Events Books


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Events Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Events
For the Sake of Peace: Seven Paths to Global Harmony
Published in Hardcover by Middleway Press (2001-02)
Author: Daisaku Ikeda
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Humanism Altruism and Righteous Compassion is the Way to Go
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-30
SGI President Ikeda's clean-cut and relatively important perspective on Peace is greatly emphasized in this book. His humanistic ideals which he incorporates from Nichiren Buddhism greatly reflect both his hope AND action toward a peaceful world. I particularly admired his propositions to make and enhance a more positive environment among our racially, socially and spiritually diversed society---given all for the sake of eveyrone's happiness and the achievement of peace. President Ikeda truly understands the formula needed to lead everyone to their own content and happiness and how can human beings create a more beneficial environment for themselves. His ideas on humanism, altruism and peace are realistic and something that is truly relevant in our disturbed society. A very good scholarly work worth every penny. You'll not regret reading this one.

A refreshing change from the usual esoteric Buddhist fare
Helpful Votes: 19 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-10
This excellent and well informed book will be of great interest to anyone interested in the historic and philosophic dynamics of our changing world. Ikeda is a wonderful writer whose understanding of Buddhism, Christianity and other world religions helps us to see current world conditions more clearly. His ability to incorporate the teachings of Shakyamuni Buddha and Nichiren into a discussion of world history and contemporary discourse will be welcomed by those who have felt confused by the esoteric approach of other Buddhist writings. As an avid reader and writer, Ikeda has cultivated great skill in presenting complex intellectual ideas in a way that makes them relevant to the everyday lives of individuals. Addressing such approaches to history and culture as relativism, universalism, orientalism, concepts of time and war cultures he makes a convincing presentation of peace and global harmony as attainable goals. The structure of this book is clear and easy to reference, making it an excellent text for teachers and activists. For a reader who has found so much of contemporary Buddhist writings alienating and unrealistic this book is a refreshing and exciting addition to social dialogue on how to create a better world. Highly recommended.

Enthusiastically recommended reading for peace activists
Helpful Votes: 19 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-18
For The Sake Of Peace: Seven Paths To Global Harmony, A Buddhist Perspective is the result of more than 25 years of UN Peace prize recipient, spiritual leader, educator, and philosopher Daisaku Ikeda's proposals to the United Nations and lectures at universities around the world. With his vision for achieving peace in the new century based upon the life- affirming teachings of Nichiren (13th century Japanese Buddhist teacher and reformer) as well as great world thinkers and philosophers ranging from Confucius, Plato, and Aristotle, to Tolstoy, Gandhi, and Toynbee, Ikeda reveals the issue of peace from the Buddhist perspective of compassion, the interconnectedness of all life, and an absolute respect for human life. For The Sake Of Peace offers "seven paths" ranging from self-mastery and dialogue to global awareness and disarmament that if taken will show humanity the way to live happily together on our finite planet. For The Sake Of Peace is enthusiastically recommended reading for peace activists, students of Buddhist philosophy, and those who have followed and appreciated Daisaku Ikeda's work and thought for the past three decades.

What we need today
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-26
Daisaku Ikeda outlines steps towards a peaceful planet.

Quoting philosophers, historians, heroes, he sets out a guide to making peace possible. "If you want peace, prepare for peace."

In this time of war, war and more war, to know there are people actively working towards a peaceful planet and future is very encouraging. Ikeda explains how we each have to start with ourselves, our family, our community. Through dialogue, and a commitment to truly desire peace.

For those who believe we do not have to go to war to make a peaceful world.

Events
The Foundation of Leadership: Enduring Principles to Govern Our Lives
Published in Hardcover by Excalibur Press (1997-01)
Author: Bo Short
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Teaches the five characteristics of leadership
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-01
This book is a must read for anyone who wishes to know about the founding principles of America and why we must instill those principles in our children. Bo Short's writing style is easy to read, and using five great forefathers of our Country relates one trait from each of them that was instrumental in giving birth to our country. Vision, Courage, Perserverance, Responsibility and Character. These are the values that this great country of ours was founded on. Wherever you are in life, if you learn those five principles and apply them, nothing will stop you and it can be done. If you instill those five principles in your children then you have successfully laid the groundwork for America and the world, for an even better life in the 21st Century.

An essay on the true leaders in our nation's history.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1998-10-29
The author breaks down the characteristics of leadership to the reader with a unique and forceful style that excites, interests and motivates. Well written and easily readable, you will feel at home with this classic the moment you pick it up. One of the few books I have read that leaves you wishing it was longer and yet at the same time you know that any author would be hard pressed to reach the same level of excellence that has been set with this work. First rate in every respect.

