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THURSDAY 2 JULY

What a Sweet Pussy! [4,325]

"God, I Couldn't Resist Her!" [3,640]

Still Life: Vulva with Glass Dildo [1&2] [3,356]

Rough Sex [3,114]

Photo Gallery [07.01.09] [2,943]

Sex, Porn & Erotica [07.02.09] [1,771]

The 'Beauty' of Western Propaganda: 'We' Think It's the Truth [1,649]

Front Page [07.01.09] [1,187]


WEDNESDAY 1 JULY

Photo Gallery [06.30.09] [2,520]

Naked Sex: Six of the Best [12] [2,140]

CIA Caught with Its Hand in Iran's Cookie Jar [1,948]

"Swarming" to Produce Regime Change in Iran [1,792]

"We're Enjoying Sex More with the Help of a Vibrator" [1,638]

What Turns You on in the Opposite Sex? [1,637]

Front Page Photos [06.30.09] [1,599]

Sex, Porn & Erotica 07.01.09] [1,424]

Very Weird Sex: David Carradine's Death & "Autoerotic Asphyxiation" [1,336]


TUESDAY 30 JUNE

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"Who's for a Ménage à Trois?" [4,910]

Photo Gallery [06.29.09] [3,008]

57: Fantasy Five Explicit Videos [2,395]

Sex, Porn & Erotica 06.30.09] [1,907]

The Crucifixion of Michael Jackson [1,882]

Clip: Men Shaving Their Pubic Hair? [Most Read - Last 28 Days] [1,844]

Front Page [06.29.09] [1,426]


MONDAY 29 JUNE

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Photo Gallery [06.28.09] [3,107]

Better Sex for Women [2,602]

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Sex, Porn & Erotica [06.29.09] [1,293]


SUNDAY 28 JUNE

Photo Gallery [06.26.09] [3,517]

Natasha Gets Her Knickers Off [3,361]

Top Five Porn Videos [9] [3,158]

After Clubbing, She Came Back to My Place [3,062]

The Clip Joint [13] [2,808]

Top Five Sex Photos [9] [2,284]

Front Page [06.26.09] [1,819]

This Week's Near-the-Knuckle Photos [9] [1,650]

Top Five Erotic Photos [9] [1,394]


MOST READ [21-27 JUNE]

1. Teenage Provocation [11,422]

2. Woman Pleasures Woman [11,104]

3. Rear Entry [9,827]

4. Erotic Arousal [Can I Help You with That?] [9,585]

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11. Photo Gallery [06.21.09] [6,388]

12. Naked Sex: Six of the Best [11] [6,385]

13. Oral Sex: Go Down & Give Her Pleasure! [6,360]

14. Photo Gallery [06.22.09] [6,117]

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FRIDAY 26 JUNE

She Brings out the Lust in Me [2,695]

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Sex, Porn & Erotica [06.26.09] [1,960]

Mighty Fine Nudes: Natasha [Teenage Sensuality] [1,873]

Essential Porn Videos [7] [1,318]

Front Page [06.25.09] [1,244]

13: Top Five Fine Nudes [Blow-Up] [1,151]

The Alienated Working-Class Male

posted Wednesday, 26 December 2007

Many of these pickup-truck driving young men,

at least in my experience,

are increasingly depressed,

bored, angry, and frightened

They use their fair share of psychiatric drugs

as well as alcohol and dope

to take the edge off of their pain

Privileged prick plays at being blue-collar in his pick-up

The "growth jobs" in Ohio and throughout

most of America are cashiers,

janitors, clerks, servers, and security guards

Meanwhile, the "growth diversions" to the pain

and boredom of low-paying, meaningless work are

(in addition to alcohol and psychotropic drugs)

casinos, lotteries, and all-you-can-eat troughs

Bourgeois Democracy

The problem with today’s democracy, and with the dominant view of democracy in our society, is that it is far too limited.

The democracy we have been talking about, and which every mainstream politician and politics professor talks about, is political democracy. To make democracy truly relevant to the majority of working people what is needed is political democracy plus economic and social democracy.

The capitalist class can live with political democracy, with the election of parliaments and governments, because the decisive levers of power do not lie there.

They exist first in the boardrooms of industry and the banks and second in the permanent institutions of the state, above all the armed forces.

The former it owns and controls directly, the latter is bound to it by a thousand economic, social and ideological ties and by these means it can turn parliament into a talking shop and bend governments to its will – as we have seen so often with Labour and other reformist governments in Britain and round the world.

This is why Marxists call this form of democracy bourgeois demo­cracy – democracy that is based on and enshrines the rule of the bourgeoisie.

"Politics Is for the Middle Classes" [Original]

I have been a clinical psychologist in private practice for more than two decades in southwestern Ohio, a Republican stronghold in the state that broke Democrats' hearts in 2004.

Three years later, it appears that most of the "blue team" remembers Ohio only for voter fraud, but I remember how Democratic candidate John Kerry failed to emotionally connect with the blue-collar blues sufferers here -- especially the younger men.

