2. In his first memoirs Making It (1967) the most vivid character is Mrs. K, the name Podhoretz gives to high school teacher/mentor
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3. Mrs. K basically commandeered Podhoretz's life as a teen, taking a bright young student and pushing him to go to elite college.
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By changing the definition of racism, many 'academics' and progressives actively and vocally encourage it.
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On a more trivial note, Podhoretz was a bad friend. https://www.amazon.com/Ex-Friends-Falling-Ginsberg-Trilling-Lillian-ebook/dp/B000FC0O4U/ref=la_B001H6S4PO_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1490669377&sr=1-1 …
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No such thing.
End of conversation
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His self-serving account of how he fell out w/Norman Mailer,aftr M. bcame a big author,is full of the bitter jealousy of 2nd rater
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If young blacks had power then why did teachers (by Podhoretz's account) not want to mentor them?
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because "power" like "privilege" is an abstract that exists in numerous forms.
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Idea that blacks in 1940s America had power is, frankly, nuts.
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