Concise well-written must read for every American
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1998-10-24
Bo Short does an excellent job of boiling down the topic of leadership into five true foundational characteristics. Excellent historical references mixed with quotes from today's Senators make this book a grippingly fast read. I recommend it very highly for readers of all ages who desire a concise picture of what makes American leadership great.

This should be required reading for every American.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-17
This book was enjoyable to read, hard to put down, and provided inspiration in myself to motivate my thoughts into action. The easy reading format of our very own history gave a huge insight of our Founding Fathers and the feelings of the age, more than any text book. This should be required reading for every American so they may be inspired into action, dream big, and do something. I know I am.

Events
The Foundation: A Great American Secret; How Private Wealth is Changing the World
Published in Hardcover by PublicAffairs (2007-01-09)
Author: JOEL FLEISHMAN
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Average review score:

Examining a Big but Little Known Area
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-08
Foundations are a subset of Non-Profit organizations that have become surprisingly big busines in the United States. Somewhere around 1/7th of the business in the country is conducted by these organizations. Somewhere around 1/9th of the workforce is employed by one. They have become an integral part of the American economy.

In this book Mr. Fleishman looks at Foundations (a number of which he has been associated as employee, trustee or some other capacity). He examines what makes a foundation successful, and how some have failed. He offers insight and advice on how to make a foundation more successful, and at the same time how foundations should have an obligation to become more accountable since they received special tax considerations from the Government. He suggests that this accountability should be done by the foundations voluntarily. However, Mr. Fleishman is an attorney and believes that if voluntary response is not forthcoming then new legal requirements should be placed upon them to require more openness.

Essential Reading for Philanthropists
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-25
I'm a high tech entrepreneur turned social entrepreneur. This book gives an excellent analysis of the foundation world from an optimistic perspective combined with a healthy amount of constructive criticism.

Something that makes this book standout are the wealth of real world examples of both success and failure. In addition to those in the book, there's a companion piece with 100 case studies available for free download as well as purchasable as a paperback book.

What I enjoyed very much was meaty discussion of key aspects of the foundation structure. Fleishman's style is direct and clear: his points are made well and are backed up with real examples. One of the best books I've read about the social sector!

Deserves serious reading from people who want to make a difference.
Helpful Votes: 22 out of 22 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-05
Joel Fleishman's book lays an excellent bedrock of history underneath its discussion of philanthropy as a great element of American tradition. We live in days of some staggering examples - from Warren Buffet's living bequest of billions, to the fine work of Bill and Melinda Gates - and many others. But rather than see this as some product of the new millennium - Fleishman shows how the new avatars of corporate generosity are following a fine tradition. More than this, the author shows that certain gifting strategies have been leveraged for huge social benefit. For those who are thinking - at whatever scale - of giving to support a cause, this book sets out the strategies that have produced most benefit. This is an excellent, thoughtful piece of work on a topic that currently has wide currency. Well worth reading.

ESSENTIAL Primer, the Good, the Bad, and the Recommended
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-19
This is a very helpful book, indeed, a unique book. Here are some of the notes I took. As one of 24 co-founders of a new 501c3, the Earth Intelligence Network, created to provide decision support to foundations, the United Nations, NGOs, and others seeking to address the ten high-level threats to Humanity, I could not have found a more relevant work.

A few notes:

