Stone and Kuznick's book targets people like us.
It is quite simply irresistible. Great stuff on "La Trahison des
Clercs". It is many ways evocative of Alexander Cockburn in his prime..
LProyect

---------------

So the bottom line is read the book. All the episodes are available here, 
but you have to subscripe to cable or some computer based equivalent, and so 
fuck you.

Okay back to the book, which is cheaper. But that just means more to read, 
when I am already back logged. Frankly, the video doesn't have enough 
substance. Although I did learn new things about Wallace one of which was 
his link to George Washington Carver. But FDR's realpolitik shines through 
for the black vote what there was of it, and the less than burning racist 
white rural poor vote. Maybe I am wrong, but I can just barely see the dim 
connection between the Dept of Agriculture's old program of homecooking on 
the cheap, with Carver and Wallace.

[Picture George and Henry with soup spoons and checked aprons.What to do 
with rope?

Today on the Busted American Chief  ... I can hear Eddie Murphy now.]

What I am currently interested in are the post-war battles to reduce or 
eliminate the communist and leftwing in European post-war governments.

La Trahison des Clercs? I certainly had to look that up. Betrayal of the 
intellectuals. Okay, plenty to go around right, left and liberal.

The one singular fact that just can't get around the left is Stalin.

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