RIP David Brooks

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (1380 of them)

those neocon intellectuals and their sterling record

brooklyn suicide cult (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 4 April 2020 19:20 (six years ago)

can’t fault their consistency

bam! Free bees! (bizarro gazzara), Saturday, 4 April 2020 19:24 (six years ago)

Friedmanesque conservatism all sounded so brilliant to Brooks during those dorm room bull sessions at U. of Chicago, and Wm. F. Buckley's eyes seemed to twinkle so charmingly on PBS.

A is for (Aimless), Saturday, 4 April 2020 19:35 (six years ago)

how you like them freedom fries

Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Saturday, 4 April 2020 21:53 (six years ago)

david brooks should be force fed copies of perlstein's books

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Saturday, 4 April 2020 22:00 (six years ago)

this fkn guy

Larry Elleison (rogermexico.), Friday, 17 April 2020 01:55 (six years ago)

Excellence is not an action, it’s a habit. Tenacity is doing what you were trained to do. It manifests in those whose training embraced hardship and taught students to deal with it. https://t.co/NBRJ8I8w8M

— David Brooks (@nytdavidbrooks) April 17, 2020

Larry Elleison (rogermexico.), Friday, 17 April 2020 01:57 (six years ago)

excited to read about the hardships he’s overcome

mookieproof, Friday, 17 April 2020 01:59 (six years ago)

he just HAD to release this on national h*rny day

methinks dababy doth bop shit too much (m bison), Friday, 17 April 2020 02:12 (six years ago)

That’s literally not what tenacity means

El Tomboto, Friday, 17 April 2020 02:13 (six years ago)

Excellence also neither an action or a habit. IT’S LIKE HE DOESN’T CARE ABOUT WORDS

El Tomboto, Friday, 17 April 2020 02:14 (six years ago)

22 million americans out of work and this fatuous oaf still has a steady paycheck

Larry Elleison (rogermexico.), Friday, 17 April 2020 02:19 (six years ago)

he’s paraphrasing a popular motivational dictum that’s almost always misattributed to aristotle

budo jeru, Friday, 17 April 2020 02:27 (six years ago)

but yeah fuck this guy and his soft, soft hands

budo jeru, Friday, 17 April 2020 02:28 (six years ago)

it is his mind that is smoothest

Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Friday, 17 April 2020 03:31 (six years ago)

What if this asshole lives to be like 108 or something

El Tomboto, Friday, 17 April 2020 04:06 (six years ago)

Surely someone on this board will outlive him and can light a votive for all the fallen ilxors on his passing

Evans on Hammond (evol j), Friday, 17 April 2020 05:00 (six years ago)

is david brooks… is david brooks the dad from calvin and hobbes pic.twitter.com/1roivrS5x0

— BDM (@bdmcclay) April 17, 2020

Glower, Disruption & Pies (kingfish), Friday, 17 April 2020 14:41 (six years ago)

I thought this said RIP Garth Brooks and I felt something for a moment

Joey Corona (Euler), Friday, 17 April 2020 14:55 (six years ago)

Panic that you might not ever hear Chris Gaines' sophomore record?

DJI, Friday, 17 April 2020 15:49 (six years ago)

the thunder rolled

Joey Corona (Euler), Friday, 17 April 2020 15:56 (six years ago)

could have had a friend in even lower places

mookieproof, Friday, 17 April 2020 15:57 (six years ago)

dang he really is dead

by marrying them https://t.co/MmFBQVGJ02

— Sarah Jones (@onesarahjones) April 17, 2020

dip to dup (rob), Friday, 17 April 2020 19:42 (six years ago)

I'm sure David Brooks' life is overflowing with hardships that he is busily being the lord and master of.

A is for (Aimless), Friday, 17 April 2020 20:10 (six years ago)

Alley oop

If David Brooks hates millennials so much then why did he marry one

— Ken Klippenstein (@kenklippenstein) April 17, 2020

Glower, Disruption & Pies (kingfish), Friday, 17 April 2020 22:19 (six years ago)

love this write-up from the good folks at https://marriedceleb.com/david-brooks

Blessed with Three Children
David and Sarah were bounded in a marital relationship for more than two decades, and they successfully share three children. Their oldest son serves in the Israel Defense Forces and is planning to go into law enforcement in the United States. While his older daughter is playing for Anaheim Ducks which is a professional ice hockey team based in Anaheim, California. The information regarding his children are still missing due to his privacy making policy hasn't leaked his personal information to any media.

