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Time for change Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-02-08 06:23 PM
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My Ten Favorite Books I read in 2007
In choosing books for this list I considered the importance of the information contained in them, the quality of the evidence the authors use to make their case, and how easy they were for me to read and understand and enjoy. I feel that my understanding of today’s world was improved a great deal as a result of reading each of the books that I describe in this post. They are discussed here in alphabetical order.


The Bush Agenda – Invading the World One Economy at a Time

http://www.google.com/search%3Fhl%3Den%26q%3D%2522the%2Bbush%2Bagenda%2522%2Bjuhasz%26btnG%3DGoogle%2BSearch&sa=X&oi=print&ct=title">The Bush Agenda”, by Antonia Juhasz, gave me a better understanding of the motives behind the Iraq War, as well as other related aspects of the Bush agenda, than any book I’ve read.

In summary, the Iraq invasion provided a great opportunity for many of George Bush’s wealthy supporters to make millions, billions, or tens of billions of dollars from contracts with the U.S. government to assist in the war effort and the reconstruction of Iraq and through access to Iraqi oil and other resources. A highly related purpose is for the occupation of Iraq to provide a launching site to occupy much of the Middle East, in order to satisfy the Bush administration’s imperial ambitions and acquire access to literally trillions of dollars worth of oil and other resources. The evidence for all this is overwhelming and is summarized in substantial detail by Juhasz.

It begins with Dick Cheney’s secret Energy Task Force meetings, launched just 10 days after he took office, and attended by representatives of many of the corporations who most benefited economically from the Iraq invasion. Minutes of the meeting showed the Task Force recommending to “make energy a priority of our trade and foreign policy” and “support initiatives by Mid-East suppliers to open up areas of their energy sector to foreign investment”.

L. Paul Bremer III, Bush’s appointee as the administrator of Iraq, quickly put into effect 100 orders which facilitated the recommendations of Cheney’s Energy Task Force and plans for the economic transformation of Iraq: All members of the Ba’ath Party and of the Iraqi Army were fired from their jobs without pay, thus putting hundreds of thousands of Iraqis (many who were highly skilled) out of work and paving the way for U.S. corporations to receive billions of dollars in reconstruction contracts; the “Trade Liberalization Policy” provided many benefits to U.S. corporations, devastating Iraq’s businesses and industries in the process; an order for “Prohibited media activity” essentially outlawed any news media criticisms of the Bush administration’s role in Iraq; The Foreign Investment Order provided the legal framework for the invasion of U.S. corporations into Iraq; Americans were placed in numerous key positions; and many other repressive orders were decreed by Bremer, including the granting of criminal and civil immunity for all Americans from Iraq’s pre-existing laws.

Billions of dollars worth of no-bid contracts were provided by the U.S. government for reconstruction and security purposes. But while almost all of this money was awarded to Bush and Cheney cronies, the Iraqis were almost totally excluded from the process. Furthermore, the reconstruction effort was a miserable failure, with electricity, potable water, and sewage services remaining far below pre-war levels. Audits of U.S. taxpayer funds found contract files to be unavailable, incomplete, and unreliable, while $8.8 billion from the Development fund for Iraq were completely unaccounted for. Yet none of this interfered with U.S. corporations receiving the full amounts of their contracts plus much more.

And as for U.S. oil companies, Production Sharing Agreements were put in place to ensure their access to Iraq’s oil, that access was multiplied manifold, their profits have skyrocketed since the occupation began, and the Bush administration remains hard at work to ensure that their access to oil increases and becomes permanent.

Juhasz sums up the situation prior to publication of her book:

While violence increases daily in Iraq and the resistance grows, the Bush administration can be confident about a few things. First, the economic restructuring is well in place and moving forward… Second, U.S. corporations continue to earn billions of dollars for work in Iraq and have the potential to earn far more. Third, a government is in place that, while not ideal, is certainly preferable to the previous regime in terms of its willingness to advance Bush administration goals. Fourth, and most important to many, the oil sector has been opened to U.S. corporate access and control… all things considered, Bush’s key political and corporate allies have much to be optimistic about….

As President Bush has repeatedly said, Iraq is only the beginning. In the name of spreading peace and democracy, he has revealed plans to take his administration’s model of imperial-style corporate globalization from Iraq to the rest of the Middle East… Having begun in Iraq, U.S. corporations are once again in the lead, eager to expand their own interests elsewhere…


Collapse – How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed

Perhaps the most comprehensive explanation I’ve ever read about the world-wide environmental situation that now confronts us was written by Jared Diamond in “Collapse – How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed” (Chosen as “Best Book of the Year” by The Boston Globe, the Los Angeles Times, The Washington Post, the San Francisco Chronicle and others). Diamond’s book describes the environmental causes of past and present failed societies, and compares them with other societies that have succeeded, in order to identify the causes of failed societies. The theme of his book can be summarized as:

Environmental crisis + failure of society to address it == > societal collapse

Diamond’s reason for writing his book is to make the point that we humans have it within our power to either fail to address the problem, which will lead to world-wide catastrophe, or to avoid catastrophe by addressing the problem while we still can. In making this point, Diamond identifies eight environmental causes of the collapse of past societies, and he adds four more that are additionally relevant to our current world.

He defends the relevance of his analogies to the past in many ways. In doing so he notes two extreme and opposite points of view that attempt to minimize the relevancy of those analogies. One is the racist point of view that holds that past failed societies deserved their fate because of their inherent failings as people. The opposite and equally invalid point of view holds that “past indigenous peoples were gentle and ecologically wise stewards of their environment, intimately knew and respected Nature, innocently lived in a virtual Garden of Eden…”

Diamond’s book is almost devoid of present day political content – as illustrated by the fact that George Bush is not mentioned once as a contributing cause to today’s environmental crisis. It’s not that he doesn’t recognize the importance of political factors to the state of our environment. He ends his book by giving an overview of our current situation and concluding that it can go either way, that he is “cautiously optimistic” that we will succeed in addressing our environmental problems, and that it all depends on whether or not we have the “political will” to do so.

Diamond makes his points with a great many examples of failed and successful societies. His examples of failed societies include Easter Island, the Anasazi, the Maya, the Greenland Norse, and the Rwandan genocide, among others.

