God of the Desert Books

God of the Desert Books

Share this post

God of the Desert Books
God of the Desert Books
21 Substack Posts Since Thursday You Might Find Enlightening
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
User's avatar
Discover more from God of the Desert Books
We are the first-ever Psychedelic Zionist book publisher. We offer nonfiction, novels, and poetry. Our Substack features cultural essays, political polemics, satire, podcasts and other assorted experiments from a diverse group of writers.
Already have an account? Sign in

21 Substack Posts Since Thursday You Might Find Enlightening

Here's a round-up of pieces you should check out this weekend.

David Swindle 🟦's avatar
David Swindle 🟦
Jun 03, 2023
3

Share this post

God of the Desert Books
God of the Desert Books
21 Substack Posts Since Thursday You Might Find Enlightening
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
1
Share
An image-generated sun painting! Why does he have a mustache?

Alright, so since this was getting pretty long and I only got as far back as Thursday I thought I’d just go ahead and cut it down to today and the last two days. There’s more than enough here for your amusement and illuminating.

Do you all like these little collections I’ve been putting together of Substack articles which I found intriguing over the last few days? Do you have any favorite writers I’m not reading who I should try? Your feedback is always appreciated.

As previously, I’m only linking free posts.

Thursday

Sore erudite insights from

Tana Ganeva
, as usual:

Substance
Scientology is awful. Rape is awful. 30 years to life for rape is not the answer.
Danny Masterson, the former actor and star of That 70s Show, has been found guilty of rape in two incidents from the early aughts. Masterson pleaded not guilty to three counts of felony rape after accusations by three women, including a former girlfriend. He was found guilty of the first two, while the third ended in mistrial. Doubts about all three cas…
Read more
2 years ago · 23 likes · 7 comments · Tana Ganeva
Bet On It
Competing with Jordan Peterson?
A Bet On It reader sent me this email after the Chicago meet-up. Reprinted with his permission. Your reactions…
Read more
2 years ago · 45 likes · 39 comments · Bryan Caplan
The UnPopulist
The Paranoid Style in American Entertainment
Wikipedia. Creative Commons. Benutzer: Verwüstung Recently, I was watching a rather grippingly made TV thriller when it started to become clear that the…
Read more
2 years ago · 21 likes · 12 comments · Robert Tracinski

Robert Tracinski
is just great. Be sure and read as much of his stuff as you can.

Nearly 60 years ago, the historian Richard Hofstadter wrote about “The Paranoid Style in American Politics,” looking at examples from the Illuminati scare to the John Birch Society. Conspiracism is a tendency that has always been with us. But Hofstadter observed that there are “situations in which they [conspiracy theories] can more readily be built into mass movements or political parties.” We are evidently living in such a time. Years after the far-right, conspiratorial John Birchers went into remission, their successors are back with a vengeance.

…

In politics, the simplified narrative of a conspiracy is used to escape the messy and inconvenient fact that other people actually disagree with you and that you have to convince them. Every faction in politics wants to believe that “the people” are naturally on their side. So, if the people don’t actually vote your way, it’s tempting to conclude that this is only because of the machination of a malevolent cabal.

So What?
Why are so many Republicans running for president?
At first glance, the 2024 Republican presidential nomination is not much of a race. Donald Trump is lapping the field, with an average lead of over 30 points…
Read more
2 years ago · 46 likes · 11 comments · Chris Cillizza

But, the 2016 race was FAR more wide open than the 2024 race looks to be. So, what gives? Why are so many people running in a race that looks like a foregone conclusion?

Ask a campaign that question and they will give you some milquetoast — or is it MILK TOAST — answer about how they see a clear path to victory with their candidate’s winning message and personality.

That’s not the truth, however. The truth is that there is an unspoken belief that Trump might not make it to the finish line in the race.

And that belief falls into two categories: Legal and health.

Yeah, this is basically what I’ve been thinking too regarding why Republicans are running against Trump when the odds are seemingly so bad for all of them.

Codebook by Kristen Soltis Anderson
In defense of the term "Millennial"
Reader note: this weekend, I’ll have Michael Dimock, president of the Pew Research Center, on my SiriusXM Show (“The Trendline with Kristen Soltis Anderson” is on P.O.TU.S., Channel 124, starting 10 am Saturday) to discuss Pew’s new approach to generational analysis. We’ll have a spirited debate! Please tune in…
Read more
2 years ago · 9 likes · 4 comments · Kristen Soltis Anderson

As I’ve said before: you can take “Xennial” when you pry it from my cold dead hands.

