Online reading group and book discussion forum
  HOME FORUMS BLOGS BOOKS LINKS DONATE ADVERTISE CONTACT  
View unanswered posts | View active topics It is currently Sat Feb 11, 2012 12:00 pm




Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 21 posts ]  Go to page 1, 2  Next
Blaming Clinton First 
Author Message
Years of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membership
All Your Posts are Belong to Us!


Joined: Sep 2002
Posts: 67
Thanks: 0
Thanked: 0 time in 0 post
Gender: None specified

Post Blaming Clinton First
Franken's chapter on Clinton addresses an argument I've heard numerous times, apparently from Fox viewers: that Clinton "did nothing" about terrorism. Franken, citing Time magazine, says Condoleezza Rice denied having met with Clinton's national security advisor to discuss the issue of terrorism. Franken then says the New York Times mentioned Rice agreeing with Sandy Berger at a meeting that terrosim was a key issue. Was either the New York Times or Time magazine in error, or did Rice play down the efforts of the Clinton Administration to encourage Bush to focus on terrorism?




Tue Nov 18, 2003 11:37 pm
Profile
Years of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membership
Official Newbie!


Joined: Nov 2003
Posts: 2
Thanks: 0
Thanked: 0 time in 0 post
Gender: None specified

Post Re: Blaming Clinton First
the chapter on "operation ignore" shouLd make you sick.

"I've often wondered, what if all of us in the world discovered that we were threatened by an outer -- a power from outer space, from another planet. Wouldn't we all of a sudden find that we didn't have any differences between us at all, we were all human beings, citizens of the world, and wouldn't we come together to fight that particular threat?"
- Ronald Reagan




Sat Nov 22, 2003 12:10 am
Profile
Years of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membership
All Your Posts are Belong to Us!


Joined: Sep 2002
Posts: 67
Thanks: 0
Thanked: 0 time in 0 post
Gender: None specified

Post Re: Blaming Clinton First
What's shocking about Operation Ignore isn't that Bush was aloof from the issue until it was too late, but that Clinton is now perceived as "soft on terrorism" even though the Right criticized Clinton's actions whenever he used military force.




Sun Nov 23, 2003 7:50 pm
Profile
User avatar
Years of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membership
Gaining experience


Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 76
Location: Bellingham, WA
Thanks: 0
Thanked: 0 time in 0 post
Gender: Male
Country: United States (us)

Post Re: Blaming Clinton First
The conservatives control the monopoly media, and the minds of infovision dumb Americans.

Clinton could do no right and Bush can do no wrong. That is the message I am getting, though I am intelligent to know better. They both have their good and bad points and moves.

I didn't see Clinton as my savior or Bush as the "Devil incarnate", they are both just ordinary humans.

I am just personally against the overall philosophy and direction of the conservative movement, and Democrats are just the "lesser of the two evils" that slow down the dangerous and misguided philosophy and goals of the conservative rights. I do not agree much with the Democrats either, but at least they are not so driven to destroy democracy or our environment.

I would prefer a third party, but our present election system guarantees that will never happen. So we realistically have only two choices. A vote for a third party is a vote for the opposite major candidate who would be your last choice. It is worse than a "throw away vote"; it actually harms your political direction.

Monty Vonn
Meme Wars!




Sun Nov 30, 2003 1:35 pm
Profile WWW
User avatar
Years of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membership
Online
BookTalk.org Hall of Fame

BookTalk.org Owner
Diamond Contributor 3

Joined: May 2002
Posts: 11883
Images: 0
Location: Florida
Highscores: 145
Thanks: 735
Thanked: 339 times in 271 posts
Gender: Male
Country: United States (us)

Post Re: Blaming Clinton First
Monty

Quote:
A vote for a third party is a vote for the opposite major candidate who would be your last choice. It is worse than a "throw away vote"; it actually harms your political direction.


You're so right...and what a shame. 3rd party candidates have very little chance of winning in an election. Don't laugh, but I was planning on voting for Ross Perot, but I knew it would be throwing my vote out. Ross was a bit odd, but the man is a successful business man and it sure would be nice to have a change in the White House.

Chris

"When once you have tasted flight, you will forever walk the earth with your eyes turned skyward,for there you have been, and there you will always want to be."



