Governments


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Book reviews for "Governments" sorted by average review score:

Banking on Privilege: The Politics of Spanish Financial Reform
Published in Hardcover by Cornell Univ Pr (November, 1997)
Author: Sofia A. Perez
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An outstanding book about economic and political power
This amazing book focuses on the relationship between the economic power of Spain's largest financial institutions and the political power of successive Spanish governments. It gives an excellent view of how economic power manages to control the three legal powers of the State in modern European democracies. Definitively a must read!!

The best book on the politics of Spanish banking
This book is a great example of social-science research on the politics of financial reform. Although focused on the Spanish banking sector, it makes comparisons with other European countries, especially France. Easily one of the best political analyses of the power of private banks in emerging economies. Highly recommended for those interested in understanding the forthcoming European Economic and Monetary Union of 1999.


The Basic Symbols of the American Political Tradition
Published in Paperback by Catholic Univ of Amer Pr (March, 1995)
Authors: Willmoore Kendall and George W. Carey
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Letter from Independence Mall, Phil., PA

"It's probably the best thing George Carey ever worked on." "It's one of the most important books I ever read." "It changed the way I think about America."

Willmoore Kendall's classic work, The Basic Symbols of the American Political Tradition, provides an understanding which can only be described as refreshing of the political and cultural tradition out of which the Philadelphia Constitution was forged, and The United States of America was founded. Basic Symbols seeks to determine what propositions and ideals America was founded upon, and is thus committed to, and whether these are the ideals currently accepted as true, and often presented as neatly summed up in the Bill of Rights and in that well worn understanding of that passage of the Declaration of Independence: "...all men are created equal... ." Basic Symbols warns that the true tradition may seem anathema to some modern historians and Americans alike who wished it weren't so, but Basic Symbols sets out to present the truth anyway.

This single volume of political science and historical inquiry handily challenges the traditional orthodoxy, or the ignorance, that surrounds the founding in a novel manner: by a close inspection of the facts, and more importantly, the application of the analytical method-the hermeneutic-of Erik Voegelin, to the facts. Kendall's book is almost worth the read just to see the theories and teachings of Erik Voegelin briefly explicated and then put into fruitful action, and if nothing else, Basic Symbols can serve as a spring board for further study not into debates about America's founding, but into the works of this important yet often overlooked historian.

Kendall starts with the Mayflower Compact of (1620), and then examines the General Orders of Connecticut(1638), the Body of Liberties of Massachusetts Bay(1641), the Virginia Declaration of Rights(1776), our own Declaration of Independence(1776), the Constitution(1787-1789) and finally the Bill of Rights(1789). Kendall slowly teases out a common thread--our tradition--that runs its course, unfolds, and develops over this stretch of time and through these early experiences and experiments in self-government on this side of the Atlantic. Basic Symbols also tackles in this time span, and in the history of America since, a problem common to all political traditions: derailment.

Basic Symbols identifies the Gettysburg address as a watershed in the political tradition of America, made possible by a partial derailment in the years preceding the Civil War. Today, the two incompatible traditions are still with us and their friction is at the root of much of our present day political discord; so much so that to ask and seek the answer to the question, "What is the tradition amongst us?" is the very reason why Basic Symbols was written.

Rather than the rights-speak and emphasis upon rights that has grown out of the elevation of the Bill of Rights, and the tortured understanding of 'equality' that has sprung from the Declaration, Basic Symbols instead proffers a formidable, and well supported, alternative; the true tradition amongst us holds (or held) the supremacy of the general political will of the community; the legislature through which this is expressed in a very slow, careful, and deliberative fashion; a virtuous people from which these governing bodies are elected, and the concomitant conviction of a virtuous people in a higher law than that of any secular government.

Basic Symbols notes that any mention of rights, any ethos of equality, etc., are nowhere to be found in our tradition as founding symbols; they were understood as only the possible concerns for the deliberations of a political community after the establishment of its aims and purposes. Thus, they are not the starting points from which the uniquely American order and tradition is defined. This explains why all forms of variants on "the common good," "better ordering...and preservation," were the starting points for, and of paramount importance to, the drafters of everything from the Mayflower Compact to our own Constitution. Kendall does well to further point out why the Bill of Rights was opposed to a man by the framers of the Constitution, lending only more support to his thesis. His analysis of the Declaration and the true meaning of "...all men are created equal..." places the Declaration and the Founding in a whole new light: the light of the American political tradition he identifies which provides a better explication and understanding of these documents, much like a better fitting solution to a puzzle. And this is just to name a few of the most important points. Kendall does well to document and explain the meaning, significance, and importance of all the symbols he identifies as having a place in the American political tradition.

The loss of many of the qualities the framers and the Federalist Papers thought necessary for the preservation of the republic and our liberty can leave some readers of Basic Symbols feeling as though the framers were not as wise as they are often made out to be; perhaps their underlying premises were wrong or have since been perverted, and the American experiment has proven to be a failure.