My office is a mile from the Ohio River. Across the river to the south is Kentucky, closer than Brooklyn is from Manhattan, and a short drive west takes me to Indiana.

In this Ohio-Kentucky-Indiana area, union jobs that pay livable wages are vanishing, but the blue-collar group that's not disappearing is the one that Howard Dean got himself in trouble for taking seriously: guys with a pickup truck and a Confederate flag.

For these guys there is no shame in not voting. They don't take seriously what the Democrats and the Republicans say about the issues, assuming "they are all liars who will say anything to get elected."

Some older blue-collar men in my part of the world know that historically the Democrats, more than the Republicans, have thrown them an occasional bone.

But the younger generation knows that the farms their daddies once owned are now upscale subdivisions, and that the plants where their daddies once worked are now vacant because of, in part, Bill Clinton and the Democrats' North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) triumph.

Over the years, I have counseled many blue-collar men after they had been laid off from factory jobs and had begun to abuse alcohol, other drugs and/or their spouses.

Today, I increasingly see younger men who have never held a job with a living wage. I recently talked to two such men in their mid-twenties, both unemployed and on parole for substance-abuse related offenses.

Seeing no other options, they are intent on joining the military when their parole ends.

Having nothing to do, they often drive around aimlessly, sometimes listening to right-wing radio. Both of these young men were Bush supporters in 2004, though neither actually voted.

One of these young men routinely repeats, "Michael Moore is a rich, liberal opportunist."

But he just as routinely expresses a deep hatred for CEOs with multi-million dollar salaries.

He likes U.S. history, and when we discussed anarchists Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman's plot to kill Carnegie Steel Chairman Henry Frick after Frick had reduced steel workers' wages and attempted to break the union with scabs, the young man smiled with admiration.

He maintained his affection even after I told him that Goldman and Berkman were more politically left of Moore than Moore is left of Bush.

Upon leaning that Berkman botched the job and only wounded Frick and served 14 years in prison, the young man chuckled and said, "Sounds like some stupid crap that I would have gotten into."

Many of these pickup-truck driving young men, at least in my experience, are increasingly depressed, bored, angry, and frightened. They use their fair share of psychiatric drugs as well as alcohol and dope to take the edge off of their pain.

The "growth jobs" in Ohio and throughout most of America are cashiers, janitors, clerks, servers, and security guards.

Meanwhile, the "growth diversions" to the pain and boredom of low-paying, meaningless work are (in addition to alcohol and psychotropic drugs) casinos, lotteries, and all-you-can-eat troughs.

Despite distractions and diversions, insecurity and anxiety remain powerful, and many of these young men are vitalized by someone absent of apparent doubts -- someone blindly, passionately in love with America.

The subtext of exactly why a politician is in love with America doesn't appear to matter.

In the case of George W. Bush, it could well have been, "Where else but America can a spoiled brat, substance-abusing, business failure whose own mother expected nothing of him get elected president?"

Whatever Bush's subtext, he was able to project far more of that "in love with America" feeling than Kerry. Film clips of Kerry leading the Vietnam Veterans Against the War showed Kerry's words criticizing U.S. government policy.

The pickup-truck community is certainly OK with criticizing the U.S. government, but Kerry's pained eyes expressed unhappiness about America. While it may have been his most genuine personal moment, sadly, it did not play well.

"I love America, but I hate our government" is what they want to see, hear, and feel.

These pickup-truck driving young men are also bored and want to be entertained. Unfortunately for the blue team, Kerry in his presidential run was one more bore.

The first rule of entertainment is capturing attention, and the second rule is holding attention, often accomplished through surprise.

It is difficult to take your eyes off of Bush's arrogant swagger and smirk, and there's drama whenever he is asked an unscripted question -- there's always the possibility of an incredibly nonsensical response.

While most of these young men don't like Bill Clinton, they agree that he is entertaining.

How can you take your eyes off of an Elvis impersonator with a Jerry Springer-show sex life who was president of the United States?

They admit to me that, in terms of taking their minds off of their troubles, Clinton's antics were almost as good as Jeff Foxworthy and the "Blue Collar Comedy Tour."

These young men are also angry, and a politician must be able to make them feel good about their rage.

Bush made them feel good not so much by whom he attacked but by the fact that he seems to enjoy attacking.

Kerry blew his big opportunity to connect with their rage when he could not even get genuinely pissed off at the Swift-Boat hit men aimed at destroying him.

When it comes to voting for either the blue or red corporate teams, I routinely don't. However, I did vote for Kerry.

At the time, I justified my action by the calculation that a few less lives might be lost, both here and in Iraq, with the blue team's brand of corporate feudalism.

Now that Democrats can't blame people like me for their 2004 defeat, perhaps they will confront themselves.

That can go two ways: They can become more Machiavellian than the Republicans and select a demagogue who exploits blue-collar despair.

Or they can select someone who connects with this despair and who also actually takes democracy seriously -- but can that be done by any corporate team?

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