* Foundations are the dynamo of social change, with three roles varying from foundation to foundation: as driver, as partner, or as catalyst.
* The author is very critical of the general state of mismanagement and in some cases, lack of clear ethical guidelines or stated values, and says the field must do better.
* In his view, and his case studies bear this out, foundations are an enormous force for good, but they are unregulated, unaccountable, and if they are to retain the tax breaks and the trust of the people, they must change their process, their governance, and their attitude--this will, in the author's words, strengthen the social contract within which they are given so much leeway.
* He states that foundations *need* a decision-making process (music to my ears) and also a progress-checking system.
* He clearly communicates the willy-nilly state of many foundation programs, their lack of boundaries and focus, and hence their relative lack of impact. He states that many underperform, are insulated, and are arrogant.
* A positive quote (the book is generally positive and constructive) from page 3: "Foundations enable the creation of countless civil sector organizations--groups dealing with human rights, civil liberties, social policy experimentation, public advocacy, environmental protection, knowledge generation, human capital building, and service delivery, among other causes--and assist them in building national, regional, and local constituencies that move into the forefront of continuing social change. Elsewhere in the book he points out that in many areas, foundations preceeded and inspired later government programs.
* He is careful to point out that foundations have had limited success with education, health care, and poverty, and that in the face of global challenges (e.g. the ten high level threats to Humanity) the best they can do is educate the public and press government for action. I disagree. If foundations could collaborate with the United Nations UN) and leverage the Multinational Decision Support Center (MDSC) that we are trying to create in Tampa, Florida, they could among themselves agree to take on specific elements of a $230 billion a year program that Medard Gabel has been researching for ten years.
* He points out that US foundations take in 1.1 trillion a year in revenues, but only dole out $33.6 billion a year. In my view, given the enormous value of preventive action, I believe the foundations should be required to dole out 20% of their endowment in the first year of a concerted global program, and then so much as to keep the endowment steady, not hoarding and growing.
* While the "overarching objective" of foundations is large-scale social change, the author notes that they are peripheral players *unless they can organize and catalyze in the aggregate--precisely what the UN and the MDSC could help them do.
* He laments the current lack among most foundations of the "scientific method" that the Carnegies and Rockefellers first imposed, to wit: 1) get the facts; 2) identify problems precisely; 3) study options for action; 4) identify supporting and opposing stakeholders; and 5) plan for action. He blames the predominantly academic leadership of foundations today for the loss of "business" rigor and focus.
* The bottom line in this book appears with regularity in these pages: without goal setting and progress measuring, most foundation programs are simply arbitrary give-a-ways. He admires the Carnegie "Appraisal List" as a good starting point. He points out that neither inputs nor outputs matter; what matters is outcome.
* He lists all that ails foundations, a list that includes arrogance, discourtesy, inaccessibility, arbitrariness, failure to communicate, foundation Attention Deficit Disorder, lack of accountability, invisibility, scholarly void, and political vulnerability.
* The balance of the book consists of chapters that are extremely helpful, and here to whet the potential buyer's interest, I will simply list five core aspects of the book.
* Strategies and practices include (with subheadings not shown here):
* Creating and disseminating knowledge
* Building human capital
* Public policy advocacy
* Changing public attitudes
* Changing the law
* Creating a blue ribbon commission
* Offering an award or prize
* Building a model through a pilot program
* Financing litigation
* Building institutions
* Building physical plant
* Catalyzing partnerships among foundation
* Catalyzing partnerships with the for-profit sector
* Ways of recognizing impact include:
* Major benefits to the public
* Expansion of knowledge
* Helping to launch a movement
* Catalyzing an urgent social change
* Taking an initiative to scale
* Characteristics of high-impact programs (with much detail for each):
* Focus
* Alignment
* Due diligence about the problem
* Due diligence about the solution
* Intelligent talent selection
* Due diligence about prospective grant-receiving organizations
* Entrepreneurial riskp-taking
* Optemistic thinking
* Independence
* Effective grantee selection and management
* Long-term thinking and commitment
* Maintaining focus and alignment over time

There is a chapter on how foundations fail, and certainly this entire book, and especially this chapter, need to be read by any foundation executive--or any prospective donor to any foundation.

This is a truly great and helpful book. I put it down thinking to myself, "my goodness, not only does the United Nations need an Assistant Secretary General for Decision Support, but so also do the foundations in the aggregate." Worthy book!

A More Secure World: Our Shared Responsibility--Report of the Secretary-General's High-level Panel on Threats, Challenges and Change
Preparing for the 21st century: An appraisal of U.S. intelligence : report of the Commission on the Roles and Capabilities of the United States Intelligence Community
The 9/11 Commission Report: Final Report of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States (Authorized Edition)
On Intelligence: Spies and Secrecy in an Open World
The New Craft of Intelligence: Personal, Public, & Political--Citizen's Action Handbook for Fighting Terrorism, Genocide, Disease, Toxic Bombs, & Corruption
Peacekeeping Intelligence: Emerging Concepts for the Future
Information Operations: All Information, All Languages, All the Time
THE SMART NATION ACT: Public Intelligence in the Public Interest

Events
The Frank Conspiracy
Published in Paperback by Lulu.com (2003-10-22)
Author: Olivia Frank
List price: $26.08
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Average review score:

Honest And Compelling About Espionage And More
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-23
A thought-provoking read about a truly remarkable life. I found The Frank Conspiracy absorbing, touching and shocking. Not all glamour and excitement, a spy's existence is dangerous and lonely. A tremendous book.

An Outstanding Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-20
I couldn't put this book down. Powerful, poignant, vivid, evocative, ultimately inspiring. Every woman and man will gain a deeper understanding to the meaning of life when they read this captivating book. There's nothing else like it on the market, it really is unique. I recommend you read it before they make the movie. Not just spies, its about one woman's fight against injustice, its about love and death, its about thrills and spills, its about religion and politics, its about everything important. This book is my bible, its so sparky and compelling I've read it again and again.

