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Monday, January 25, 2010 Comments: 3

In When Skateboards Will Be Free: A Memoir, the author talks about the effect of the Socialist Workers Party on his family and himself.

Music: Kevin MacLeod
Photo: Karen Mainenti
  • Catherine   Thursday, January 28, 2010 - 8:22pm

    This is brilliant.

    Fascinating.

    I think a lot of people (even people one wouldn't expect) can relate to feeling like they are growing up as "outsiders" in this culture that seeks to accommodate so much diversity of beliefs and backgrounds.

    I found it intriguing that on the one hand he recognizes the similarity between the Socialist utopian vision and the Christian afterlife, that he also seemed to speak of leaving the party as if leaving a "cult" and yet still felt himself holding onto the vision or even the hope or aspiration that a socialist future might arise.
    Most compelling!!
    This really resonated for me.

    It is refreshing to be able to attend to such moments
    of self reflection and candor.

    Grazie Barbara!

  • Max Hockley   Monday, January 25, 2010 - 6:33pm

    I would be curious to see what he would say if he went to live in a socialist country for a few years. I wonder if it would live up to his expectations or not.

  • Melanie Saladino   Monday, January 25, 2010 - 2:33pm

    This is fascinating stuff.

    This part really struck a cord with me: "So, I think what that says or what that does for someone like my mom is, then,
    she doesn't really have to make too much of an effort to change her life in order
    to be able to buy her son a skateboard, which is really what she should have
    been focusing her time on.

    The skateboard becomes an excellent metaphor for so many times when we waste our time lamenting when we could invest our time in the achieving of a goal.

    www.surviveyourlayoff.com

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