Sun Nov 30, 2003 10:03 pm
Profile Email YIM WWW
Years of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membership
Finally Comfortable


Joined: Dec 2003
Posts: 52
Thanks: 0
Thanked: 0 time in 0 post
Gender: None specified

Post Re: Blaming Clinton First
Originally posted by Meme Wars
Quote:
I am just personally against the overall philosophy and direction of the conservative movement, and Democrats are just the "lesser of the two evils" that slow down the dangerous and misguided philosophy and goals of the conservative rights. I do not agree much with the Democrats either, but at least they are not so driven to destroy democracy or our environment.


I used to feel exactly this way, but now I'm actually quite the opposite: I usually vote Republican, even though I don't agree with all (or even most) of their platform.

Back when the far right - Pat Robertson, the AFA, and the Christian Coalition - had real power I usually voted Democrat just to counter that scary theocratic movement. But since the early 90's the religious right has been more or less ostracized and the trend is only increasing (John McCain is Bush's likely successor for the RNC nomination and he makes no bones about being a secularist). With the theocrats effectively neutralized (and civil rights well established) I feel free to support the Republicans for a strong national defense and the dissolution of the nanny state.

I do wish that Republicans had a better environmental policy (and McCain is better on it than Bush is), but I know I'll never get everything I want. And if the Democrats would nominate a genuine leader of moderate leaning they could get my vote back ... but I certainly don't see that happening in 2004 (and probably not in 2008 either, considering the frightening state of affairs in that party).


S




Tue Dec 02, 2003 6:17 pm
Profile
User avatar
Years of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membership
I dumpster dive for books!

Bronze Contributor

Joined: Aug 2003
Posts: 1796
Thanks: 0
Thanked: 14 times in 12 posts
Gender: Male
Country: United States (us)

Post American War Crimes
Masters of War
Militarism and Blowback in the Era of American Empire


edited by Carl Boggs

Routledge, 2003, paper


p191

"The historical reality is that the U.S. drive for economic, political, and military domination has led to massive and horrific war crimes, to repeated and flagrant violations of international law-a legacy easily documented but one which has been obscured, covered up, or simply ignored within the national c ethos of denial.

The U.S. record of war crimes has been, from the nineteenth century to the present, a largely invisible one with no government, no political leaders, no military officials, no lower-level operatives held accountable for criminal actions.

A culture of militarism has saturated the public sphere, including academia, endowing all U.S. interventions abroad with a patina of patriotic goodness and democratic sensibilities beyond genuine interrogation. Anyone challenging this mythology is quickly marginalized, branded a traitor or Communist or terrorist or simply a lunatic beyond the pale of reasonable discussion.

After 9/11 this situation has worsened: a nominally liberal-democratic system has moved ever more ominously along the road of corporatism, authoritarianism, and narrowing public discourses. American society today exhibits every sign of ideological closure, one-dimensionality, and erosion of civic culture accompanied by the rise of national chauvinism and hostility to foreign influences, exacerbated by the spring 2003 invasion and occupation of Iraq.

Recent ideological trends involve a steadfast refusal to confront the larger context of U.S. foreign policy or to reflect upon the far-reaching consequences of U.S. empire, as if the terrorist attacks occurred in a historical void. Of course psychological denial has profound ramifications, for with it a siege mentality can readily appear-and such a mentality seems to have gripped much of American public life.

As Chalmers Johnson writes in Blowback: "What we have freed ourselves of . . . is any genuine consciousness of how we might look to others on this globe. Most Americans are probably unaware of how Washington exercises its global hegemony since so much of this activity takes place either in relative secrecy or under comforting rubrics. Many may, as a start, find it hard to believe that our place in the world even adds up to an empire. Nowhere is this proposition more evident than in the sphere of war crimes discourse.""




Wed Dec 03, 2003 12:49 am
Profile
User avatar
Years of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membership
I dumpster dive for books!