A SENSATIONAL SPY BOOK!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-12
Spy Olivia Frank battles against injustice to expose a shocking British Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) plot to assassinate the life of a well-known multi-millionaire who was forced into exile from the United Kingdom. A real eyeopener it lifts the lid on a despicable scandal to dupe the public. A true story it was filmed by UK television investigator Roger Cook's The Cook Report, too hot to transmit so buy it before they ban it!

Excellent spy book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-21
A real eye-opener, exciting, moving, ultimately inspiring. A book for everyone, it uncovers the cloak and dagger world of spies and reveals the hardships encountered by a genuine spy. I found myself unable to put this down and told all my friends they must read it too. An extraordinary story about real people. find out what's going on.

Events
Friendly Fire?: The Good, The Bad And The Corrupt
Published in Hardcover by 1st Books Library (2003-08-26)
Author: Stephen K. Peach
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Average review score:

Buy This Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-15
Buy This Book! I'm serious, you need to read about the corruption that the author went through. As far as I know, no other officer has ever been shot TWICE by other cops and lived to tell the tale. I'm amazed it isn't a movie yet, and what he went through after exposing more crime, the people running this California City (close to Los Angeles) need to be in Jail. If your into true crime, this book sounds like fiction, but it is true. All I can say is BUY IT, even just to learn how your government works against our interests, just to save themselves money and to protect their own rear-ends. I'm staying away from that area, and once you read this book, you will want to as well.

To serve and Protect....Themselves
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-02
SAN BERNARDINO, California - Corruption, intimidation and rape are not words most would normally associate with members of the nation's police forces. However, power sometimes intoxicates and can make one feel like they are above the law, even if they are sworn to protect it. Stephen K. Peach tells a story of internal corruption and cover-up in the San Bernardino Police Department in his shocking and revealing new book, Friendly Fire? The Good, The Bad and The Corrupt.
Stephen Peach emigrated from England to the United States in 1986 to follow his dream of becoming a police officer. After becoming a U.S. Citizen, he began his career in 1991 with the San Bernardino Police Department and became a highly regarded gang investigator and S.W.A.T. officer. His personable style encouraged trust and confidence in the people he met, and his eye for detail helped solve numerous crimes. In 1998, things fell apart. He was shot twice in two weeks on two separate S.W.A.T. calls. The second time occurred as he was serving a warrant on a former San Bernardino detective. Peach says that his supervisor shot him in the leg to initiate a gun battle between the former detective and Peach's fellow officers. The wound nearly killed him. He fought hard to return to his post and later discovered an officer in the department was raping women.
When one of the victims named the offending officer, the department ignored it and looked to cover up his crimes. Peach was singled out as a liability and had to go. Now, he tells his story. With Friendly Fire?, he hopes to expose the corruption that he discovered in his own department and redeem some of the honor of his badge. "The pattern of corruption in San Bernardino is a disgrace to all the officers that are honest and put their lives in jeopardy every day to serve the citizens. The purpose of his book is to hold those that are corrupt accountable," Peach says. Friendly Fire? is his first book.

Exposing Police Corruption
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-07
This book exposes the dirty underside of Law Enforcement politics. I was a highly regarded gang and SWAT officer that was the victim of 2 accidental? shootings within 2 weeks of each other by other officers. The second time I was shot by my supervisor while serving a warrant on an ex-detective. I was shot to initiate a gunfight between a SWAT team and the detective, it worked, the team believing that the ex-detective had shot me tried to shoot the ex-detective. I returned to work 5 months later, disabled and slightly disillusioned however I continued to work the streets and I used my vast network of informants to find a Police officer rapist. I tried in vain to bring about an internal investigation for a year to expose the rapist however the department turned their corruption upon me to discredit me, trying to frame me with a crime they knew I didn't commit. If it became common knowledge that I had tried to expose the police officer rapist, the dozens of victims could sue and bankrupt the City. The San Bernardino Police Department protected the rapist as he had witnessed drug money thefts in search warrants that the administration took part in. "What happened to me is common in Police Agencies, if they could do this to me, someone who understand the law, what else is going on?" My book exposes the corruption that City Governments allow to occur to protect their civil liability. Many other corrupt activities that I have exposed in my book have never been exposed before. This is a true story of many different crimes that administrators and their corrupt subordinates have committed that they would rather not have exposed.

Wow, this is an amazing and shocking story....
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-26
This book chronicles the working and corruption of San Bernardino Police dept. Scary because it's non-fiction. Very interesting as to how the police can deal with all elements that they are exposed to on a daily basis. How certain departments condone a superior attitude to the people they are suppposed to serve. This was a real wake up call to what goes on behind the Blue line. I can only hope Stephen Peach gets the justice he rightly deserves.