Diamond summarizes our current situation as follows:

Our world society is presently on a non-sustainable course, and any of our 12 problems of non-sustainability that we have just summarized would suffice to limit our lifestyle within the next several decades. They are like time bombs with fuses of less than 50 years…. Any of the dozen problems if unsolved would do us grave harm… If we solved 11 of the problems, but not the 12th, we would still be in trouble… We have to solve them all.

Thus, because we are rapidly advancing along this non-sustainable course, the world’s environmental problems will get resolved, in one way or another within the lifetime of the children and young adults alive today. The only question is whether they will become resolved in pleasant ways of our own choice, or in unpleasant ways not of our choice, such as warfare, genocide, starvation, disease epidemics, and collapses of societies. While all of those grim phenomena have been endemic to humanity throughout our history, their frequency increases with environmental degradation, population pressure, and the resulting poverty and political instability.

Diamond ends his book with his bottom line reason for writing it:

Thus, we have the opportunity to learn from the mistakes of distant peoples and past peoples. That’s an opportunity that no past society enjoyed to such a degree. My hope in writing this book has been that enough people will choose to profit from that opportunity to make a difference.


The Conscience of a Liberal

Economics is generally a very difficult subject for me to read about and comprehend. Paul Krugman, more than any economist I’ve read, explains economic issues in terms that are easy to understand, along with detailed and referenced explanations for the reasons behind the economic trends that he discusses.

The main theme in “The Conscience of a Liberal” is how “movement conservatism” took over the Republican Party and our country in the early 1980s, made substantial progress in dismantling the New Deal, and produced a degree of economic inequality not seen here since what Krugman refers to as the “Long Gilded Age”, which lasted from the late 1860s to the Great Depression of 1929.

When a political movement that benefits the few at the expense of the many comes to power in a democracy, that demands an explanation. Krugman discusses several explanations for it, but he believes that racist backlash against our nation’s efforts to end racial discrimination provides the main explanation. However, he also discusses the evidence that race as a winning issue for Republicans is now in its last throes.

In the last parts of his book, Krugman provides an overview of the situation now facing us and comments on where he thinks we need to go from here. He concisely spells out the difference between us and our political opponents:

Liberals want to restore the middle-class society I grew up in; those who call themselves conservative want to take us back to the Gilded Age, undoing a century of history. Liberals defend long standing institutions like Social Security and Medicare; those who call themselves conservative want to privatize or undermine those institutions. Liberals want to honor our democratic principles and the rule of law; those who call themselves conservative want the president to have dictatorial powers and have applauded the Bush administration as it imprisons people without charges and subjects them to torture…. with a political strategy that rests, at its core, on exploiting the unwillingness of some Americans to grant equal rights to their fellow citizens – to those who don’t share their skin color, don’t share their faith, don’t share their sexual preferences.

Krugman concludes that movement conservatism does not represent the vast majority of the people of our country, and therefore there is no room for “bipartisan consensus” with them. He explains the futility of compromise with these people and where we need to go from here:

The central fact of modern American political life is the control of the Republican Party by movement conservatives, whose vision of what America should be is completely antithetical to that of the progressive movement. Because of that control, the notion… that we can make progress through bipartisan consensus is simply foolish. To be a progressive, then, means being partisan – at least for now.

The only way a progressive agenda can be enacted is if Democrats have both the presidency and a large enough majority in Congress to overcome Republican opposition. And achieving that kind of political preponderance will require leadership that makes opponents of the progressive agenda pay a political price for their obstructionism – leadership that, like FDR, welcomes the hatred of the interest groups trying to prevent us from making our society better.


Ghost Plane – The True Story of the CIA Torture Program

In “Ghost Plane”, Stephen Grey, Amnesty International Award-Winning Journalist for Excellence in Human Rights Reporting, meticulously documents the illegal and horrendous system of torture and other human rights abuses that George Bush has perpetrated upon the world as part of his so-called “War on Terror”. That system has three major components: Known U.S. operated prisons at Guantanamo Bay and in Iraq and Afghanistan, where torture and other grave abuses of human rights occur routinely; Secret U.S. prisons throughout the world where similar or worse abuses occur routinely; and worst of all, the program of “extraordinary rendition”, whereby U.S. officials kidnap (or otherwise gather into their custody) men or boys and transport them to prisons in countries where few or no barriers to the most horrendous kinds of torture exist, in full knowledge that those men are likely to be systematically tortured and never released until dead. In his book, copyrighted in 2006, Grey estimates that 11 thousand have encountered such a fate since the onset of George Bush’s “War on Terror”.

Grey makes every effort in his book to avoid exaggeration or any statement that might be seen as an exaggeration. Here are excerpts from his basic description of the U.S. torture program from his introduction:

As I continued my reporting in Washington, I heard whispers that there was something much bigger going on: a system of clandestine prisons that involved the incarceration of thousands of prisoners, not just the few hundred in Cuba. While the president spoke of spreading liberty across the world, CIA insiders spoke of a return to the old days of working hand in glove with some of the most repressive secret police in the world…

Much later, when more pieces of the puzzle were in place, I thought of the work of Alexander Solzhenitsyn, the dissident writer. When he described the Soviet Union’s network of prison camps as a “Gulag Archipelago” he was portraying a parallel world that existed within physical reach of everyday life but yet could remain unseen to ordinary people. After years of persecution, Solzhenitsyn described a jail system that he knew from firsthand experience had swallowed millions of citizens into its entrails. At least a tenth never emerged alive.

The modern world of prisons run by the United States and its allies in the war on terror is far less extensive. Its inmates number thousands not millions. And yet there are eerie parallels between what the Soviet Union created and what we, in the West, are now constructing…

The Gulag was so very vast and extensive, and yet still it could be hidden in people’s minds. Ordinary citizens could persuade themselves that all was normal even as their next-door neighbor disappeared…

How much more than surreal, more apart from normal existence, was the network of prisons run after 9/11 by the United States and its allies? How much easier too was the denial and the double-think when those who disappeared into the modern gulag were, being mainly swarthy skinned Arabs with a different culture, so different from most of us in the West? How much more reassuring were the words from our politicians that all was well?