Bronze Contributor

Joined: Aug 2003
Posts: 1796
Thanks: 0
Thanked: 14 times in 12 posts
Gender: Male
Country: United States (us)

Post American Humanitarianism
The Logic of U.S. Intervention - Michael Parenti


p21

"While claiming to be motivated by a dedication to human rights and democracy, U.S. Ieaders have supported some of the most notorious right-wing autocracies in history, governments that have tortured, killed, or otherwise maltreated large numbers of their citizens because of their dissenting political views, as in Turkey, Zaire, Chad, Pakistan, Morocco, Indonesia, Honduras, Peru, Colombia, Argentina, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, the Philippines, Cuba (under Batista), Nicaragua (under Somoza), Iran (under the Shah), and Portugal (under Salazar). Assistance is also given to counterrevolutionary groups in leftist revolutionary countries.

These groups have perpetrated some of the most brutal bloodletting against civilian populations, as have Unita in Angola, Renamo in Mozambique, the Contras in Nicaragua, the Khmer Rouge (during the 1980s) in Cambodia, the counterinsurgency ethnic slaughter in Rwanda, the mujahideen and then the Taliban in Afghanistan, and the right-wing Albanian separatist KLA in Kosovo.


p34

... U.S. politico-corporate elites have long struggled to make the world safe for the system of transnational corporate capital accumulation; to attain control of the markets, lands, natural resources, and cheap labor of all countries; and to prevent the emergence of revolutionary socialist, populist, or even military nationalist regimes that challenge this arrangement by seeking to build alternative or competing economic systems.

To achieve this, a global military machine is essential. The goal is to create a world populated by client states and compliant populations completely open to transnational corporate penetration, on terms that are completely favorable to the penetrators. It is not too much to conclude that such an activist and violent global policy is produced not by dumb coincidence but by conscious design."




Wed Dec 03, 2003 12:54 am
Profile
User avatar
Years of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membership
I dumpster dive for books!

Bronze Contributor

Joined: Aug 2003
Posts: 1796
Thanks: 0
Thanked: 14 times in 12 posts
Gender: Male
Country: United States (us)

Post American War Criminals
On December 3, 1996, the Justice Department issued a list of 16 Japanese citizens who would be barred from entering the United States because of "war crimes" committed during the Second World War. Among those denied entry were some who were alleged to have been members of the infamous "Unit 731", which, said the Justice Department, "conducted inhumane and frequently lethal pseudo-medical experiments -- on thousands of ... prisoners and civilians," including mass dissections of living humans. (1)

This action appeared to be rather hypocritical in light of the fact that after the war the man in charge of the Unit 731 program -- whose subjects included captured American soldiers -- General Shiroshii, along with his colleagues, had been granted immunity and freedom in exchange for providing the United States with details about the experiments. Moreover, their crimes were not to be revealed to the world. The justification for this policy, advanced by American scientists and military officials, was, of course, the proverbial, ubiquitous "national security".{2}

There is another reason the 1996 policy is hypocritical. The Japanese, if they wished to, could issue a list of Americans barred from Japan for "war crimes" and "crimes against humanity". Such a list might include the following:

George Bush, for the murder of hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians, including many thousands of children, in attacks upon Iraq and Panama.

Colin Powell, for his prominent role in the attacks on Iraq and Panama.

General Norman Schwarzkopf, for his military leadership of the Iraqi carnage.

Ronald Reagan, for the death, destruction, and torture inflicted upon the people of El Salvador, Guatemala, Nicaragua and Grenada by his military and political policies.

Elliott Abrams, for his key participation in Reagan's obsessive and paranoid "anti-communist" crusade.

Oliver North, for being a prime mover behind the contras, whose atrocities are legendary, and for his role in the invasion of Grenada, which took the lives of hundreds of innocent civilians.

Henry Kissinger (who has successfully combined two careers: socialite and war criminal), for his Machiavellian, amoral, immoral roles in the US interventions into Angola, Chile, East Timor, Vietnam, and Cambodia which brought unspeakable horror and misery to the peoples of those lands.

Gerald Ford, for giving his approval to Indonesia to use American arms to brutally suppress the people of East Timor.

Robert McNamara, for his responsibility in the slaughters in Indochina and the suppression of popular movements in Peru.

John Deutch, for his callous coverups of Gulf War Syndrome at the Defense Department and drug complicity at the CIA.

Bill Clinton, for his unprovoked rocket attacks upon the people of Iraq and his continual military aid to the governments of Turkey, Peru, Colombia and Mexico, which use the weapons to arm death squads and to carry out wholesale massacres of their own people.

