Read Senior Editor Susan J. Douglas's 8 reasons to make a tax-deductible donation to In These Times.
ZoomZoom InZoom OutPrintDiscuss
Supplementary > July 6, 2005

A Socialist in the Age of Triangulation

By Rick Perlstein

James Weinstein: The Man

Jimmy By Beth Maschinot
Creature Comforts
By Lee Aitken
Look, It's a Better World
By Joan Walsh
A Generous Teacher
By Sheryl Larson
The Man Who Came to Dinner By Jim McNeill
Hope and Politics By Pat Arnow
A Socialist in the Age of Triangulation By Rick Perlstein
Farewell Songs
By Teresa Prados Torreira
Jimmeth By Salim Muwakkil
A Worthy Soul By Saul Landau

I had my first glimmering that Jimmy Weinstein was special the first time I met him in the flesh. It was in the mid-’90s, in New York, a time before the fad for the Atkins Diets made what he was about to do seem unusual and even wondrous. He ordered a hamburger—I was used to people his age ordering salad with dressing on the side or “egg beaters” or dry toast or whatever—and he poured half a shaker of salt upon it. He did things his own way: a socialist in the Age of Triangulation.

I really knew Jimmy was special after I moved to Chicago. He had a book coming out, and In These Times asked me to review it. I said I wasn’t interested because I disagreed with it: He thought the Soviet experiment had some nobility in it, and I thought it was shit from start to finish. Something extraordinary happened after that: Jimmy Weinstein sought me out as a friend. This, it seemed, was the requirement: I was someone he knew he could argue with. Thinking about his life, that makes perfect sense. Setting up new staging grounds for arguments—Studies on the Left, Socialist Review, In These Times, the Modern Times bookstore in San Francisco, or even a dinner in a Caribbean restaurant where he spun out scenarios for an America without a military-industrial complex in three easy steps while I sat across the table from him and made my case for why that would make the economy collapse—was his life’s work, from the beginning to the end. I can’t think of a calling more noble.

Rick Perlstein is the author of Nixonland: The Politics and Culture of the American Beserk, 1965-1972, which will be published next year.

More information about Rick Perlstein
  • subscribe to print magazine

  • Reader Comments

    “He ordered a hamburger--I was used to people his age ordering salad with dressing on the side or “egg beaters” or dry toast or whatever--and he poured half a shaker of salt upon it.”

    I think it’s pretty clear what happened to poor Jimmy. But, I just hope he relished his hamburgers.  Who wants to live forever anyway.

    Posted by Lefty on Jul 12, 2005 at 1:11 PM
  • register a new account »Posting Security

    To participate in our forums, please register for a free account.
Join Here
Member Login

Forgot password?

Article Appeared in this Issue

Full contents
Past issues

Also by Rick Perlstein
"To people who say they are sick of the corporate dominated and celebrity fixated news media, I say, "Stop whining and subscribe to In These Times." --Barbara Ehrenreich
Popular Discussions