Net Worth of David Brooks
David has an estimated net worth of $5 Million, however, it hasn't been officially confirmed yet, but, surely, his wealth is in a very good figure. Other personalities like Kate Norley and Stephanie Ruhle has the same amount of wealth. Being one of the greatest workers in the United States, he surely earns a good amount of remuneration.

let me be your friend on the other end! (Karl Malone), Friday, 17 April 2020 22:29 (six years ago)

it's true though, he surely does earn a good amount of remuneration

let me be your friend on the other end! (Karl Malone), Friday, 17 April 2020 22:30 (six years ago)

https://marriedceleb.com/david-brooks#previously-married-to-sarah

let me be your friend on the other end! (Karl Malone), Friday, 17 April 2020 22:34 (six years ago)

https://i.imgur.com/Aq5yDgG.png

let me be your friend on the other end! (Karl Malone), Friday, 17 April 2020 22:34 (six years ago)

prose is still better than a david brooks piece tbh

budo jeru, Friday, 17 April 2020 23:12 (six years ago)

If you lived your life on Twitter you would never know music existed.

— David Brooks (@nytdavidbrooks) April 18, 2020

jaymc, Saturday, 18 April 2020 02:30 (six years ago)

makes u think

mookieproof, Saturday, 18 April 2020 02:39 (six years ago)

Literally on the same fucking day more people have been talking about music than I can recently remember because if Fiona.

Evans on Hammond (evol j), Saturday, 18 April 2020 04:30 (six years ago)

one month passes...

wtaf someone tell me this is not real

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/04/opinion/united-states-reparations.html

Larry Elleison (rogermexico.), Friday, 5 June 2020 20:24 (six years ago)

nooooooooooooo whyyyyyyyyyyyy

did not read bc paywall but the fact that this exists is just uuuuuuugh I hate him so much

mom tossed in kimchee (quincie), Saturday, 6 June 2020 02:12 (six years ago)

omg please someone C&P the text here

longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Sunday, 7 June 2020 03:35 (six years ago)

Opinion: How to Do Reparations Right
It’s time to tackle racial disparities.
This moment is about police brutality, but it’s not only about police brutality. The word I keep hearing is “exhausted.”

People are exhausted by and fed up with the enduring wealth disparities between white and black, with the health disparities that leave black people more vulnerable to Covid-19, with the centuries-long disparities in violence and the threat of violence, with daily indignities of African-Americans and stains that linger on our nation decade after decade.

The killing of George Floyd happened in a context — and that context is racial disparity.

Racial disparity doesn’t make for gripping YouTube videos. It doesn’t spark mass protests because it’s not an event; it’s just the daily condition of our lives.

It’s just a condition that people in affluent Manhattan live in one universe and people a few miles away in the Bronx live in a different universe. It’s just a condition that many black families send their kids to struggling inner-city schools while white families move to the suburbs and put on black T-shirts every few years to protest racial injustice.

The response to this moment will be inadequate if it’s just police reforms. There has to be a greater effort to tackle the wider disparities.

Reparations and integration are the way to do that. Reparations would involve an official apology for centuries of slavery and discrimination, and spending money to reduce their effects.

There’s a wrong way to spend that money: trying to find the descendants of slaves and sending them a check. That would launch a politically ruinous argument over who qualifies for the money, and at the end of the day people might be left with a $1,000 check that would produce no lasting change.

Giving reparations money to neighborhoods is the way to go.

A lot of the segregation in this country is geographic. In Minneapolis, where Floyd was killed, early-20th-century whites-only housing covenants pushed blacks into smaller and smaller patches of the city. Highways were built through black neighborhoods, ripping their fabric and crippling their economic vitality.

Today, Minneapolis is as progressive as the day is long, but the city gradually gave up on aggressive desegregation. And so you have these long-suffering black neighborhoods. The homeownership rate for blacks in Minneapolis is one-third the white rate. The typical black family earns less than half as much as the typical white family.

To really change things, you have to lift up and integrate whole communities. That’s because it takes a whole community to raise a child, to support an adult, to have a bustling local economy and a vibrant civic life. The neighborhood is the unit of change.

Who has the expertise to lift up whole neighborhoods? It’s the people who live in the neighborhoods themselves. No outsider with a foundation grant or a government contract really knows what’s going on in any neighborhood or would be trusted to make change. The people who live in the neighborhoods know what to do. They just need the resources to do it.

A few weeks before the lockdown I was in and around South Los Angeles. In Watts I interviewed Keisha Daniels from Sisters of Watts, which helps kids and homeless people in a variety of ways. I interviewed Barak and Sara Bomani of Unearth and Empower Communities, which helps educate and nurture young people in nearby Compton.

Daniels and the Bomanis are experts in how to lift up their neighborhoods. If we got them money and support they would figure out what to do.

How can government focus money on formerly redlined neighborhoods and other communities?

National service programs would pay young people to work for these organizations. A National Endowment for Civic Architecture, modeled on, say, the National Endowment for the Arts, could support neighborhood groups around the country. A Social Innovation Fund would be a private/public partnership to fund such organizations. Moving to Opportunity grants and K-12 education savings accounts would help minorities to move to integrated schools. Collective impact structures could coordinate local action and use data to find what works.

In the progressive era, governments built libraries across the country, which remain vital centers of neighborhood life. We’re about to have a lot of empty retail space. Why can’t we build Opportunity Centers where all the groups moving children from cradle to career could work and collaborate?

