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by Arminius
Chalmers Johnson is arguably the most important writer in the United States these days. His "Blowback" trilogy on American empire is a landmark classic.
He is a distinguished professor at the University of California at Berkeley. An old cold warrier, he is an East Asia specialist. The first volume in what unexpectedly became a trilogy was Blowback: The Costs and Consequences of American Empire (2000, rev. 2004). Blowback is a CIA term for the nasty consequences of meddling in other countries. This book was little noticed before 9/11. Afterwards, when much attention was directed to the question of "why they hate us," the book became a classic. The second volume is: The Sorrows of Empire: Militarism, Secrecy, and the End of the Republic (2004). This book led to one of my favorite small social experiments. My small law firm has several U.S. citizens, all educated and mature adults, plus one law clerk from an African country. I made a prediction, and it came true. I called a mini-staff meeting and asked everybody how many military bases they think the United States maintains around the world. The Americans gave answers like: 5? 15? maybe 25? The African said: it must be over 1,000. Ding ding ding! I mean really. WTF do we think we are, we Americans?! More below the fold...
The third volume is: Nemesis: The Last Days of the American Republic (2007). It was just released this month.
Everybody needs to go to amazon.com right now and order it! Get multiple copies. Here are four paragraphs from the prologue that show why I think this one short book is more effective than 10,000 diaries on the blogosphere:
Until the 2004 presidential election, ordinary citizens of the United States could at least claim that our foreign policy, including our illegal invasion of Iraq, was the work of George Bush's administration and that we had not put him in office. In 2000, Bush lost the popular vote and was appointed president thanks to the intervention of the Supreme Court in a 5-4 decision. In November 2004, regardless of claims about voter fraud, Bush won the popular vote by over 3.5 million ballots, making his wars ours. The political system failed not because we elected one candidate rather than another as president, since neither offered a responsible alternative to aggressive war and militarism, but because the election essentially endorsed and ratified the policies we had pursued since 9/11. He produces some of the finest rants ever written, combined with cool and magisterial scholarship. Again, I strongly encourage everybody to get this book. Nemesis, of course, is "the goddess of retribution, who punishes human transgression of the natural, right order of things and the arrogance that causes it." If God is just, there is Hell to pay in this country.
Nemesis | 9 comments (9 topical, 0 editorial, 0 hidden)
Nemesis | 9 comments (9 topical, 0 editorial, 0 hidden)
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We listened to PEN American Center's "State of Emergency" and found 1940s books by Curzio Malaparte only at Alibris
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