Society's Child
Quart opens with the story of her own pregnancy, which happened after she and her husband had for years been enjoying the modest professional freedoms of "doing what they want" and which came as a series of eye-opening financial shocks. She quickly realizes that they are in no position to absorb the sheer costs of having a child; before she and her husband find more secure and better-paying jobs, they had been members of what Quart terms "the Middle Precariat," highly educated people whose labor has become irregular and contingent, often entailing a good deal of unpaid "shadow work," and all only barely sufficient to keep up the facade of middle class respectability. "These people believed that their training or background would ensure that they would be properly, comfortably middle-class," she writes, "but it has not worked out that way."
In a series of in-depth and deeply personal interviews, Quart delves into the lives of some of these people - an adjunct professor who must use food stamps to feed herself and her daughter, despite working constantly, harried caregivers who work so much they barely see their own children, and half a dozen others caught in the endless cycle of "running just to stay in place."
'Morally irresponsible to ignore the occupation': Birthright dissident calls on Jews to rethink trip

Bethany Zaiman, on the day she left the Birthright trip, at the Tel Aviv stock exchange, June 28, 2018.
One of the Birthright-bolters, Bethany Zaiman, a doctoral student in anthropology, has given an interview to David Kattenburg at Green Planet Monitor and answered some questions re the action.
The action wasn't planned ahead of time, Zaiman implies. She joined the trip as a critic of Birthright hoping for answers. "I was very fortunate on the trip to meet a few other women who had similar reservations and questions."
The past couple of weeks have offered an unprecedented look into the way Harvard University evaluates applicants. The details came to light during a lawsuit alleging that the school of has discriminated against Asian-Americans hoping for a spot at the school - a claim Harvard vehemently denies. Though the suit has certainly pulled back the curtain on the Harvard admissions process, many details still remain under wraps. Harvard is hoping to keep it that way.
As part of the suit, the school filed a brief late last week arguing that certain documents produced as part of the case - including internal training materials and preliminary snapshots of the school's admitted class during specific periods of the application cycle - should remain under seal.
John Grisham: 'Day of reckoning' coming for student debt
The brief is part of a larger request to keep certain documents, like individual applicant files or correspondence with alumni, under seal so as not to violate the privacy of people communicating with or submitting their information to Harvard. "Harvard is deeply committed to protecting the extensive personal information applicants entrust to us in the admissions process," a Harvard spokesperson said in a statement regarding last week's brief.
Comment: What a joke. They're only concerned with protecting their own 'personal information', i.e. the evidence that their admissions process is highly politicized, and monetized. Years ago, Daniel Golden wrote a book about how super-rich families essentially buy admission for their children. That's how Jared Kushner got into Harvard, for example: The Story Behind Jared Kushner's Curious Acceptance into Harvard:
My book exposed a grubby secret of American higher education: that the rich buy their under-achieving children's way into elite universities with massive, tax-deductible donations. It reported that New Jersey real estate developer Charles Kushner had pledged $2.5 million to Harvard University in 1998, not long before his son Jared was admitted to the prestigious Ivy League school. At the time, Harvard accepted about one of every nine applicants. (Nowadays, it only takes one out of twenty.)
I also quoted administrators at Jared's high school, who described him as a less than stellar student and expressed dismay at Harvard's decision.
"There was no way anybody in the administrative office of the school thought he would on the merits get into Harvard," a former official at The Frisch School in Paramus, New Jersey, told me. "His GPA did not warrant it, his SAT scores did not warrant it. We thought for sure, there was no way this was going to happen. Then, lo and behold, Jared was accepted. It was a little bit disappointing because there were at the time other kids we thought should really get in on the merits, and they did not."
Comment: Harvard is a joke:
- Buy your indoctrination for the low, low price of $10k! Harvard now offering 'social justice' certificates, with no requirements
- Harvard to offer four-year degree In Feeling Oppressed
- Affirmative action is racist: DOJ investigating Harvard for discriminating against Asian-Americans
From their editorial:
"We represent a group of intellectuals and cultural figures central to Israeli society, several of whom are world renowned in their fields. We are patriotic Israeli citizens who love our country and who contribute tirelessly to Israeli science and culture, and to that of the world at large. We fully intend to stay here and continue to contribute, but we are horrified by the situation and fear deeply for our lives and those of our offspring, and for the lives of the 13 million Jews and Arabs who live here and who have no other homeland."The Palestinian government even picked up the story, posting the op-ed to the PLO's Facebook page along with this excerpt, a line that closes the article: "... if peace is not established in this part of the world very soon, an area that has become a timebomb of national and religious tensions, there will be no future and no life for us or the Palestinians."
Comment: Intellectuals in general have a tendency to arrive late to history. Israeli intellectuals should have spoken up more vigorously several decades ago - but hey, better late than never!
A Nissan drove onto the sidewalk near a pedestrian crossing and ran over several people, the police said. "As a result of the accident, a local 63-year-old man has died at the scene, while three other pedestrians were hospitalized with various degrees of injuries," they added.
The driver of the car was a local man in his early 20s who, "according to preliminary data, fell asleep behind the wheel, drove through the incoming traffic and crashed into the pedestrians."
Footage shows officers leaving an elevator in the Mandalay Bay Hotel one floor below the room from which Stephen Paddock gunned down 58 people. In the footage, released last week, the officers can be heard talking about a 131 incident, police code for a shooting.
Officer Cordell Hendrex is reportedly one of the first responders under review. The footage shows the veteran cop spending more than four minutes standing in a hallway, with his gun drawn, as Paddock fires rapidly from a window above.
The rise in the crime rate has led to calls for more to be done by the Mayor of London and the UK Government to tackle the issue and now a leading tourism expert has added her voice to the debate by highlighting the negative impact the increase in stabbings could have on tourism to the capital.
Speaking to Express.co.uk, Anna Hillingdon, from the University of Bournemouth said: "If you think about it, people use the rule of thumb when deciding where to go on holiday.
"Common sense means they attach higher probability to events that are recent, so if there are negative events happening in London such as a stabbing or a mobbing - and it's happening now - it is seen as risky.
Heather wants cochlear implants so she can talk to people and hear lions. Her mother, too, opts for the implants. But when she discovers the implant will not be as effective for her, she changes her mind, and, without consulting her daughter, decrees that neither of them will be undergoing the procedure.
After the film ended, our professor asked students for their thoughts. When called on, I said that parents should try to make their children's lives easier. If I remember my words correctly, I added: "They shouldn't hold their children back from something that will help them grow."
Comment: Universities, and particularly Canadian universities, are ground zero for ridiculous identity politics, and it seems they're only getting worse. What kind of "higher education" can be expected from an institution that willfully censors and blocks thoughts and discussion? The universities are now indoctrination centers that teach 'right-think' and dissuade actual thinking. Why anyone would pay the exorbitant tuition for this kind of programming is a complete mystery.
See also:
- The Strange Saga of Lindsay Shepherd: From Inquisition to Exoneration, But The Crime of Being White Remains
- New university course states that 'objectivity' is a 'white mythology'
- White Rutgers University professor goes on racist rant against white children on Facebook
- In the literally crazy world of identity politics, facts are oppressive
- Yale University being investigated by Department of Education, accused of 'toxic environment against men'
Comment: The postmodernist world of identity politics is literally crazy-making. How can anyone consider a survey of "experts'" arbitrary opinions to be of any value whatsoever? Yet the results from the survey, particularly that the United States is one of the ten most dangerous countries in the world for women, are being splashed across headlines all over the internet. When it's this easy to forward a false narrative, and such disdain is held for actual facts, what hope is there for someone who is actually capable of thinking?
See also:
- Jordan Peterson is showing us that identity politics is all about one thing: Coercion
- The Truth Perspective: Identity Politics on Steroids: How Zionism Outdoes Them All
- Zionism is the Right's 'Identity Politics'
- South Carolina backs totalitarian identity politics measures, passes legislation making it illegal to criticize Israel
- Conformity to identity politics or education: The student's dilemma
- Identity politics is harming the sciences
- How Jordan Peterson's stoic world view provides an antidote to nihilism, identity politics and the tribalism of cultural Marxism
- Steven Pinker on identity politics: 'An enemy of reason and Enlightenment values'