In the last chapter of his book, titled “Conclusion: Winning the War”, Grey explains how George Bush’s “War on Terror” has only increased the terrorism risk, and he notes that “it is imperative that an informed debate begins on whether the West’s approach, conducted largely in the shadows, is the right one”. Introducing his recommendations for radically changing our approach, Grey says:

I’ve spoken both to those who waged this war – those closely connected to the CIA and the U.S. government – and to those caught up in its operations, including many former prisoners. Despite describing things from different poles, I’ve found that most have described a similar story. Few on either side doubt, for instance, the scale of torture implemented within many of the jails where America has sent its prisoners…

Grey ends his book by noting:

Ignoring human rights helps recruit terrorists, justifies terrorism, and defeats the best thing we have going for us – the fact we stand for something better: for freedom, tolerance, and laws that protect all.


House of War – The Pentagon and the Disastrous Rise of American Power

House of War” by James Carroll is a must read for anyone who wants to thoroughly understand the rise and effects of the military industrial complex in our country. Carroll is a former priest and the son of a three star U.S. Air Forces general. Though he maintained a great deal of respect for his father, he nevertheless developed strong anti-war views in his youth – which led to tensions with his father. Though he writes from an anti-war point of view, all of the facts on which he bases his opinions are thoroughly documented. At the same time, his emotional investment in the issues he writes about makes his book all the more interesting.

The main theme of Carroll’s book is that the Pentagon has become a tremendously powerful entity unto itself, beyond the control of anyone, even American presidents. In the last pages of his book he says:

The Pentagon defines America’s reach across the world, and for countless millions that reach is choking… The Pentagon is now the dead center of an open-ended martial enterprise that no longer pretends to be defense. The world itself must be reshaped… The Pentagon has, more than ever, become a place to fear.

Though his book is even-handed from a political standpoint, Carroll is very straight forward and scathing in his description of the irresponsible way that the Bush administration has handled his “War on Terror”:

Preventing the spread of nuclear weapons… was the primary reason given for the Bush invasion of Iraq… Yet the concerns about weapons of mass destruction that justified the attack on Iraq, and may yet do so on Iran, are absurdly misplaced. When it comes to nuclear danger, Washington is by far the graver problem, beginning with its post-Cold War refusal to significantly downsize its own nuclear arsenal… to the Bush administration’s 2003 repudiation of the Antiballistic Missile Treaty and the 2004 deployment of missile defense, which motivated Russia and China to add “hair” to the hair trigger; to the Bush administration’s stated – and unprecedented – readiness to use nuclear weapons against non-nuclear states… Under Donald Rumsfeld, the Pentagon embarked in 2002 on the stunning project of developing a new generation of nuclear weapons…

The effect of all this… is to legitimize nuclear-based politics, giving other nations, friend and foe alike, compelling reasons to acquire a nuclear capacity, if only for deterrence, and prompting them to behave in similar ways. That pattern was fully evident in Iran and North Korea, beginning almost immediately after the launching of the Global War on Terror, and the pattern promises to show itself in “nuclear-capable states” like Brazil, Argentina, Egypt, Australia, South Africa, and others that long ago renounced nuclear ambitions. Meanwhile, Russia, China, Israel, India, and Pakistan are all furiously adding to their nuclear arsenal. The Pentagon has become the engine of proliferation.

We come to what amounts to an ultimate betrayal by the national security establishment of its most solemn obligation, which is to provide for national security. The probing of questions about government failures before September 11, 2001, is meaningless when measured against the new jeopardy into which America was plunged by the war that Bush embarked upon… In late 2003, Donald Rumsfeld said, in an internal Pentagon memo, “We lack the metrics to know if we are winning or losing the Global War on Terror.” This odd assessment from a secretary of defense… actually reflects the Pentagon’s interest in an open-ended war. Permanent war means permanent martial dominance…


Nemesis – The Last Days of the American Republic

Chalmers Johnson calls “Nemesis” the last of his “inadvertent (non-fiction) trilogy” – a series of three books which were meant to warn Americans of pending catastrophe and the “decline and fall of the American Empire” if they don’t change their ways soon. He never planned to write three volumes, but the first two warnings were ignored so he gave it one last try – though he believes it is probably already too late.

His first book, which I haven’t read, was called “Blowback”, where Johnson warned of retaliation against the United States for the “covert, illegal violence” that we perpetrated abroad for the purpose of overthrowing democratically elected governments of other nations. It was written prior to the 9-11-2001 attacks on our country, but it didn’t receive much attention until after that date. His second book, “The Sorrows of Empire”, which was one of the best books I’ve ever read, warned about the disastrous effects of the monumental militarization of our country. And the focus of his current book can be pretty well ascertained from its subtitle – “The Last Days of the American Republic”.

Johnson explains the consequences of most Americans buying into the myth of a purely good and innocent nation as the victim of a world wide evil conspiracy:

Because Americans generally failed to consider seriously why we had been attacked on 9/11, the Bush administration was able to respond in a way that made the situation far worse…

Then he expands on the disastrous consequences of buying into Bush’s myth by explaining what otherwise could have happened, and what instead did happen.

We could have… won the hearts and minds of populations al-Qaeda was trying to mobilize… avoided entirely contravening the Geneva Conventions covering the treatment of prisoners of war and never have headed down the path of torturing people we picked up almost at random in Afghanistan and Iraq. The U.S. government would have had no need to lie to its own citizens and the rest of the world about the nonexistent nuclear threat posed by Iraq or carry out a phony preventive war against that country.

Instead, we undermined the NATO alliance and brought to power in Iraq allies of the Islamic fundamentalists in Iran. Contrary to what virtually every strategist recommended as an effective response to terrorism, we launched our high-tech military against some of the poorest, weakest people on Earth. In Afghanistan, our aerial bombardment … gave warlordism, banditry, and opium production a new lease on life. In Iraq our “shock and awe” assault invited comparison with the sacking of Baghdad in 1258 by the Mongols. President Bush declared that… you are either with us or against us… His actions would ensure that, in the years to come, there would be ever more people around the world against us….


Overthrow – America’s History of Regime Change from Hawaii to Iraq

In “Overthrow, Stephen Kinzer explores all 14 instances of regime change, overt or covert, by the United States since 1893, including only those episodes where the intended regime change was successful and where the United States played the decisive role, rather than where it acted in concert with other nations or as part of a larger war (as in WW II or the Korean War). The 14 episodes describe regime changes in Hawaii, Cuba, Puerto Rico, the Philippines, Nicaragua, Honduras, Iran, Guatemala, Vietnam, Chile, Grenada, Panama, Afghanistan, and Iraq.

