Historians are now using the f-word to describe what’s happening in America. In this video, I explain why, why it matters, and what you can do.
KEY SOURCES & FURTHER READING
→ Robert Paxton, The Anatomy of Fascism (2004)
→ Robert Paxton, “The Five Stages of Fascism,” Journal of Modern History (1998)
→ Umberto Eco, “Ur-Fascism,” The New York Review of Books (1995)
→ Jason Stanley, How Fascism Works (2018)
→ Timothy Snyder, On Tyranny (2017)
ONE EASY THING YOU CAN DO TODAY
Cancel your ChatGPT subscription. GPT is owned by OpenAI, whose CEO Sam Altman is part of the same tech oligarchy that helped bring us here. Hit them where it hurts. → QuitGPT.org
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All content directed, written and (partially) edited by John Mauriello. John Mauriello has been working professionally as an industrial designer since 2010. He is a former adjunct professor at California College of the Arts.
Everyone’s been complaining about how ugly the modern world looks. They say corporations are greedy, designers are lazy, minimalism destroys beauty, convenience destroyed culture…you’ve heard all of it. They’re not totally wrong, but they’re all blaming the wrong things and they’re ignoring the people who quietly decide how almost everything around you is allowed to look.
A personal loss reverberates from revolution to betrayal. Those responsible for Maurice Bishop’s house arrest are implicated in his murder. The people of Grenada, and the wider Caribbean region, were ultimately betrayed by their leadership. #GrenadaRevolution#PoliticalBetrayal#MauriceBishop#CaribbeanHistory#SocialJustice Professor Gus John at the 2014 sold out African Odysseys screening/Q&A of the Grenada Revolution by Dr Bruce Paddington of University of West Indies. The film is about Maurice Bishop, the people of Grenada, their fight for equality and the subsequent 1983 US invasion. Panellists include Michael La Rose from New Beacon Books, and Dr Bruce Paddington. The African Odysseys monthly, educational, anti-racist film programme now in its 20th year was cancelled by the British Film Institute who refused to run a legally required Race Equality Impact Assessment, against expert advice from 25 academics, while rejecting an open letter to keep it from Professor Gus John and 18,000 people who signed the petition in support of African Odysseys https://www.change.org/p/save-17-years-of-black-film-history-at-british-film-institute/u/34332068 The profound impact of invasion and loss. Witnessing the passing of a father is a deeply personal experience. For some, this grief is compounded by external events. Following a father’s passing and during arrangements for his funeral, the shocking news of a massacre and subsequent invasion emerged. Bodies intended for funeral homes were instead collected by invading forces and buried, an ignominious end for a father who loved his country.