Events
Galilee Flowers, or Flowers of Galilee
Published in Paperback by BookSurge Publishing (2005-09-20)
Author: Israel Shamir
List price: $17.99
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Average review score:

comparable with all the best essayist.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-28
I was stunned by the quality of Shamir's writing. No dry review can convey the richness of his descriptions of the Palestinian landscape and people, and their brutalisation and dispossession by Israel. This is up with the best travely writing, and the best literature ever. The eye and mind just effortlessly gulp up his writing. He is controversial, not just because he exposes the injustice of the occupation, but because he goes to the heart of the matter ( where few dare look), identifying the locus of Israel's power in the financial power of US jewish elites. I think this is obviously correct, but he goes even further; he identifies some facets of jewish culture and religion which he considers malign. I think this should not be off limits, considering the amount of coverage given to those who claim that there is something inherently violent in Islam. But I don't accept his answer - that jews convert to Christianity. I think it's time we all outgrew religion, of any kind. This latter trend in his writing, is not so evident here as in his later writing where it intrudes too much for my taste.
Even if you violently disagree with Shamir, few could fail to be impressed by his writing. At one point, he even draws an analogy with the tv science fiction series, Babylon 5 (my all-time favourite), which shows, to me, that he has a profound sense of what's valuable.Babylon 5 - The Complete Television Series (5-Pack)

A rich and deeply felt examination...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-27
A rich and deeply felt examination...

Details life in the Occupied Territories with sensitivity, insight and a fine eye for moral ambiguities. Highly recommended!

The Rarest of Poetic Geniuses Who Writes in Prose
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-09
It's books like this that remind you some things definitely need to be put into book form to be properly appreciated. I remember reading it sitting outside of a Starbucks several nights in a row and having revelation after revelation alter my perception of the world - and for the better, I knew as one who experiences an epiphany.

The beautiful essays in this book show the heart of someone who truly loves Palestine and its people and makes the reader share that love. I'm ashamed to think of how I used to fall for the portrayal, by "the masters of discourse," of the Palestinians. Shamir, through this book, most certainly helped wise me up.

Shamir has been accused of being anti-Semitic, but actually this formerly Jewish convert to Orthodox Christianity is not against any innocent people, be they Jewish or non-Jewish. He is against the ideology of Judaic Supremacism, and God bless him for that.

Reading this book is so rewarding that I can't even come up with words to explain how I feel about it. Divinely inspired, for the most part, I scarcely think are words of hyperbole.

This man loves the holy land
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-21
With every word, every phrase, Israel Shamir displays his love
of the holy land. I've read lots of books on the Middle East,
but this is - by far - the most compelling. I really cannot
express how important this book is to me, so I'll include a
quote from Nick Pretzlick, which I agree with wholeheartedly:

"Israel Shamir is in love with the Holy Land. He has a
passion for the land and its people; he believes the
two are umbilically linked. For him there is only one
viable solution to the conflict that has ravaged the
region for so long and that is the one state solution.
Shamir is a humanist and although he is scathing about
Palestine's enemies - the Jewish elite - he takes
pride in and writes lovingly about the courageous
Jews, who resist Israeli crimes.

Flowers of Galilee is a collection of essays, so full
of affection - such an elegy of love - that, reading
it for the first time, I felt impelled to delay the
turning of pages, preferring instead to linger over
images - to savour the sentiments.

Shamir does not pull any punches. He challenges
conventional thinking, but he does so with honesty,
affection and such thorough understanding and
knowledge that his outspokenness is reasonable and
rational. Flowers of Galilee is an eye opener - a
learning experience. It is also enchanting."

Events
The Geography of Hope: A Tour of the World We Need
Published in Paperback by Vintage Canada (2008-07-29)
Author: Chris Turner
List price:

Average review score:

At last, an environmental book that doesn't make me despair
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-05
The trouble with the majority of writing about climate change and other environmental worries is that they make people think, "Oh, hell. It's too late anyway. Why even try to do anything?" The Geography of Hope is an antidote to this kind of thinking. I am now 54 years old, and when I was 20 years old or so, I devoured ecological jeremiads such as Rachel Carson's Silent Spring. The trouble is, back then I actually thought my civilization was doomed to fall apart before the end of the 20th century. This, fortunately, didn't happen and in the meantime I got sidelined by matters too complex to detail here. Now at last I am returning to my environmental roots, but I find I simply no longer have the patience and strength to wade through dour predictions of ecological gloom and doom. Chris Turner's The Geography of Hope is the first book on this topic that I have felt glad to pick up, because it shows that it is really possible to put the brakes to the looming climate train wreck before it occurs and that sustainability is already within our grasp using existing technology, if only we would commit to it. How inspiring!