For most of the regime changes described in Kinzer’s book the results have been catastrophic for the country whose legitimate government we overthrew, often in behalf of a small wealthy elite that profited enormously from gaining access to the resources of the country. Kinzer describes the long term results of the regime changes as well as the motivations behind them and how they were carried out. Here is his description of the long term results from our overthrow of the legitimately elected government of Nicaragua in 1909:

In few countries is it possible to trace the development of anti-American sentiment as clearly as in Nicaragua. A century of trouble between the two nations, which led to the death of thousands and great suffering for generations of Nicaraguans, began when the United States deposed President Zelaya in 1909… Zelaya was the greatest statesman Nicaragua ever produced. If the United States had found a way to deal with him, it might have avoided the disasters that followed…

That terrible miscalculation drew the United States into a century of interventions in Nicaragua. They took a heavy toll in blood and treasure, profoundly damaged America’s image in the world, and helped keep generations of Nicaraguans in misery. Nicaragua still competes with Haiti to lead the Western Hemisphere in much that is undesirable, including rates of poverty, unemployment, infant mortality, and deaths from curable diseases.


The Shock Doctrine – The Rise of Disaster Capitalism

The Shock Doctrine”, by Naomi Klein, is the only book on my 2007 list that I haven’t finished yet. But it is too important to leave off any list.

I believe that this book goes a very long way towards explaining why so much of the world’s population is impoverished today. It is no accident. Third World nations have to a very large extent been kept down by external human forces who seek to profit from the labors of the poor. To a very large extent today, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank, which are both very much under the control of the United States, are instruments which facilitate this process. They loan money to impoverished nations that are desperate for it, imposing conditions on those nations which work to keep the great majority of its inhabitants impoverished indefinitely. The process is something akin to loan sharking or indentured servitude. Since the governing elites of those nations usually profit from the deal, they have some motivation to play along with it.

The underpinning for the whole system is right wing economic ideology of the type first put forth by Milton Friedman. Since the rules of the game are so painful to the vast majority of a country’s inhabitants, various methods have had to be developed to keep the population in line. Sometimes that involves martial law and widespread kidnappings, executions, disappearances and torture, as under Pinochet in Chile. But many other methods have been developed as well, and often financial pressures or threats are enough to do the job. Taken as a whole, Klein terms these methods “shock therapy” – a therapy that is brutal enough to make a person or a population docile enough to go along with what they’re told to do. This is how she describes the beginnings of it in the introduction to her book:

Friedman first learned how to exploit a large-scale shock or crisis in the mid-seventies, when he acted as adviser to the Chilean dictator, General Augusto Pinochet. Not only were Chileans in a state of shock following Pinochet’s violent coup, but the country was also traumatized by severe hyperinflation. Friedman advised Pinochet to impose a rapid-fire transformation of the economy – tax cuts, free trade, privatized services, cuts to social spending and deregulation… It was the most extreme capitalist make-over ever attempted anywhere, and it became known as a “Chicago School” revolution… Friedman predicted that the speed, suddenness and scope of the economic shifts would provoke psychological reactions in the public that “facilitate the adjustment”. He coined a phrase for this painful tactic: economic “shock treatment.” In the decades since, whenever governments have imposed sweeping free-market programs, the all-at-once shock treatment, or “shock therapy,” has been the method of choice. Pinochet also facilitated the adjustment with his own shock treatments…

It is also important to note here that Klein’s book exhibits an interesting parallel with two books written by John Perkins – “Confessions of an Economic Hit Man” and “The Secret History of the American Empire – Economic Hit Men, Jackals, and the Truth about Global Corruption” (also excellent books, but I didn’t have room for them on this list). Klein and Perkins write about very much the same phenomenon and reach very similar conclusions. The difference is that while Perkins bases his account mainly on his personal experiences and observations, Klein takes a wider view of the situation and bases her conclusions on extensive research and investigation.

It is worth quoting John Perkins here on his summary of how the system works:

We build a global empire. We are an elite group of men and women who utilize international financial organizations to foment conditions that make other nations subservient to the corporatocracy running our biggest corporations, our government, and our banks. Like our counterparts in the Mafia, EHMs (Economic hit men) provide favors...


Static – Government Liars, Media Cheerleaders, and the People Who Fight Back

Amy Goodman is one of our country’s most valuable journalists. Any time I read a book that deals with issues of substantial importance to our country and our world, it turns out that Amy Goodman has interviewed the author on her radio program, “Democracy Now”.

Static” was written by Amy and her brother, David Goodman. The book is a scathing but accurate and very well documented critique of journalism in our country today. It describes how much of the “news” we receive today is more akin to corporate propaganda than it is to news. Related to that, it also describes how the Bush administration goes to great lengths to control the news that Americans receive and suppress news that it feels threatened by.

Here is the Goodman’s description of some things the Bush administration has done to suppress news of the Iraq War, especially related to American atrocities:

The Al Jazeera offices in Afghanistan and Basra were bombed by American planes, and two of its correspondents have been imprisoned on unspecified terrorism charges… Al Jazeera’s journalists are not the only ones under siege. The Iraq War has been among the deadliest conflicts ever for journalists. The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) reported that by mid-2006, over 100 journalists and media assistants had been killed in Iraq while doing their jobs. By comparison, 66 journalists lost their lives over the course of the 20-year-long Vietnam conflict. More than half of those killed in Iraq were Iraqi and other Arab journalists. Fifteen journalists have been killed by U.S. fire…

Journalists also risk arrest while reporting on the war in Iraq: In 2005 alone, U.S. forces arrested seven Iraqi journalists “for prolonged periods without charge or the disclosure of any supporting evidence,” according to CPJ. All were eventually released, and no charges were ever filed. CPJ concluded that the Pentagon has “displayed a pattern of disregard when confronted with issues involving the security of Iraqi journalists and citizens.”…

In an extraordinary attack on the press, the U.S. military declared in April 2004 that there could be no peace for Fallujah unless Al Jazeera abandoned the city … In August 2004, the U.S.-backed Iraqi government ordered Al Jazeera’s Baghdad bureau closed.

The take home message of the book is:

Now, with lives and freedoms on the line, we need a media that cuts through the lies and fakery that obscure the truth. A media that is fiercely independent. Unembedded. Journalists that works to inform, not to deceive. The soldiers and civilians in harm’s way in Iraq deserve no less. The citizens of the devastated and abandoned Gulf Coast are counting on it. And the people shackled in America’s secret gulags cry out for it. Free speech is democracy’s last line of defense. We must demand it. Defend it. And most of all, use it – now.