It’s true this has sort of been tried before. The Great Society had a “Community Action” project that professed to redistribute power to neighborhoods. But it did it in the worst possible ways. A lot of what it did involved sending disruptive agitators to stir up conflict between local activists and local elected officials. The result was rancor and gridlock.

This tumultuous moment offers a chance to launch a new chapter in our history, and reparations are part of that launch. They offer a chance to build vibrant neighborhoods where diverse people want to live together, where the atmosphere is kids playing on the sidewalks and not a knee in the back of the neck.

Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Sunday, 7 June 2020 03:45 (six years ago)

pls no xp nooooooo

k*r*n koltrane (Simon H.), Sunday, 7 June 2020 03:45 (six years ago)

Damn, that is a fucking masterclass

longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Sunday, 7 June 2020 03:48 (six years ago)

Left idea's time has come, but there's a wrong way and a right way to do it
How should we do it? Through tepid liberal ideas.
These can be best accomplished through policies from center-right think tanks.

longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Sunday, 7 June 2020 03:50 (six years ago)

the man finally starts saying some things that make sense and it's like the prodigal son, who wasted his patrimony in riotous living and disregard of his responsibility to his place, and then he comes skulking around saying he's changed. it's gobsmacking enough to make it seem like it's something special instead of, "bruh, what took you so long? welcome to the light."

A is for (Aimless), Sunday, 7 June 2020 03:55 (six years ago)

But just the right young people, no outside agitators (looks like I've always pictured a textbook at local xtian academy):
The Great Society had a “Community Action” project that professed to redistribute power to neighborhoods. But it did it in the worst possible ways. A lot of what it did involved sending disruptive agitators to stir up conflict between local activists and local elected officials. The result was rancor and gridlock.

dow, Sunday, 7 June 2020 04:04 (six years ago)

This article in The Atlantic is...unexpected.

The Culture of Policing is Broken

The killings of the past few years and the Black Lives Matter movement, which has arisen in response to them, have given all Americans an education in the systematic mistreatment of black people by police forces across the country. Videos of police brutality are washing across everyone’s phones: videos of cops running over young women with police horses, pushing down old white men for no reason, rushing into crowds of peaceful demonstrators, and raining blows on young people and reporters. Videos that show the deadness in the eyes of an officer as he kicks a young woman in the face, a woman who is just sitting there peacefully on the street.

Where does this brutality come from? And what can we do about it?

Two theories are now dominating public debate. The first sees the problem on the individual level. There are a number of “bad apples” in every police force—authoritarian, racist bullies who take pleasure in pummeling defenseless black men. We need to take away union protections, increase sanctions, remove them from the force, and prosecute them when appropriate.

The second theory sees the problem on the systemic level. There’s something inherently oppressive about neighborhoods being ruled by men and women with guns, batons, and mace. In a systemically racist society, the use of force in that way is bound to be unjust. We need to “defund the police” and try softer, more communal models.

Both theories contain some truth. Some cops, like George Floyd’s killer, Derek Chauvin, rack up a lot of complaints and infractions. It’s also true that over the course of American history, law enforcement has constantly been used to enforce racial hierarchy. Police brutality reflects the legacy of racial lynchings, and some of the habits of mind that are still embedded in American society and in its police departments.

But the evidence suggests that the bulk of the problem is on a different level, neither individual or systemic. The problem lies in the organizational cultures of some police forces. In the forces with an us-versus-the-world siege mentality. In the ones with the we-strap-on-the-armor-and-fight culture, the ones who depersonalize the human beings out on the street. All cruelty begins with dehumanization—not seeing the face of the other, not seeing the whole humanity of the other. A cultural regime of dehumanization has been constructed in many police departments. In that fertile ground, racial biases can spread and become entrenched. But the regime can be deconstructed.

but also fuck you (unperson), Tuesday, 16 June 2020 22:40 (six years ago)

Must be so white male nice to feel perfectly comfortable expounding on any and all topics as if you possess expertise or have some special insight that the world must hear about.

mom tossed in kimchee (quincie), Tuesday, 16 June 2020 22:47 (six years ago)

It's his job to comment on everything. And to that job he brings a stunning lack of humility and a consistently purblind insight.

A is for (Aimless), Tuesday, 16 June 2020 22:51 (six years ago)

RIP

crystal-brained yogahead (map), Tuesday, 16 June 2020 22:55 (six years ago)

there's a catch right? Some shitty neoliberal reform program about 20 paragraphs down I'm guessing.

longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Tuesday, 16 June 2020 22:59 (six years ago)

'culture' is one of his hobbyhorses iric

j., Tuesday, 16 June 2020 23:01 (six years ago)

guys you all had it wrong - the problem with the police is neither individual or systemic

Li'l Brexit (Tracer Hand), Tuesday, 16 June 2020 23:01 (six years ago)

in this piece for the atlantic, i will explain how 'organizational' is different than 'systemic'

Li'l Brexit (Tracer Hand), Tuesday, 16 June 2020 23:02 (six years ago)


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.