Inspiring
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-15
If anyone is feeling that the world is coming to an end because of human folly...then you must read "The Geography Of Hope"Here you will meet individuals all over the world who are making the world a better place and there is HOPE !!!! Brav0 !!!

What exists NOW that can be building blocks for a truly sustainable world?
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-02
Chris Turner takes a year-long tour around the world, visiting places that are implementing solutions for sustainable living. A zero-net energy island in Denmark. Community Supported Agriculture in the southern USA. Plug-in hybrid cars. Earthship homes in New Mexico. Radical improvements in waste recycling in various industries. Examples of New Urbanism in city planning and architecture in Florida, the UK, Denmark, Colorado. Mass transit and city policy in Portland. Finhorn in the UK and Tibetan refugee communities in India -- for agriculture and community and deliberate living. A micro-hydro installation in a remote village on the Burma/Thai border built by local villagers, folks from a nearby refugee camp students, and local NGOs. He looks at questions like "what kinds of planning and structures inspire community?" "What exists NOW that can be building blocks for a truly sustainable world?" Inspiring and casual at the same time.

What would Homer do?
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-27
I have no background in environmentalism or connection to the author. As a general reader I thoroughly enjoyed this book and found it informative, inspiring and entertaining in equal parts. An unequivocal five stars!
The author is a journalist and disillusioned environmental activist. He is also a new father, and, concerned for his daughter's future, decided to do a global survey of existing, practical methods of achieving environmental sustainability. His perspective is what makes this book so refreshing: tired of the mainstream environmental movement's two main weapons of guilt and apocalyptic predictions, he searches for not just the means but the inspiration to change the way the world's resources are used. I found this practical, hopeful approach much more compelling than the doom-and-gloom, armchair analyst approach of, say, George Monbiot's Heat.
Potential readers should keep in mind that the author's previous opus was Planet Simpson, an exploration of the cultural significance of an animated cartoon series. This is a mixed blessing. On the one hand, it informs his writing with a pop-culture sensibility that makes for entertaining asides and a contemporary grasp of how cultural fashions evolve. On the other hand, the one time I felt we may be getting a little too much information was in the final chapter. There he describes how the epiphany of embracing environmental sustainability occurred to him at a Seattle Lebowski Fest, a cult-like celebration of a movie that he admits to "only begin to understand after the fifth viewing". Presumably fatherhood changed his priorities, and rather than strain his credibility, I found this geeky anecdote disarming. A Greenpeace diatribe this is not.

Events
God Willing: Political Fundamentalism in the White House, the 'War on Terror' and the Echoing Press
Published in Hardcover by Pluto Press (2004-08-01)
Author: David Domke
List price: $85.00
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A must-read for any who love democracy
Helpful Votes: 22 out of 25 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-25
I have followed David Domke's research for more than five years and have appreciated his thorough documentation and analsyis of a phenomenen that is largely ignored by the mainstream media and unknown to the American public. The phenomenen of political fundamentalism, so carefully covered in his new book, "God Willing," is a must-read for anyone who cherishes American democracy.



Domke's book is the product of meticulous analysis of hundreds of Bush administration speeches, news reports and public opinion polls between the September 11 terrorist attacks and the end of major combat in Iraq. The research clearly shows that Bush strategically cloaked his religiously conservative worldview in nationalistic language and ideas that were reflected consistently by the media and the general public. This religious-cum-political worldview, in turn, framed public discourse in ways that seriously threaten freedoms that are at the heart of a democracy. Complex issues were reduced to simplistic binaries ("You are either with us or you are with the terrorists."). Criticism of the administration's policies was labeled un-American. The War on Terror and invastion of Iraq were justified as America's calling such that dissent was seen as defying God's will.



All Americans, regardless of their political leanings, must agree that such rhetoric, when echoed by the press, limits the free and open discourse that is fundamental to democratic governance. Domke deserves great credit for stepping forward to call on the news media and the public to demand more wide-ranging dialogue, including dissent, on the important issues facing our country. In my book, he's a true patriot.