Takeover – The Return of the Imperial Presidency and the Subversion of American Democracy

There isn’t much more to say about Charlie Savage’s “Takeover” other than that it is an excellent and thoroughly documented story of every major step the Bush/Cheney administration has taken to subvert our Constitution for the sake of increasing their own power. His conclusion:

The expansive presidential powers claimed and exercised by the Bush-Cheney White House are now an immutable part of American history… The importance of such precedents is difficult to overstate. As Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson once warned, any new claim of executive power, once validated into precedent, “lies like a loaded weapon ready for the hand of any authority that can bring forward a plausible claim of an urgent need. Every repetition imbeds that principle more deeply in our law and thinking and expands it to new purposes.

Sooner or later, there will always be another urgent need.


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Lex Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-02-08 06:26 PM
Response to Original message
1. Impressive. I re-read "Call of the Wild" by Jack London
Edited on Wed Jan-02-08 06:27 PM by Lex
and that's still a great read. :hi:

Other ones too, but I'd have to think awhile to categorize the Top Ten.







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Time for change Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 07:46 AM
Response to Reply #1
22. That might have been the first book I ever read
I think it was a kids version, with pictures? I recall being really impressed by it, but I can't remember much about it now, except it had to do with a dog who got lost or something.
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ChairmanAgnostic Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-02-08 06:35 PM
Response to Original message
2. people still read books?
I read them all, but for Static, which is now on my list.

I agree that they were all worthwhile.
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mtnester Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-02-08 06:45 PM
Response to Original message
3. I mostly strayed from political reading this past year.
It was simply too depressing for me.

I read "The Road" by Cormac Mcarthy (devastatingly tragic and touching all at once)

2012 - Whitley Streiber

Assault on Reason - Al Gore

Hattie Big Sky - Kirby Larson

The Traveler - John Twelve Hawks (wonderful read)

Windfalls - Jean Hegland

I was into cooking this past year, so I did all the Bourdain books (got one right here I need to start on...No Reservations), and bought a ton of cookbooks. Deconstructed Desserts, Nigella, Batali...etc. I could not get enough of da recipes and pictures.

And also read some fantastic soft porn a la romance...specifically Bertrice Small (LOVE her and have for decades). However, I am not all that thrilled with the Anne Rice wannabees writing romance right now. Wish Diane Galbadon would get back to Jamie and Claire instead of that weenie Lord John...and for the LOVE of GAWD could Jean Auel write faster? Sheesh. Even Stephen King did not leave Roland and crew on the train as long as she does fer crying out LOUD!

Oh, almost forgot..did read Lizzy's Story early in the year (Stephen King). I am STILL pissed that he left Jack out of the finale of the Black Tower series.

OK..that's enough :)
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gateley Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-02-08 06:49 PM
Response to Original message
4. Thank you - I haven't read any of them, but they sound intriguing so will
pick them up. But I have a question -- seriously. How could you read all these without becoming unglued? Just reading the snips about them starts my blood boiling...


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Time for change Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-02-08 11:04 PM
Response to Reply #4
14. Good question -- I look at it like this
There is plenty in this world to come unglued about and get your blood boiling.

The Supreme Court handing the 2000 election to our current Idiot-in-Chief is one of them.

Another would be the systematic dismantling of our Constitution and the rule of law in our country by the Bush administration.

And to top it off, now we have a Democratic Congress that is content to sit by and let them get away with it.

So, the reason that I read all these books is similar to the reason why I belong to DU. I have a great need to understand why all these terrible things have happened. These books bring me closer to that. I still have a very long way to go, but as long as I feel that I'm making progress, that helps to prevent me from becoming unglued.
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Blarch Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-02-08 06:56 PM
Response to Original message
5. Some recent good reads ...
Gore , Assault on Reason. Great insight into the 'who's' and 'what' of the assault on America

Naomi Klein, Shock Doctrine. How was this book never written before, it was all in front of us and nobody could put it together like she did.

Nikki Sixx, The Heroin Diaries. It's incredible what he went through in terms of drugs, turns out paranoia from shooting coke is pretty comical.





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Yael Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-02-08 08:00 PM
Response to Original message
6. Thanks for the list! Bookmarked to study further
I LOVED The Shock Doctrine. Blackwater by Scahill was another good read this year.
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Time for change Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 08:49 AM
Response to Reply #6
23. I'm in the middle of reading Blackwater and The Shock Doctrine now
Yes, Blackwater is another very good book. Very informative, and very important for Americans to understand what our mercenary armies are doing in Iraq, other countries, and in the U.S.

I think that The Shock Doctrine could be one of those books that changes the course of world history.
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RufusTFirefly Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-02-08 08:38 PM
Response to Original message
7. Nice list
Of the ones you've mentioned, I've only read Overthrow and The Shock Doctrine, although I've been meaning to read Collapse for ages. If you liked Overthrow, I'd recommend one of Kinzer's earlier books, All the Shah's Men: An American Coup and the Roots of Middle East Terror, which goes into greater detail about the overthrow of Mossadegh in Iran.

I'm curious as to whether anyone has read Robert Reich's Supercapitalism, which, despite its market-fundamentalist-sounding title is apparently about how the relationship between corporate and government power has gotten way out of whack. (Gee, what a shock.) I haven't read it yet, and I wouldn't normally read a book like that, but I heard Reich speak, and he made it sound pretty interesting.
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Time for change Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 11:05 AM
Response to Reply #7
25. I haven't read Reich's Supercapitalism
but I'll bet it's pretty good. I've read other stuff by Reich, and he explains things very well.

I agree that "All the Shah's Men" was excellent. Kinzer does a great job of putting U.S. imperialism in perspective. Americans ought to be aware of that episode as the Bush administration contemplates yet again destroying the lives of the people of Iran.
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SpiralHawk Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-02-08 08:43 PM
Response to Original message
8. nice list
thank you
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puebloknot Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-02-08 09:01 PM
Response to Original message
9. Great list! I've read some of them, plan to read others. But...
...too much political reading makes Jack and Jill dull girls and boys (though how can they not do so in times like these?). If you'll send me your address, I'll send you a good romance novel and a bottle of New Mexico's version of Champagne -- Gruet Sparkling Rose, which is excellent -- so as to give your brain a rest! :)

Glancing just slightly to my left in my office I see The Theocons, Religion Gone Bad, and American Fascists.