Proof
Proof of Collusion, Chapter 2: Trump and the Agalarovs
Read more
2 years ago · 65 likes · 5 comments · Seth Abramson

Fascinating:

The Manosphere and Beyond
The Demonic Charisma of Andrew Tate
‘I look up, admiringly, at Trump Tower, tall, proudly gleaming in the late afternoon sunlight.’ - Patrick Bateman, American Psycho…
Read more
2 years ago · 3 likes · James Bloodworth

Friday

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
The Women Who Support Trump, DeSantis' Insanity Just Got Worse, Fewer Kids Going to College, The Right Boycotting Chick-fil-A, a Cop’s First 45 Words Tell You If You're in Danger, Johnny Mathis Sings
Women who support Trump cite party, economy over sexual misconduct (The Washington Post) SUMMARY: When a New York jury found former president Donald Trump liable for sexual abuse earlier this month, it was the first time he had been held accountable for behavior that more than a dozen women have alleged over m…
Read more
2 years ago · 237 likes · 65 comments · Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
And the Quest for Pop Culture
Spider-Man in the Multiverse of Animated Magic
Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse was a pure delight that came out of nowhere in 2018. I initially mistook it for skippable. (It was not skippable for Spider-Man fans.) However, the multiverse is a concept that quickly wears out its welcome and eventually requires cosmic housecleaning, so I was skeptical they could pull off a second one…
Read more
2 years ago · Daniel Sherrier

I would like to see this one. I guess I will once it comes to streaming.

War and More
Erdogan Ties Up Presidency in Türkiye
On May 29, Recep Tayyip Erdogan won re-election as Türkiye president. Erdogan secured another five-year term. What’s it all mean for the U.S.? What’s the bottom line? Expectations that the election would signal major shifts in foreign policy were overblown. Türkiye will remain a critical bi-lateral partner for the U.S. and an important and influential…
Read more
2 years ago · 2 likes · James Jay Carafano

James Jay Carafano
remains one of my favorite foreign policy thinkers.

Cool! A double hit of

Sherman Alexie
:

Sherman Alexie
A Window in Spokane, Washington
Read more
2 years ago · 157 likes · 115 comments · Sherman Alexie
Persuasion
The ‘I’ in BIPOC
During my lifetime, there have been three phases when Native Americans and Native American culture suddenly became extraordinarily popular. The first was in the early 1970s with the rise of the American Indian Movement (AIM), a radical Indian-led political group that fought for Native American civil right…
Read more
2 years ago · 125 likes · 31 comments · Sherman Alexie
The Microdose
California psychedelics legalization bill advances, Kentucky to spend $42 million on ibogaine research; DC’s psychedelics lobbyists; Is informed consent possible?
Happy Friday, and welcome back to The Microdose, an independent journalism newsletter brought to you by the U.C. Berkeley Center for the Science of Psychedelics. The State of Psychedelics Last week, California senators narrowly passed Senate Bill 58…
Read more
2 years ago · 13 likes · jane c. hu
So What?
The 39 most outlandish lines from Donald Trump's interview with Sean Hannity
While in Iowa on Thursday, Donald Trump sat for an interview with Fox News Sean Hannity. I went through the transcript of their back and forth and pulled out the lines you need to see. They’re below. “It was a little nasty out, but it's Iowa. It's a beautiful place. When it rains, it's beautiful…
Read more
2 years ago · 35 likes · 13 comments · Chris Cillizza
Horse of a Different Colour
CUNY Law School commencement failed its Jewish students
Before a backdrop reading “Law in the Service of Human Needs”, Fatima Mohammed took the stage on May 12, 2023 to deliver her address as the elected commencement speaker for the CUNY School of Public Law’s class of 2023. She began like every commencement address everywhere; thanking professors and parents for their suppor…
Read more
2 years ago · 1 like · 1 comment · Sadie-Rae Werner

The always thoughtful

Sadie-Rae Werner
writes on a sad story which I’ve monitored and written on twice this past week.

For as much as Mohammed and Kiswani’s addresses ignite my fire to correct misinformation and disinformation about Jews and Israel in order to stop the spread of the Antisemitic virus, the more times I rewatched and thought about their speeches after they were brought to my attention by a friend, the more they filled me with an intense sadness. 

Be sure and subscribe to Sadie-Rae.

