"Still, to suggest that the violence was unnecessary or entirely unjustified would be to misunderstand the complexity of the story. Even calling the actions "riots" rather than "rebellions" or "uprisings" obscures the principled outrage that animated many acts of resistance that occurred in the aftermath of Gray's death."
"As an illustration of the excesses of our time, all three men point to the gross inflation of executive compensation, which was 20 times an average worker's pay in 1973 and is roughly 260 times an average worker's salary today [...] To add insult to injury, those earning their income from wages must, under current tax code, pay a higher percentage of their wages to the government than those who earn their income from dividends and capital gains."
"There is plenty of reason to debate the central premise of privatization—that business always does it better—but we don't have to go there to find the idea objectionable ...] Businesses are not made to function for the public good. They are made to function for the good of profit ...] Furthermore, by injecting moneymaking into the relationship between a citizen and the basic services of life—water, roads, electricity, and education—privatization distorts the social contract."
"In order to repair the damage that has been done, we must craft a new set of frameworks for our economy, for our schools, for our justice system, for public housing. We must resist the power and persuasion of market values. We must reinvest in communities. We must imagine the world that is not yet."
the last chapter of this book is just four pages, and brought me to tears with nearly every paragraph. it's a list and analysis of people resisting the oppression that is the focus of the rest of the book. and it is some of the most hopeful such analysis we've ever seen
it's too long to properly share on here, but the book is Nobody, by Marc Lamont Hill, if y'all want to read it yourselves