I recently read Atonement, and highly recommend it as an escapist piece -- to escape from our own period of war to one 60 years ago! And the film is great, too.

Being completely serious now, I recently read The Lost: The Search for Six of Six Million. It's very touching and very well written.

Cheers!
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Time for change Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 10:00 AM
Response to Reply #9
24. Thank you -- I'll put Atonement and The Lost on my list
I guess The Lost is about a search for someone's relatives who were victims of the Holocaust?
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puebloknot Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 03:10 PM
Response to Reply #24
28. Yes, The Lost...
...was written by a young Jewish man who started his book by saying that his elderly Jewish relatives would break into tears when they saw him because he looked *so* much like a brother of their family who was lost in the Holocaust, along with his wife and four daughters. That inspired him, Daniel Medelsohn, to begin exploring is family history, and he eventually went back to the small Polish village where his family had lived before the war.

It's the old, old story about how some family members got out, but one decided he wouldn't leave home, and ended up paying with his life.

Atonement is set in World War II, but is a novel rather than a historical/autobiographical piece. But it's a good taste of what life was like during that period in England.
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eppur_se_muova Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-02-08 09:31 PM
Response to Original message
10. Thanks! Several of those I hadn't seen in my local red-tinted bookstore.
My favorite recent read: "The Fircracker Boys", about Edward Teller's plan in the late 50's/early 60's to nuke Alaska. The people who fought the plan are (largely) unsung heroes!
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Time for change Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 01:55 PM
Response to Reply #10
26. I never heard of that . What on earth did he want to nuke Alaska for?
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EOTE Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 03:51 PM
Response to Reply #26
31. Check out Operation Plowshare and Project Chariot.
I'm guessing that's what the book is about.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Teller
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Time for change Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 05:39 PM
Response to Reply #31
43. Thank you EOTE
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eppur_se_muova Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 05:40 PM
Response to Reply #31
44. Yep, that's it. Playing with H-bombs "like boys with firecrackers", hence the title. nt
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Misskittycat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-02-08 09:44 PM
Response to Original message
11. K & R. Good list. n/t
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Orwellian_Ghost Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-02-08 09:47 PM
Response to Original message
12. K&R n/t
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Neurotica Donating Member (412 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-02-08 09:51 PM
Response to Original message
13. I rediscovered fiction this year -- my form of escapism
One of my favorites -- "Straight Man" by Richard Russo. It was absolutely hilarious. I can't wait to read more of his books.

Meanwhile, a number of serious nonfiction books are staring down at me from the bookshelf -- including the Jared Diamond book you mentioned as well as his book "Guns, Germs and Steel." My backlog also includes "Religious Literacy" by Stephen Prothero, "American Theocracy" by Kevin Phillips and "Freethinkers" by Susan Jacoby, among many others.

Thanks for your recommendations by the way. I'm going to add them to my must-read list. I have a word document listing various authors/books and drag a printout of this document around in my purse for my many trips to the local library.
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Time for change Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 03:04 PM
Response to Reply #13
27. Great, I hope you enjoy them
I'll keep Straight Man in mind.
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ladym55 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-02-08 11:07 PM
Response to Original message
15. Great list!!
And I have another addition--Broken Government by John Dean.
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Time for change Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 05:14 PM
Response to Reply #15
39. I'm just starting to read that now
I like John Dean. I remember him mainly for being the first real breakthrough in the Watergate hearings. He was one helluva cool witness. Watching his testimony day after day was as exciting as any novel I've ever read.
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ladym55 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 10:46 PM
Response to Reply #39
55. I've read two of his books
I also read Conservatives Without Conscience. Both books were carefully researched arguments and real wake-up calls. John Dean WAS a conservative, is now an independent, and is no fan of the current Republican Party.

Both books are a good read.
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progressoid Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 12:01 AM
Response to Original message
16. Damn, if I read all of those I'd have to have my depression medication doubled.
And join an anger managment class.
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WilliamPitt Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 12:04 AM
Response to Original message
17. K&R x 1,000,000,000,000
If I could. Amazing post.

:toast:
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Time for change Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 05:34 PM
Response to Reply #17
41. Thank you much
:toast:
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kcass1954 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 12:08 AM
Response to Original message
18. Thanks for the list! I just ordered Shock Doctrine.
I got a gift card for Barnes & Noble, and wasn't sure what to get. There was just enough left over to buy a novel that I found in the bargain bin.
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Time for change Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 05:49 PM
Response to Reply #18
45. That's great
I think that the Shock Doctrine could be one of those books that alters the course of world history -- if it is effective in bringing the evils of economic "shock therapy" to a wide enough audience that successful efforts are made to discredit it and thereby seriously reduce its use.

Tom Friedman wrote a book about what Naomi Klein calls "economic shock therapy" a couple of years ago. He calls it "the golden straightjacket", and he means that in a favorable light. I wonder if he was one its victims if he would feel the same way about it.
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pnorman Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 12:23 AM
Response to Original message
19. "Nemesis"
I already have that in Audible.com format (Haven't listened to it yet though). I just checked that website and saw that the remaining two in Chalmers Johnson's trilogy are now available. They're in the shopping basket now.

Thanks for posting that great list.

pnorman
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ConsAreLiars Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 02:15 AM
Response to Original message
20. Thank you for taking the time to provide these synopses.
Anyone who has any questions about how things work can find some help in the guidance you have given.
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Mendocino Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 02:37 AM
Response to Original message
21. The World Without Us-Alan Weisman
Truth and Consequences-Keith Olbermann

As Far As The Eye Can See-David Brill

were the last three books I read.
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LSK Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 03:11 PM
Response to Original message
29. Assault on Reason and Fair Game
Edited on Thu Jan-03-08 03:13 PM by LSK
Have not finished Fair Game yet. I am in the middle of 5 books right now.

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CRH Donating Member (671 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 03:42 PM
Response to Original message
30. Impressive list, ...
Edited on Thu Jan-03-08 03:53 PM by CRH
It must be nice to be near a good book store where many of the above listed books are easily available. An impressive reading list. I'll book mark and put many on my wish list.

