About Me

My photo
Marc Sims Host Just A Few Questions Marc Sims was born, raised, and resides in the city of Chicago Illinois. https://open.spotify.com/show/3OvsD9A8ESUfKS20UMTHyV marcsimschicago@gmail.com

Wednesday, May 26, 2021

Chicago's Gun Violence

    

 

It would be great if Mayor Lori Lightfoot Blamed Chicago's gun violence on capitalism and racism. In the African American neighborhoods I partially blame gun violence on the legacy of slavery and the benefits of the Civil Rights Movement.  

Fewer police, more resources for education, training, WPA type jobs, and teaching a few Chicago residents how to stay calm are just a few ways Mayor Lori Lightfoot can reduce gun violence.

 
Marc Sims 
Chicago
 




Influencing Public Policy: 400 Plus Podcast

Marc Sims talks with public intellectual Salim Muwakkil about influencing public policy.

https://anchor.fm/marc-sims8/episodes/Influencing-Public-Policy-Salim-Muwakkil-e116jdj


WBEZ: Class segregation among blacks is higher than among both whites and Latinos. So when you measure, as you mentioned, the evenness of the classes within the predominantly black, Latino or white neighborhoods, you find that there is greater pull-away between poor blacks and upper income blacks than there is between poor whites and upper income whites and poor Latinos and upper income Latinos.

Mary Pattillo, the Harold Washington Professor of Sociology and African-American Studies at Northwestern University.



Washington Post columnist Eugene Robinson defines the four classes of black America




NPR: Eugene Robinson, the Pulitzer Prize-winning Washington Post columnist, in a new book about the increasing disconnect between America's African-American communities.

Thursday, May 20, 2021

Public Policy & Working Class Americans

 

 



Here is a question I posted on social media, and one response.

Does the brilliance of public intellectuals, college professors, and noted book authors influence public policy where it improves the lives of working class Americans?

Marc Sims 

 

Salim Muwakkil

Yes it does. But the influence is through a cultural seep that is necessarily incremental. 

The New Deal of FDR's America, which ushered in significant social changes essentially creating the white middle-class, was based on the arcane theories of British economist John Maynard Keynes; supply-side Reaganomics can be traced to economists Robert Mundell and Arthur Laffer; LBJ's Great Society is a Galbraithian (John Kenneth Galbraith) production with help from John Hicks, Franco Modigliani and even some left-leaning stuff from Jurgen Habermas. Dr. Kenneth Clark's 60s' theories and pathbreaking studies on how schools socialize racial inferiority still inform some school curricula --though not nearly enough.

In short, ideas nurtured in academia are absolutely essential to governmental policies. Of course, the decision on what studies to value remains a political one.

 

Marc Sims

Chicago

 

Influencing Public Policy: 400 Plus Podcast

Marc Sims talks with public intellectual Salim Muwakkil about influencing public policy.

https://anchor.fm/marc-sims8/episodes/Influencing-Public-Policy-Salim-Muwakkil-e116jdj


https://chicago.suntimes.com/crime/2021/5/17/22441064/15-year-old-girl-shot-washington-park