The internet entrepreneur Kim Dotcom in Auckland, New Zealand, in 2014. He has been fighting extradition to the United States since 2012.
Mr. Dotcom, an online renegade who along with three associates faces the charges relating to a defunct file-sharing website, Megaupload, plans to appeal the ruling.
His lawyer, Ira Rothken, said Mr. Dotcom would appeal to the Supreme Court, New Zealand's highest. He added that if the court agreed to hear the case, the process could take a year.
Comment: To call Kim Dotcom a controversial figure is an understatement. While he has been accused of profiting from copyright infringement, he has been a strong internet freedom activist and Julian Assange advocate. One wonders how much of the impending case against him in the US is simply an attempted means of shutting him up.
See also:
- Time for something better: Kim Dotcom invites Assange and Snowden to create replacement for 'deep state conspirators' Twitter, Facebook
- Kim Dotcom says Julian Assange's internet has been cut off at Ecuadorian embassy in London
- Kim Dotcom wins human rights tribunal case in New Zealand, declares US extradition bid 'over'
- Kim Dotcom proposes alternative platform as answer to Twitter's 'censorship of Seth Rich tweets'
- Kim Dotcom tweets warnings about 'invisible spy war' & deep state interference
- Kim Dotcom destroys Obama and Killary for bankrupting US of its civil liberties
- Kim Dotcom to Trump: "The DNC hack wasn't even a hack - I know who did it and why"
- Kim Dotcom sues US & NZ governments for billions of dollars in damages













Comment: Just a little questioning by foreign Jews in Israel and everyone loses their minds. Ideological possession, anyone?
See also: Israelis go hysterical over walkout from 'Birthright' tour - "Radicals!" "You will get raped!"