Maybe you'll disagree with the tradition Kendall portrays, or deem it no longer relevant, but if you do read it, one thing is certain; you will come away from this book as Gary Wills describes how the crowd walked off from the Gettysburg Address: "...under a changed sky, into a different America."

Letter from Independence Mall, Phil. PA
"It's probably the best thing George Carey ever worked on." "It's one of the most important books I ever read." "It changed the way I think about America." Willmoore Kendall's classic work, The Basic Symbols of the American Political Tradition, provides an understanding which can only be described as refreshing of the political and cultural tradition out of which the Philadelphia Constitution was forged, and The United States of America was founded. Basic Symbols seeks to determine what propositions and ideals America was founded upon, and is thus committed to, and whether these are the ideals currently accepted as true, and often presented as neatly summed up in the Bill of Rights and in that well worn understanding of that passage of the Declaration of Independence: "all men are created equal... ." Basic Symbols warns that the true tradition may seem anathema to some modern historians and Americans alike who wished it weren't so, but Basic Symbols sets out to present the truth anyway. This single volume of political science and historical inquiry handily challenges the traditional orthodoxy, or the ignorance, that surrounds the founding in a novel manner: by a close inspection of the facts, and more importantly, the application of the analytical method-the hermeneutic-of Erik Voegelin, to the facts. Kendall's book is almost worth the read just to see the theories and teachings of Erik Voegelin briefly explicated and then put into fruitful action, and if nothing else, Basic Symbols can serve as a spring board for further study not into debates about America's founding, but into the works of this important yet often overlooked historian. Kendall starts with the Mayflower Compact of (1620), and then examines the General Orders of Connecticut(1638), the Body of Liberties of Massachusetts Bay(1641), the Virginia Declaration of Rights(1776), our own Declaration of Independence(1776), the Constitution(1787-1789) and finally the Bill of Rights(1789). Kendall slowly teases out a common thread that runs its course, unfolds, and develops over this stretch of time and through these early experiences and experiments in self-government on this side of the Atlantic. Basic Symbols also tackles in this time span, and in the history of America since, a problem common to all political traditions: derailment. Basic Symbols identifies the Gettysburg address as a watershed in the political tradition of America, made possible by a partial derailment in the years preceding the Civil War. Today, the two incompatible traditions are still with us and their friction is at the root of much of our present day political discord; so much so that to ask and seek the answer to the question, "What is the tradition amongst us?" is the very reason why Basic Symbols was written. Rather than the rights-speak and emphasis upon rights that has grown out of the elevation of the Bill of Rights, and the tortured understanding of 'equality' that has sprung from the Declaration, Basic Symbols instead proffers a formidable, and well supported, alternative; the true tradition amongst us holds (or held) the supremacy of the general political will of the community; the legislature through which this is expressed in a very slow, careful, and deliberative fashion; a virtuous people from which these governing bodies are elected, and the concomitant conviction of a virtuous people in a higher law than that of any secular government. Basic Symbols notes that any mention of rights, any ethos of equality, etc., are nowhere to be found in our tradition as founding symbols; they were understood as only the possible concerns for the deliberations of a political community after the establishment of its aims and purposes. Thus, they are not the starting points from which the uniquely American order and tradition is defined. This explains why all forms of variants on "the common good," "better ordering and preservation," were the starting points for, and of paramount importance to, the drafters of everything from the Mayflower Compact to our own Constitution. And this is just to name a few of the most important points. Kendall does well to document and explain the meaning, significance, and importance of all the symbols he identifies as having a place in the American political tradition. The loss of many of the qualities the framers and the Federalist Papers thought necessary for the preservation of the republic and our liberty can leave some readers of Basic Symbols feeling as though the framers were not as wise as they are often made out to be; perhaps their underlying premises were wrong or have since been perverted, and the American experiment has proven to be a failure. Maybe you'll disagree with the tradition Kendall portrays, or deem it no longer relevant, but if you do read it, one thing is certain; you will come away from this book as Gary Wills describes how the crowd walked off from the Gettysburg Address: "...under a changed sky, into a different America."


Between Two Nations: The Political Predicament of Latinos in New York City
Published in Hardcover by Cornell Univ Pr (June, 1998)
Author: Michael Jones-Correa
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Fascinating and Surprising
Interspersed with immigration tables, maps and personal vignettes, statistics models and modernist poetry, Between Two Nations is more than an exploration of immigration, marginality and political identity in the City; it approaches sociopolitical art. Capturing trial and tribulation, the melee of irrationality, self-interest and calculation in our polity, the faces and the thrum of humanity, one cannot help but wonder: who is Michael Jones-Correa?

A terrific book
Really lets us know how Latino immigrants think about citizenship, and how they act politically. Given the way that immigration is changing America, a must read.


