Notes from an Uneven Playing Field