A Nation At Perill
Helpful Votes: 30 out of 33 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-29
Over my lifetime, I have come to have a healthy respect for the American free press. Recently, however, I have found myself questioning what I read in the papers and hear coming from other media. Thanks to David Domke and this book, I now understand that my increasing concerns about the American media were well founded. Domke presents clear evidence that George Bush and his staff developed a calculated policy designed to stop all opposition to a Bush/Republican plan dealing with a post 9/11 world and to shut down any healthy exchange of diverse ideas. Based on the research, these actions by the Bush administration have led to an interconnection of religious fundamentalism and political policy that is little different from that of the Taliban or al Qaida - with the obvious inserting of Bush as the person who professes to be carrying out God's will. Domke also presents evidence that these actions by Bush were echoed by the mainstream media so substantially that a policy has been established that essentially says, "you are either with the president or you are against democracy and for the terrorists." Further, there is the suggestion that to challenge the president is to put the nation at great peril. Domke has courage in presenting these research findings. The actions of the Bush administration and the news media were directly counter to fundamental American democratic ideals and principles, and Domke's work makes that clear.

Bush's political fundamentalism undermines democracy
Helpful Votes: 36 out of 38 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-25
After September 11, 2001, I knew I was frustrated with the Bush administration's use of civil religion to promote its political goals, but I had a hard time articulating my uneasiness. I owe David Domke a debt of gratitude. His book helped me understand what I have been feeling and thinking. Domke uses the phrase "political fundamentalism" to describe the way the Bush administration's uses civil religion.

Political fundamentalism, according to Domke, has four major characteristics:
·A black and white world view that has no patience with complexities
·A sense of urgency that drives towards immediate and enduring action
·Identification of the Christian faith with the values of freedom and liberty
·Intolerance of dissent

For each of these four aspects, Domke presents excerpts from speeches by President Bush between September 11, 2001 and May, 2003, when Bush declared "mission accomplished" in Iraq. Domke analyzes the vocabulary and concepts in Bush's speeches that manifest this approach used so effectively by Bush's administration. Domke notes the way those same words and concepts appear in editorials and TV commentary within a few days of each speech.

The net effect, according to Domke, of the Bush administration's political fundamentalism, and the echoing of those views in the press, is a compromise of the very principles that make democracy work: discussion of various points of view and the willingness to take the time to reach some level of consensus. In fact, Domke argues that our administration is doing the very same kinds of things that the violent Islamic fundamentalists are doing: using religion to justify self-interest.

Everyone who feels uneasy about the Bush Administration's use of religious images, as well as those who have concerns about the way the press helped Bush advance his agenda, should read this book.

Stolen Democracy, Stolen Chrisitanity
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-23
Domke shows how the fundamentalist politics based on fundamentalist religion has usurped the democracy "of the people, by the people and for the people". The black and white, right and wrong stance of President Bush and his administration has supplanted the values of the teachings of Jesus Christ. Domke shows how language crafted to fit fundamentalist politics can only be countered with language from a different world view - the language of a world view based in hope not fear.

Events
The Good Death : The New American Search to Reshape the End of Life
Published in Hardcover by Bantam (1997-10-01)
Author: Marilyn Webb
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Important information everyone should know!
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-19
The Good Death provided me with information that everyone should know! If you have a loved one facing a trminal illness this is the book that you should read. I was especially grateful for the information about pain management, about what to expect, and to learn why we fail so often in this country to make people comfortable in their final days, how our "war on drugs" has tied the hands of doctors and resulted in dying patients being under medicated, often times grossly under medicated even hospices, and what you can do to insure that your loved on will not suffer.

Amazing insight to how modern issues affect our society's view on death
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-02
You cannot walk away from this book without a new persepective on how modern issues have affected the death experience. Marilyn Webb not not only brings insight to the reader on how death affects the family and friends, but also the dying. She presents a breadth of knowledge on so many point of views without pushing one or the other, because she knows death is a personal experience.

Entheogens: Professional Listing
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-03
"The Good Death" has been selected for listing in "Religion and Psychoactive Sacraments: An Entheogen Chrestomathy." http://www.csp.org/chrestomathy

Many views of dying in America
Helpful Votes: 86 out of 87 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-09
Offering no soft, simple answers, this book gives a troubling look at many different views of dying in America. A necessary read for anyone interested in not just the spiritual side of dying, but the practical, political, difficult aspects of dying.

When I started reading books on dying (Final Gifts by Maggie Callanan, Patricia Kelley; The Grace in Dying by Kathleen Singh), I read books that gave me hope and comfort in dealing with my own mortality. This book made the hair on my neck rise up.

It begins by shattering illusions (the ones I'd built up) about having a pain-free, easy death. There are insurance companies, personal opinions, differing agendas of a variety of institutions that come into play.

In short, some people have an easier death than others. Webb writes in an easy to read, article style. She begins with a chapter called "Dying Easy", about the nearly beautiful, fairly comfortable death of Judith Hardin, who at 36 dies at home with her husband and children.