NOTES
1. Washington Post, December 4, 1996, p. A1
2. Leonard A. Cole, Clouds of Secrecy: The Army's Germ Warfare Tests over Populated
Areas (Maryland, 1990), pp. 12-14
Written by William Blum, author of Killing Hope: U.S. Military and CIA Interventions
Since World War II; email:b blum6@aol.com




Wed Dec 03, 2003 1:02 am
Profile
Years of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membership
Finally Comfortable


Joined: Dec 2003
Posts: 52
Thanks: 0
Thanked: 0 time in 0 post
Gender: None specified

Post Re: American War Criminals
Dissident Heart, I'm not really sure what the aim of your last three posts was. Are they related to the "Blaming Clinton First" topic in some way I can't see? Or did the anti-americanism within just build up to the point that you had to vomit it forth somewhere?

Either way, you're citing papers written by people who have a political agenda. Just because Boggs and Parenti say "this is the way things are" it doesn't mean that is, indeed, the way things are. I'm a fairly bright guy with a good education, and I've seen hundreds of papers like "Masters of War" and "The Logic of US Intervention", all of them filled with elitist rhetoric about how America is responsible for everything bad that happens in the world, how our leaders are the worst kind of war criminals imaginable (if they're anything but far left liberals, that is), and how any attempt to refute such claims amounts to "repression of dissent". The language used is rife with alarming words and phrases like "idealogical closure", "culture of militarism", and "psychological denial", all of which sound impressive and scary and point to the conclusion that the author must know what he's talking about because he uses such powerful terms.

But the truth is that most academic papers like those you posted are nothing more than anti-right, anti-American rhetoric mixed with a healthy dose of liberal ideology. Are they all? No, of course not. I've read papers that presented a well-reasoned case for greater international oversight of American foreign policy (I still utterly disagree, but I found the arguments to be nonpartisan and authoritative). If time allows I might look up Boggs' and Parenti's work on the Internet (and check their credentials while I'm at it) to give them a more comprehensive reading, but judging from the excerpts posted I'm not overly hopeful that they amount to much more than propaganda.

And no, I'm not dismissing the "points" raised by either paper out of hand. But I'm not going to respond to any of them right away either, because I have no idea which you consider to be the strongest arguments (and I have little doubt I'd be accused of straw man tactics if I picked one you considered weak). If you'd like to present the three you think are the best points made by Boggs and / or Parenti I'd be happy to give you a refutation (or concede the point, if I find it valid).

In the mean time - and as a simple "rhetoric or insight" litmus test - why don't we take the term "empire" as used by Boggs. Dissident Heart please explain in which ways modern America is an empire. And I don't mean "go find an academic paper on the subject and post a link to it". I mean go get out your dictionary, look up the word "empire", and then draw parallels between the definition and the United States as it exists today.


S




Wed Dec 03, 2003 11:09 am
Profile
User avatar
Years of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membership
I dumpster dive for books!

Bronze Contributor

Joined: Aug 2003
Posts: 1796
Thanks: 0
Thanked: 14 times in 12 posts
Gender: Male
Country: United States (us)

Post Re: American War Criminals
spandor,

My borrowing of these snippets from Parenti, Boggs, and Blum relates to two concerns for this thread.

First, the idea that 'blaming Clinton' for 'doing nothing about Terrorism' as addressed by Franken is absurd, but not because Clinton was doing his best, or at least wasn't as negligent as the Bushies argue...it is absurd because Clinton, like Bush Sr., Reagan, Carter, Ford, Nixon, et al were not negligent in defending terrorism, but were terrorist perpetrators. State terrorists, equipped with the largest military and media arsenal in world history. Franken is still part of the problem if he thinks Clinton and the Democrats are somehow exempt from this FACT.

Second, your support of a Republican commitment to a "strong national defense and the dissolution of the nanny state" sparked a need to respond with a short delivery of unwelcome facts concerning a massive military state and its driving economic and political forces.

