Grace

Add friend
Sign in to Goodreads to learn more about Grace.


Rejection
Grace is currently reading
by Tony Tulathimutte (Goodreads Author)
bookshelves: currently-reading
Rate this book
Clear rating

 
City of Miracles
Rate this book
Clear rating

progress: 
 
  (45%)
Dec 12, 2025 04:58PM

 
My Friends
Grace is currently reading
by Fredrik Backman (Goodreads Author)
bookshelves: currently-reading
Rate this book
Clear rating

progress: 
 
  (19%)
"Hi everyone um AH I’m already crying" Nov 23, 2025 06:24PM

 
See all 7 books that Grace is reading…
Loading...
Jason Hickel
“It wasn’t until nearly 400 years later [since capitalist privatizations at home in Britain, i.e. the Enclosures starting in 1500s] that life expectancies in Britain finally began to rise. […] It happened slightly later in the rest of Europe, while in the colonised world longevity didn’t begin to improve until the early 1900s [decolonization]. So if [capitalist economic] growth itself does not have an automatic relationship with life expectancy and human welfare, what could possibly explain this trend?

Historians today point out that it began with a startlingly simple intervention […]: [public] sanitation. In the middle of the 1800s, public health researchers had discovered that health outcomes could be improved by introducing simple sanitation measures, such as separating sewage from drinking water. All it required was a bit of public plumbing. But public plumbing requires public works, and public money. You have to appropriate private land for things like public water pumps and public baths. And you have to be able to dig on private property in order to connect tenements and factories to the system. This is where the problems began. For decades, progress towards the goal of public sanitation was opposed, not enabled, by the capitalist class. Libertarian-minded landowners refused to allow officials to use their property [note: the Enclosures required state violence to privatize land], and refused to pay the taxes required to get it done.

The resistance of these elites was broken only once commoners won the right to vote and workers organised into unions. Over the following decades these movements, which in Britain began with the Chartists and the Municipal Socialists, leveraged the state to intervene against the capitalist class. They fought for a new vision: that cities should be managed for the good of everyone, not just for the few. These movements delivered not only public sanitation systems but also, in the years that followed, public healthcare, vaccination coverage, public education, public housing, better wages and safer working conditions. According to research by the historian Simon Szreter, access to these public goods – which were, in a way, a new kind of commons – had a significant positive impact on human health, and spurred soaring life expectancy through the twentieth century.”
Jason Hickel, Less Is More: How Degrowth Will Save the World

99401 The Backlot Gay Book Forum — 1408 members — last activity Dec 19, 2025 04:49AM
The members of The Backlot (formerly AfterElton) love to chat about the latest in gay books. With the site changing, we're moving the discussion here. ...more
532033 The Sapphic Squad — 6790 members — last activity 6 hours, 28 min ago
A book group for reading sapphic books and connecting over our often-obscure favorites! At least for now we're predominantly-YA but adult recs are ALW ...more
year in books
Carina ...
115 books | 26 friends

The Con...
19,313 books | 2,829 friends

Emma
353 books | 34 friends

Celena
465 books | 20 friends

X
X
2,328 books | 133 friends

Elle Wa...
387 books | 24 friends

Addis
170 books | 102 friends

Iz
Iz
523 books | 12 friends

More friends…
The Color Purple by Alice Walker
Best Books Ever
76,081 books — 282,669 voters




Polls voted on by Grace

Lists liked by Grace