I do have a comment, probably not a popular one, on one of the authors, and one of his past books. That being Chalmers Johnson. And, I will make one assumption from your abbreviated review, that Nemesis is just an extension of 'The Sorrows of Empire', and that Chalmers Johnson still presents 911, as a genuine unassisted surprise attack by 19 Muslim fundamentalist hijackers. The attack masterminded by one, Osama bin Laden and al Qaeda, from within the terrorists' camps in Afghanistan.

If as in the past, Johnson still presents this myth as historical fact, he then perpetrates a false history that others will quote and site. After Oswald and magic bullets, it is personally hard for me to accept 'politically correct' versions of events, that later turn into revisionist gospel taught to the children as a basis of foundation upon which future generations form their perceptions of their country and culture.

That Chalmers Johnson presents well researched facts as a plausible accounting of history, then wraps the 911 farce with this apparent accountability, he thereby creates a danger of legitimizing the false flag operation as truth. He buries the revelation that elements within the government and large portions of both political parties, aided and/or abetted, while helping to cover up the truth. Therefore, the entire federal political system lent itself to the deception used to embark on the war crimes of unprovoked preemptive war in all its morally bankrupt nastiness.

How does one account for the neo-con document 'Rebuilding America's Defenses' (the blueprint of the actions of the post 911 Bush administration), being written in September of 2000, before Bush entered office. The stated intention of hegemonic domination of Eurasian resources and wealth, the stated intention of unilateral preemptive warfare when needed, the stated intention of considering international treaties irrelevant, the stated intention of pursuing smaller tactical nuclear weapons, the stated intention of rendering the United Nations ineffectual if the security council did not sanction desired interventions. The stated intention to rebuild the US military to accomplish the stated hegemonic foreign policy, with a 3.8% allotment of our GDP, later matched exactly in the funding in the 2003 budget. With a document so precisely written, how is one to view a statement that accomplishing all of this would be much easier and happen much faster, if the country were to experience a 'new Pearl Harbor' event.

How does one account for all the unheeded warnings from other nation states of an imminent attack, the diversion of our entire domestic protection into simultaneous multiple military war games, the total failure of a long effective Air Traffic Control system that in the past has quickly intercepted errant aircraft. How does one account for the collapse of WTC7, the initial small hole in the Pentagon void of identifiable airplane parts, identifying all the hijackers in less than 48 hours when their names were not on the manifest, the destruction of the crime scenes before forensic investigations could happen, or the unsolved anthrax terrorism further discouraging a timely investigation.

One can only come to the conclusion we have been presented with no where near the truth of that day, and the actions and deceptions that have followed have had overwhelming bipartisan support.

Yet Mr. Johnson seems content to allow all that entailed 911, to be accepted hook line and sinker, as written, in the politically correct official version. To say that the Bush administration wasted the goodwill and cooperation of the world at large in our hunt for terrorists following the 911 attack, without ever questioning the legitimacy of an obvious false flag operation presaging preemptive war, for me travels beyond genuine. It leads the people away from the very corruption, they need to confront.

edit: added an article and conjunction I forgot.
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EOTE Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 03:57 PM
Response to Reply #30
32. If you check out TfC's journal, you'll see he's no proponent of any 911 coincidence theories.
Your gripes with Chalmers Johnson's books seem legitimate, but that doesn't mean that he can't present other information in a thorough and well thought out manner. There are lots of people, even some very smart ones, who just refuse to believe our government could be involved so complicitly with such evil actions.
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CRH Donating Member (671 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 04:28 PM
Response to Reply #32
36. Acknowledged, ...

I rarely find issue with the posts of TFC, and his reading list is impressive. As for Chalmers Johnson, though he does present other information suggesting needed change, by making it more palatable to some my misrepresenting the motivation for preemptive war, I still question whether this helps. Especially when the misrepresentation buries the culpability of nearly all of the federal politicians and the system itself, in pursuit of a foreign policy of a rogue state. It willfully distorts the needed solution. Just my opinion.
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Time for change Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 04:25 PM
Response to Reply #30
35. Like you, I believe that there are numerous unanswered questions about what really happened on 9-11
And that the 9-11 Commission was a sham coverup operation, and that the events of 9-11 were either planned by the Bush administration or that they were known about and allowed to happen -- as I note in this post:
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_mesg&forum=125&topic_id=73406&mesg_id=73406

However, there are many authors who have very important critiques of the Bush administration other than their complicity in the events of 9-11, including some on the list in my OP.

When that is the case I do not hold it against them to proceed with their criticisms and either ignore the events of 9-11 or briefly recap the official story. There may be one of two major reasons for doing so that I can think of. First, like most of us, including me, they probably don't know what really happened on 9-11, and since that doesn't constitute the major theme of their book, they leave it out because it isn't directly relevant. Secondly, many authors who believe as we do in LIHOP or MIHOP probably recognize that if they bring up those ideas their book will be scathingly criticized for that reason alone, and the message they wish to convey will be lost.

Chalmers Johnson has some very important things to discuss. The fact that he's not an expert or fully informed on the events of 9-11 doesn't detract from that IMO. I don't believe that there is anything in any of his books that forwards the acceptance of the official 9-11 story, though I don't remember all the details from his book.
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CRH Donating Member (671 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 05:50 PM
Response to Reply #35
46. Excellent post on the 911 link, ...

I just love it when the lid pops open again on that can of worms.

I'm surprised that one didn't find the dungeon, you were very accurate, thorough, and compelling.

Question for you. Since you posted this in March of 2006, have you found a better account than Griffins book, 'The 911 Commission Report - Ommissions and Distortions'?

Also I understand as you have written above, the danger of authors acknowkedging LIHOP or MIHOP, receiving scathing reviews and perhaps even not finding a publisher. But still it can be stated, " if you subcribe to the official findings of the 911 commission, then ...". To blend otherwise well researched facts with fiction, IMHO, lends to the danger of acceptance of revisionist history. That is not to say everything Johnson has written is unworthy of thought, but it should be weighed with knowledge he accepts offical reasoning resting on questional foundations. Just my opinion, nada mas nada menus.
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Time for change Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 06:31 PM
Response to Reply #46
47. Actually, my 9-11 post did end up in the dungeon -- and after only 23 minutes
I thought Griffin's account was superb. No, I haven't found a better account, but then I haven't looked very hard for one. I do know, however, that Griffin has come out with a follow-up book, the purpose of which is to debunk his major critics.