Beyond September 11: An Anthology of Dissent
Published in Paperback by Pluto Press (July, 2002)
Author: Phil Scraton
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Explanatory and Insightful!
According to a number of highly intelligent thinkers, the foreign policy of the U.S. is principally driven by imperialistic motives. In its alleged war against terrorism, the U.S. punishes certain regimes while it simultaneously aids and protects other states which are equally oppressive and belligerent. It is claimed in this book that hypocrisy and imperialism are the chief characteristics of the foreign policy of the U.S. government. It is imperative that we examine the root causes of today's terrorism in order to be able to understand what factors drive people to commit terrorist acts. Why are many third world countries inimically disposed toward the U.S.? This is one of many question thoroughly analyzed in this book. Needless to say, understanding the root causes of terrorism does not mean that it is justifiable. Killing innocent people is always wrong regardless of what the reason might be. However, this must hold for all countries, not just the Arab world. As it stands today, only the actions of the Arab world are condemned and severely punished. What about Israel and Russia? How often does the mass media criticize atrocities committed by these oppressive regimes? Never, at least not in the U.S. although the similar situation applies throughout the West. These highly important questions are meticulously analyzed by the intellectual thinkers found in this book. What they all have in common is their joint effort to depict a highly unjust and discriminatory foreign policy of the U.S. government, characterized by gross hypocrisy. As Chomsky brilliantly puts it, how can the U.S. government possibly claim that it fights terrorism when the U.S. was charged with state terrorism against Nicaragua by International Court in the Hague? It is absurd and worthy of condemnation. This is a book that should be read by every American. It is one of the most important books ever written; a masterpiece beyond comprehension.

Voices of reason
Why am I the first Amazon reader to review this book? It was published over nine months ago. While we were busily filling our carts and stroking our egos with copies of Bernard Lewis's almost offensively inane "What Went Wrong?", Phil Scraton had already compiled an anthology which actually answers the question. This is easily the most cool-headed and comprehensive book to be inspired by September 11. What surprises me most is that it exists. Scraton's contributors - a range of journalists, academics, lawyers, human rights advocates and other commentators - take the unthinkable step of actually questioning the Bush/Blair response to September 11. They come to this view from many different political and ideological positions. What unites this particular coalition of the willing is their willingness to do two things: first, to look into the history of the Middle East, and the history of Western influence there, as a way of making sense of the terrorist attacks; secondly, to explore the motivations for, and consequences of, our ultra-conservative response. These writers cut through the fatuous hubris of "Muslims hate us" and the "axis of evil" and lay bare the real motivations - on both sides. When successive British and US governments come out of such an analysis looking somewhat less than innocent, it would be easy to dismiss this book as "excusing" terrorism. It does not do that. To explore the origins and motivations of terrorism - to explain it - is not to excuse it. Understanding our enemies is surely THE essential element of an effective strategy for defeating them. That this can be accurately described as the "dissenting" view shows precisely how far we in the West have slipped to the right. Still, it is immensely reassuring that some journalists and academics are willing (and still able) to engage publicly in this kind of debate, considering it is actively discouraged if not gagged by an American press which, like Bush himself, is mostly a lapdog of defense industry advocates, conservative fear-mongers and other American fascists intent on world domination. You don't believe me? Go visit newamericancentury.org to see Cheney and Rumsfeld's plan to have us goose-stepping through the next hundred years. Their logic is simple - the economy depends on war, so let's start a few. With friends like these, who needs enemies?


Bible and Government: Public Policy from a Christian Perspective
Published in Paperback by Alertness Books (March, 2003)
Author: John M. Cobin
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A sharply written, critical account
Bible And Government: Public Policy From A Christian Perspective by John M. Cobin (a devout Evangelical Christian, father of six homeschooled children, and Visiting Professor of Economics and Public Policy, George Mason University) is a sharply written, critical account of the expansion of American governmental power and the threatening implication said power has for Christians and the Christian community in particular. Professor Cobin offers noteworthy and insightful evaluations on public policies ranging from speed limits to food stamps, all with an eye to what Christianity demands in terms of obeying the government. Bible And Government is a thoughtful and thought-provoking read with ideas imminently worthy of serious consideration by students of Public Policy, Political Economy, and Christian Social Issues Studies.

Fascinating and insightful book
A novel approach that should have been obvious to Evangelicals long ago. Few books have an opportunity to change the way people think about such an important mattter as public policy. This is one such book. You will think about its implications for weeks after reading it. Dr. Lesle Long, Greenville, SC


The Big Picture: An American Commentary
Published in Paperback by HarperCollins (paper) (April, 1991)
Author: A. Whitney Brown
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Great
Good stuff. Buy it or I'll shank you! (Though I may be a bit biased, being family and all...Oh well.)

