Imaginary integratipn

ish mailian ishmailian at gmail.com
Tue Mar 1 14:58:40 CST 2016


Grover is an intellectual of sorts. The intellectuals must form an
alliance with the poor and ordinary, with the working men and women,
with castaways and renegades, and outlaws and the lot and this
coalition will be difficult to forge and difficult to wield, but it
must be done if the challenge to the establishment is to make even a
dent, but Grover is an inept leader, one who, though smarter than the
others, is not, as Tim says, smart enough to see the disadvantages of
smarts, and, as is P's theme, of the application of smart systems,
math etc. to social transformation, to matters of the heart.

On Mon, Feb 29, 2016 at 6:27 AM, Mark Kohut <mark.kohut at gmail.com> wrote:
> The young ones imagine the secret integration, of course. Innocence seeing the natural moral order, the future as it should be.
> The Americans working to register voters those years with adults who feared w knowledge it might cost them jobs, pain, poverty, and worse, were moved most by the feeling, " it was for their children", Their futures, and the future.
> This story, written while those civil rights struggles had played out on TV and everywhere for years, published the year of The Civil Rights Act is
>
> So hopeful for the TRP of after V. Discuss.
>
> Sent from my iPhone-
> Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?listpynchon-l
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Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?list=pynchon-l



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