In particular, there is a web site that is devoted to "debunking" 9-11 "conspiracy theories". It was pointed out to me by someone who responded to the above noted OP. I started to go through it. I found the points I read about less than fully convincing, which you can see in at least one of my responses, but I just didn't have the time to go through very many of them. Nor have I bought Griffin's follow-up book. Keeping up with this stuff can be a full time job.

I don't feel that mentioning the official story, without defending it, necessarily means that one subscribes to it. Consider the fact also that it takes a great deal of time to go through all the evidence and come to intelligent conclusions regarding the validity of the official story. Most authors who feel the need to mention the events of 9-11, which includes anyone writing about contemporary U.S. history, probably feel that they don't have the time to review the evidence in enough detail that they would be able to discuss it intelligently. Many may feel that it's not worth their time to do that -- given that probably few would pay much attention anyhow. Griffin did it, but then, (as far as I know) that's the only thing he writes about. I don't know, it's a tough call. But I've become accustomed to the fact very few people writing about contempory U.S. history will touch the subject. Even Michael Moore, in Faehrenheit 9-11, didn't challenge the main parts of the official story -- at least not enough to suggest LIHOP or MIHOP, though I'm certain he subscribes to one of those.

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CRH Donating Member (671 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 07:27 PM
Response to Reply #47
51. Thanks for the reply, ...
When I return to the states I'll look for Griffin's book and the follow up.

It is sad 911 has been buried and is an untouchable subject. The last decent research I read on it was Crossing the Rubicon by Ruppert, but it will never be accepted as mainstream. Though well researched and documented, there were parts I thought the supposition gave too much credit to the sophistication of the plan. But supposition is about all we are left with after the destruction of the crime scenes, no serious investigation, and the pervasive censorship. Many of us know what did not happen, (i.e. the official story), but few who will talk know what did happen.

The sad thing is to realize the whole society is living the political consequence of this farce, and neither party seems the least bit interested in changing the method of operation. Both parties seem content to base their foreign policy on the fear of terrorism, and the lies borne from their covered up crimes. The country was lost when no one demanded the truth, and every politician in Washington but one, allowed silence to continue the charade.

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Time for change Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 08:01 PM
Response to Reply #51
52. I found Griffin's book on the subject much more readable and well supported than Ruppert's
Edited on Thu Jan-03-08 08:02 PM by Time for change
You also might be very interested in this video if you haven't seen it:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=7866929448192753501

It's one of the most interesting videos I've ever seen.

One thing to keep in mind is that the Bush/Cheney "War on Terror" is a farce whether or not Bin Laden was really behind 9-11 and whether or not Bush/Cheney let it happen on purpose. Many authors, including Johnson, have made the point that the so-called "War on Terror" is a farce. I don't know how many of these authors subscribe to MIHOP or LIHOP privately. But they make the point effectively that the GWOT is a farce without invoking MIHOP or LIHOP. If they do privately subscribe to MIHOP or LIHOP they may well feel that invoking those ideas will, ironically, dilute the idea that the WOT is a farce, by discrediting themselves in the eyes of many of their readers. People like me don't have to worry about that because we're not selling books for a national audience.

Secondly, terrorism by Islamic fundamentalists is a threat for us whether or not they were behind 9-11. So, by acknowledging that terrorism by Islamic fundamentalists is a threat to us, and yet Bush's WOT is a farce, these authors are not fundamentally imparting false information IMO.
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BelgianMadCow Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 03:59 PM
Response to Original message
33. bookmarked
always love your threads, Time for change.

:toast:
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Time for change Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 06:33 PM
Response to Reply #33
48. Thank you BelgianMadCow
:toast:
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Danascot Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 04:19 PM
Response to Original message
34. Collapse was an amazing book
Important and highly recommended. It was like taking a semester long college course. If you aren't up to tackling the book, get an audio version. My library had it on CDs.

Just to briefly summarize one example. Easter Island was originally forested at the time of it's first colonization. Over a period of time, the people who settled the island cut down all the trees. At some point only a few trees remained and finally just one. It must have been clear to everyone that it was a mistake to decimate all the trees but even then, the decision was made to cut the last one. Without trees, they couldn't even build the ocean-going canoes that might have allowed them to escape to other islands. By the time it was discovered by European explorers the Easter Islanders were no more.

Could something similar happen to us on a global basis? Prof. Diamond makes it very clear that it could, and that it is almost inevitable unless some very radical changes take place.

An interesting tidbit is that all of the famous Easter Island statues faced inland, not outward beyond the shore of their own little world.

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hfojvt Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 05:05 PM
Response to Original message
37. what can I say?
I am not sure I read any books this year, except for the first two volumes of the Chronicles of Narnia. But I did read a number of your threads.
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greiner3 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 05:09 PM
Response to Original message
38. I wish I had 1/10 your reading time;
But there are 2 books I've read this year that I would like to share. Richard Dawkin's 'The god delusion' and Naomi Wolf's, 'The End of America: A Letter of Warning to a Young Patriot.' Except for that, I read about 6-7 college text books and would love to recommend them, however I find that material such as that has a very small audience.
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Time for change Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 05:21 PM
Response to Reply #38
40. Strangely, one reason I have more reading time than I used to have as recently as 3 years ago is
the development of arthritis of my hip. I used to play a lot of tennis in my spare time, and now I rarely play any more. But what the hell, reading good books can be as fulfilling as tennis, and more important as well.

If you're attending college, that must cut down on your time for reading other books quite a bit.

"The End of America" I had on my top 10 list, but then I had to bump it off. It's a damn important book though. I sure hope that it wakes up a few million people in this country. What is 'The God delusion' about?

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warren pease Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 05:35 PM
Response to Original message
42. Jeez, TfC...
And here I was proudly hacking my way through "Martial Law for Dummies" and the annotated version of "Green Eggs and Ham." I wonder if "The Shock Doctrine" is available in Cliff's Notes...


wp
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Time for change Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 06:35 PM
Response to Reply #42
49. I don't know, but that's one book that is so chok full of important information that I'd definitely
recommend reading the full book. I doubt that cliff notes could do it justice.
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Lisa Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 06:40 PM
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50. excellent reviews -- thanks!
I've only gotten as far as Diamond and Klein so far -- but I suspect I'll like the others just as much.
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katty Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 08:04 PM
Response to Original message
53. Great list, thanks!
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mdmc Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-03-08 08:10 PM
Response to Original message
54. thanks for the OP
Thanks for the OP. I watchin IA right now, but will read later.:kick:
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