The Honest Broker
How I Disintermediated My Writing Career
It’s a clumsy word, something a slick young MBA must have concocted after the second scotch neat on an expense account. Just saying it forces my mouth into all sorts of painful contortions—like the time I bit into a Tianjin hot pepper at Chef Chu’s and had to sprint to the men’s room to douse the fire…
Read more
2 years ago · 368 likes · 77 comments · Ted Gioia
So What?
Friday mailbag!
Sorry for the lateness of the mailbag — I did a panel on the future of journalism at Georgetown today! Cool stuff! Let’s get to it.So What? is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber…
Read more
2 years ago · 13 likes · 4 comments · Chris Cillizza

Some interesting insights on the 2024 presidential race.

Saturday

Persuasion
Why Erdoğan Won
Listen now (46 min) | Nora Fisher Onar is an associate professor of international studies at the University of San Francisco and author of the forthcoming book Contesting Pluralism(s): Islam, Liberalism and Nationalism in Turkey. In this week’s conversation, Yascha Mounk and Nora Fisher Onar discuss how President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan prevailed despite economic turmoil and a b…
Listen now
2 years ago · 9 likes · 2 comments · Yascha Mounk

I deeply despise Erdogan and regard him as one of the world’s most influential antisemites.

MILLER’S BOOK REVIEW 📚
Culture Is What We Make It—All of Us
Few authors span the globe the way Harvard Professor Martin Puchner does. The lead editor on the ambitious and bestselling Norton Anthology of World Literature, he also teaches a popular Massive Open Online Course for HarvardX, Masterpieces in World Literature…
Read more
2 years ago · 6 likes · 3 comments · Joel J Miller
Michael Mohr's Sincere American Writing
My Father Passed
Well, after just shy of two years battling Stage 4 Melanoma, my father, 77, finally passed. He died peacefully yesterday, Friday, June 2nd, 2023 at precisely 4pm. He was a beloved husband and father and he left behind me, my mother, my sister and brother-in-law and their kids. He will be forever missed…
Read more
2 years ago · 23 likes · 20 comments · Michael Mohr
Virginia's Newsletter
Traces of Textiles in Florence
The textile trade, including the banking institutions that it fostered, made Florence rich. The production, finishing, and sale of cloth funded the a…
Read more
2 years ago · 8 likes · 7 comments · Virginia Postrel

Virginia Postrel
is just full of intriguing facts and insightful insights:

Having written about Florentine sumptuary laws, I was also amused to see the mini-tunics, or pannos curtos (“short cloths”), that revealed men’s legs above the middle of the thigh when standing. Under a law passed in 1373, such sexy styles were prohibited unless the wearer paid a fine/fee of 10 florins. They were still in evidence decades later. Aside from showing off men’s muscled legs, they economized on expensive cloth, surely saving more than the value of the fine.

Gorgeous photos in the piece too.

Virginia also has a moving note at the end about her father’s recent death. Do be sure to subscribe to her if you haven’t already - she’s a writer I’ve appreciated for some time and fondly recall meeting at a conference a few years ago.


Share

Leave a comment

Start writing today. Use the button below to create your Substack and connect your publication with God of the Desert Books

Start a Substack

Robert Tracinski's avatar
Facing Your Demons's avatar
Fred Tribuzzo's avatar
3 Likes∙
1 Restack
3

Share this post

God of the Desert Books
God of the Desert Books
21 Substack Posts Since Thursday You Might Find Enlightening
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
1
Share

Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Why Far Right Men Love Laura Loomer
It is so simple and the entire conservative media project collapses when we acknowledge this fundamental reality.
May 12 • 
David Swindle 🟦
18

Share this post

God of the Desert Books
God of the Desert Books
Why Far Right Men Love Laura Loomer
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
13
Russia Is a Suicidal Slave State with a Terrible Culture
Putin is only a symptom. The moral values of the nation are the disease.
Mar 16, 2024 • 
David Swindle 🟦
36

Share this post

God of the Desert Books
God of the Desert Books
Russia Is a Suicidal Slave State with a Terrible Culture
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
7
The Real Reason J.K. Rowling Needs to Be Arrested Immediately
The bestselling author committed serious crimes to fuel her massive success.
Apr 4, 2024 • 
David Swindle 🟦
24

Share this post

God of the Desert Books
God of the Desert Books
The Real Reason J.K. Rowling Needs to Be Arrested Immediately
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
13

Ready for more?

© 2025 David Swindle
Privacy ∙ Terms ∙ Collection notice
Start writingGet the app
Substack is the home for great culture

Share

Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More

Create your profile

User's avatar

Only paid subscribers can comment on this post

Already a paid subscriber? Sign in

Check your email

For your security, we need to re-authenticate you.

Click the link we sent to , or click here to sign in.