As for your hesitant identification of my quotations as "anti-right, anti-American rhetoric mixed with a healthy dose of liberal ideology" which reflexively and uncritically claim that "America is responsible for everything bad that happens in the world, how our leaders are the worst kind of war criminals imaginable"...I would ask that you indulge my quotation fetish with a statement by Noam Chomsky (the guru of anti-americans) regarding his incessant desire to constantly critique and expose American abuses:

"The main reasons for my concern with U.S. foreign policy are that I find it, in general, horrifying, and that I think that it is possible for me to do something to modify it, at least to mitigate some of its most dangerous and destructive aspects. In the concrete circumstances of my own society, where I live and work, there are various ways to do this: speaking, writing, organizing, demonstrating, resisting, and others. Over the years, I've been engaged in a variety of such activities.

The foreign policy of other states is also in general horrifying -- roughly speaking, states are violent to the extent that they have the power to act in the interests of those with domestic power -- but there is not very much that I can do about it. It is, for example, easy enough for an American intellectual to write critical analyses of the behavior of the Soviet Union in Afghanistan and Eastern Europe (or in supporting the Argentine generals), but such efforts have little if any effect in modifying or reversing the actions of the U.S.S.R. Rather, such efforts, which are naturally much welcomed by those who dominate the ideological institutions here, may serve to contribute to the violence of the American state, by reinforcing the images of Soviet brutality (often accurate) that are used to frighten Americans into conformity and obedience.

I do not suggest that this is a reason to avoid critical analysis of the U.S.S.R.; in fact, I have often written on the foreign policy of the Soviet state. Nor would I criticize someone who devotes much, even all his work to this task. But we should understand that the moral value of this work is at best very slight, where the moral value of an action is judged in terms of its human consequences. In fact, rather delicate judgments sometimes arise, for people who are committed to decent moral values. Suppose, for example, that some German intellectual chose in 1943 to write articles on terrible things done by Britain, or the U.S., or the Jews. What he wrote might be correct, but we would not be very much impressed.

The same comments hold for a Soviet intellectual who devotes himself to a critical analysis of U.S. atrocities in Southeast Asia or Central America (or to the American support for the Argentine generals). What he says may be correct; its significance, for people being bombed or terrorized or tortured within the domains of American power and influence is negligible, possibly even negative. These are truisms, constantly denied by intellectual servants of state power who, for obvious reasons, pretend not to understand them and typically criticize those who act in accordance with decent moral principles as having a "double standard" or worse.

I try to concentrate my political activities -- writing included -- in areas where there is some moral significance to these activities, hence primarily in areas where people I can reach may act to change policies that are abhorrent, dangerous and destructive. Of course there are other factors that influence my choices, facts about my personal history, etc., which are of no interest here. One can have many reasons for engaging in political action. If the reasons are to help suffering people, to avert threats or catastrophes, and so on, then the criteria are fairly clear. For an American intellectual, these criteria dictate a prime concern for policies undertaken and pursued here, whether in the international or domestic arenas.

In some intellectual circles, it is considered naive or foolish to be guided by moral principles. About this form of idiocy, I will have nothing to say."


Excerpts from Noam Chomsky's written responses to questions from Celia Jakubowicz
Source: C.P. Otero, ed., Language and Politics (Black Rose, 1988) , pp. 369-72

monkeyfist.com:8080/Choms...asons_html




Edited by: Dissident Heart at: 12/3/03 12:58 pm



Wed Dec 03, 2003 12:19 pm
Profile
Years of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membership
All Your Posts are Belong to Us!


Joined: Sep 2002
Posts: 67
Thanks: 0
Thanked: 0 time in 0 post
Gender: None specified

Post Re: Imperial War
What's interesting about the "America number one" attitude is that it is a mirror image of the self-esteem movement in schools which is often denounced for its promotion of a "be proud of yourself no matter what" mentality.




Thu Dec 04, 2003 10:59 pm
Profile
Years of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membership
All Your Posts are Belong to Us!


Joined: Sep 2002
Posts: 67
Thanks: 0
Thanked: 0 time in 0 post
Gender: None specified

Post Re: Imperial War
>>One thing that many, many Americans are finding increasingly tiresome is the habit that certain individuals



Thu Dec 04, 2003 11:03 pm
Profile
Years of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membership
All Your Posts are Belong to Us!


Joined: Sep 2002
Posts: 67
Thanks: 0
Thanked: 0 time in 0 post
Gender: None specified

Post Re: Imperial War
"Effete" and "elite" are both buzzwords used to dismiss criticisms of conservative administrations in a knee-jerk manner. They say nothing about the real concerns of real people. What made you choose those words?