Still as funny today as it was in the early '90s
If you think A. Whitney Brown is funny on the Daily Show, you're in for a treat in this volume from his SNL days. Wry, insightful commentary from Brown's funnier years.


The Bird is Gone : A Manifesto
Published in Paperback by FC2 (01 August, 2003)
Author: Stephen Graham Jones
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once again, YES
so, not only is this book one of the most original and deftly structured to come along in recent years, but, as has been pointed out: the sentences!! Jones' sentences will take root in your head and grow, bloom, wither, rot, be reincarnated as a time travelling coyote. seriously, get on this one.

Amazing
THE BIRD IS GONE is one of the best, and most orginial books i've ever had the pleasure of reading. his prose, once again, carry their own rhythm and read like poetry. read it, get lost in it, and then read it again, because its magic. mr. jones is without question one of our most talented writers writing today. do yourself a favor and read this book, then read his other two books, because he's just that good.


Bitter Harvest : FDR, Presidential Power and the Growth of the Presidential Branch
Published in Hardcover by Cambridge University Press (28 December, 1996)
Author: Matthew J. Dickinson
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excellent book
If you care about how the presidency works or should work, you will purchase this book. Dickinson not only presents a readable, intersting history of FDR, he wonderfully contrasts Roosevelt's techniques and how and why his successors ignored and refused to employ them. It's not a "catch-all" nor a "cookbook" for presidents (although it has both of those elements), but a study into what doesn't work at the executive organizational level. For something that will change the way you look at everything from Healthcare reform to Iran-Contra, this book is definitely a winner.

Terrific discussion of "institutional presidency"
"Bitter Harvest" discusses the original growth of the White House under FDR and contrasts his staff management techniques with those presidents who followed (and who, according to the author, did a far inferior job of making the staff work for the president rather than vice versa). There is a lot of detail on the 1930s and 1940s here, but it's worth digging through. The book makes a strong argument, and backs it up nicely; highly recommended for those interested in presidential power and the influence that presidential staffs have had on American public policy.


Black Gold and Holy War: The Religious Secret Behind the Petrodollar
Published in Paperback by Thomas Nelson (January, 1984)
Author: Ishak Ibraham
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Personal Knowledge
This man, an Egyptian, knows whereof he speaks. He has a message vital for the rest of the world, which is being fed many falsehoods now about a "peaceful" Islam.
Let the record speak for itself.
I have personally spoken with other Egyptians, who confirmed many of the accounts related by this author.
Do not pass by an opportunity to see Islam from this angle. We must learn the truth, not just what is "politically correct", and profoundly deceptive.

The Power of Islam
This little book is a most relevant guide to a Christians understanding of Islam and that with their (Islam's) control of oil or the ocean routes through which oil tankers pass, they can easily bring the West down to its knees.


The Black Panther Party Reconsidered
Published in Hardcover by Black Classic Press (May, 1998)
Author: Charles Jones
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Important corrective to mainstream stereotypes
This is the first book to attempt to discuss the legacy of the Black Panther Party. The fact that a second book, Liberation, Imagination and the Black Panther Party, managed to continue the work begun here without significant overlap shows what a rich legacy it was.

One essay, "The Black Panthers and the 'Undiscovered Country' of the Left" proposesthe novel idea that the Panthers had begun to emulate many aspect of an emerging nation-state by taking on the functions of provideng serverices for the community, setting up independent relations with other nations, etc., While this seemed to be unintentional, it does suggest the larger potential of the Party.

It's important to realize that there were many Black Panther "chapters" that were inspired by the Oakland Panthers but developed autonomously and had different levels of political development. The Oakland BPP attempted to gather them all into one big centralized organization but had neither the political experience ,or the time [they were attacked by city, state and federal governments almost from day one] to properly pull it together. The essays by some of the ex-Party members in this volume provide great insight into the different ways in with the BPP were able to speak to local Black communities while encapsulating the grievances and hopes common to them all.

The one weakness of the book is its defensiveness. The city, state and federal governments used the Panthers' militant politics and gun imagery to portray them as reckless thugs who covered up their criminal tendencies with political rhetoric. The authors in this book attempt to refute that by emphasizing the community organizing aspects of the BPP such as the free breakfast programs. However, none of the authors explored the question of whether the Panthers had a legitmate case for armed revolution in the US. By avoiding the debate, the authors seem to be ceding ground to the Pantthers' opponents.

This book should not be seen as the final word but as the beginning of an important conversation. Anyone who wants to understand post-60's political movements can't avoid the fact that the Panthers helped shape the debates that continue up to our time. Read this book to see how.

A balanced view from the inside
This book is the first book that comes close to giving a balanced view of the history of the Black Panther party, its problems and its ultimate demise. It includes a view by regular rank and file members. It is well worth reading for those looking for an alternative to those books written by Party leaders, informants, or critics.


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