"Dying Hard," is based on Webb's personal interviews and experiences with the death of Peter Cicione. Cicione died a death more painful than it needed to be, largely due to medical staff's fears that this dying man was misusing morphine, might overdose or use so much medication that the drugs would no longer be effective (not true).

In "The Sorcerer's Apprenctice" and "When Death Becomes a Blessing," Webb focuses on the history of medical control of pain, the prolonging of life with new medical techniques and modern pain control through the works of Dr. Kathleen Foley, director of neurology pain service at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. Foley estimated that 5% of the patients she was seeing were "in unassuageable pain." Webb's conservative estimate offers that "109,500 people a year die with unrelieved suffering." Much of this is due to outdated information, old rules, and misunderstandings about how much medication a dying person in severe pain can and should get. She offers the possibility that terminally ill patients who want to commit suicide or look for assistance in dying might not do this, if their pain could be properly handled.

She has chapters about the legal conflicts for families who want comatose relatives off of life-support systems, with detailed information about Karen Quinlan and Nancy Cruzan's cases and the affects on their families long after these women died.

"Bearing the Burden" focuses on what happens to the lives of families with a terminally ill member - "The sad secret that many don't want to admit is that care at home, wonderful as it can be in helping a patient to a good death, is hard on families. Home care may allow for those close, intimate, late-night times with the dying family member...but there are also the difficult times: changing diapers, losing sleep or feeling intense anxiety because the patient is in pain or can't breath..."

This first half of the book is tough reading, but necessary - for there is still a lot of work to be done to make dying easier. The second half of the book deals with hospice; assisted dying (suicides); spirituality in dying.

She closes with 10 common factors 'good deaths' have - 1) open, ongoing communication with doctors, patients, families 2) preservation of the patient's decision-making powers for as long as possible 3) sophisticated pain control 4) limits on excessive treatment (medical interventions, per the patient) 5) focus on preserving the patient's quality of life 6) emotional support 7) financial support 8) family support 9) spiritual support 10) patient isn't abandoned by the medical staff even when curative treatment is no longer required.

She also has 10 changes, which she believes need to be made to change the culture of dying from a cold, hospital-set detachment to a family affair. These encompass everything from expanding health insurance to cover needs currently not met, to legalization of assisted suicide.

If you have given little thought to some of the darker sides of dying, focusing as I have on the spiritual and more uplifting side, this book offers a lot of food for thought. Well-written, easy to read, disturbing.

Even if you have different opinions than Webb has (about assisted suicide, for example), this book is a good read to investigate the other side's information and arguments.

Events
The Good Neighbor: How the United States Wrote the History of Central America and the Caribbean (New Look at History)
Published in Paperback by Pantheon (1988-11-28)
Author: George Black
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the lessons of history - still skipping class
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-11
i read this book almost 8 years ago while travelling in central america. i forgot its title then but never forgot its message. i have only just tracked it down - it was worth the wait and what it has to say is every bit as important as i remembered it. perhaps now (post 11th september) it is even more poignant, illustrating the inability of the 'west' to learn from mistakes in its foreign policy, how the lives of others are affected by this and how our complicity in this debases our own humanity. with this book, i understood so much more than i could otherwise have done, the feelings of the people i met in C.Am, particularly in nicaragua. i love the people there, the lack of malice and bitterness they are entitled to, that i felt on their behalf.
it is an essential read, for anyone interested in global politics, for anyone thinking of going travelling there, for anyone...well, for anyone.

Highly readable history of Yankee meddling below the border
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-04
The history of U.S. involvment south of its border is an ugly and painful one, full of rapacious corporations, support for torture and dictatorships, and dripping in racism. Bringing this sordid history to light is Black, who makes the history both entertaining and powerful. In a fast-reading book, loaded with photos, political cartoons, and illustrations, Black manages to swiftly educate Americanos of all kinds about this amazing history. Highly recommended!

Not just for classes
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-10
This book was required reading for a history course I took at university. It is one of the most memorable books I read while at university; in fact I actually re-read it cover-to-cover while in law school. The writing is entertaining and it has a very clever layout with interesting historical photos and illustrations. The author describes the historical events covered by the book in a fresh and persuasive style which is rarely seen in books about history or politics. I wish Black or other authors would produce more works like this on other periods of history or political topics.

Great text for classes
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-02
It is a crime that George Black's Good Neighbor has been out of print. Written with a wry style and a British detachment from the assumptions of U.S. culture, Black explores the history of what he regards as a neurotic United States romping though Central America from the Spanish American war onward. While I disagree with his premise that there is an irrationality to U.S. behavior in Latin America, my students love this book. Beautifully and intelligently illustrated.


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