Thu Dec 04, 2003 11:05 pm
Profile
Years of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membershipYears of membership
Finally Comfortable


Joined: Dec 2003
Posts: 52
Thanks: 0
Thanked: 0 time in 0 post
Gender: None specified

Post Re: Imperial War
Michael says:

Quote:
Surely a noble nation is not one that parades its virtues and ignores its flaws? That would be the opposite of humility, a quality George W. Bush, during the 2000 campaign, said was necessary for America to have in its relations with the world.


Surely not, which is why in the same post I said:

Quote:
But despite being such a high civilization and having such an excellent foundation of law, America still experiences many of the same problems as her predecessors. The men and women elected to office are not always honest, and there is corruption. Alliances are not always chosen wisely, and American guns end up in the wrong hands. Sometimes wars need to be fought and far too many innocents die along with the genuine enemies. Often America's enemies are dirty, scary people and her agents have to do dirty, scary things in order to get them.


and also:

Quote:
...most of us realize that it's good for our flaws to be pointed out every so often



Thu Dec 04, 2003 11:14 pm
Profile
Display posts from previous:  Sort by  
Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 21 posts ]  Go to page 1, 2  Next



Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot post attachments in this forum

Search for:

Recent Posts 
Can a scientist define Life?

Sat Feb 11, 2012 9:45 am

johnson1010

Life is chemistry

Sat Feb 11, 2012 9:26 am

johnson1010

Is evolutionary chance impossible?

Sat Feb 11, 2012 7:58 am

DWill

Did the man "Jesus" exist?

Sat Feb 11, 2012 7:15 am

DWill

Global warming or carbon cult?

Sat Feb 11, 2012 2:34 am

Robert Tulip

New member seeking to make friends

Fri Feb 10, 2012 11:57 pm

ilovebooks

Trying to get the hang of this

Fri Feb 10, 2012 11:00 pm

Rajeshma

Introducing myself

Fri Feb 10, 2012 10:44 pm

RomanceGeek

The Immortal Champions Saga by Jason Salfali & Jennifer Hopkins

Fri Feb 10, 2012 4:46 pm

ImmortalGirl


BookTalk.org Links 
Forum Rules & Tips
Frequently Asked Questions
BBCode Explained
Info for Authors & Publishers
Featured Book Suggestions
Author Interview Transcripts
Be a Book Discussion Leader!
    

Love to talk about books but don't have time for our book discussion forums? For casual book talk join us on Facebook.

Support BookTalk.org 
If you appreciate BookTalk.org please consider donating a few dollars to help keep us online. See who supports us.
Make a donation
RECENT DONATIONS:
• giselle - $50 January
• nomsisa - $50 September
• giselle - $50 September

Featured Books

Recent Blogging 

The 12th Disciple and Poor Richard's Downtown Colorado Springs

The 12th Disciple is now being stocked at Poor Richard's Bookstore in Colorado Springs. We're happy to have the title at such a historic location in Colorado Springs. If… more

Posted: 13 days ago
by 12th disciple

...

For most of us, a very big part of our lives will be a dark place, we wont realize it. We live, we eat, we have some fun, we go to school, we sleep. But it will come the time, when… more

Posted: 13 days ago
by aracelip7

Hello world!

Welcome to BookTalk.org Blogs. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!

See those links at the very top of the page? To get into your control panel for… more

Posted: 14 days ago
by drewdamato

There's an election this year?

The 12th Disciple's endorsement for a Presidential Candidate...we'll pass. If many haven't learned over the past several decades, centuries, and millennia, the gover… more

Posted: 20 days ago
by 12th disciple

New Books

So I've been looking for new books to read, but I haven't found any that have caught my attention lately. I want to try and venture out into a different genre, but I'… more

Posted: 26 days ago
by spazzymagee

Unethical Apple

For those who constantly gripe about jobs being sent overseas, focus your anger on this. Read about how one of the most profitable companies prided by American citizens offshores t… more

Posted: 28 days ago
by vetwriter

Role of the Individual Augmentee in the Military

An article of mine regarding the role of the Individual Augmentee in the military has been published on Blogging Authors. Read the article at:

http://bloggingauthors.com/bl… more

Posted: 30 days ago
by vetwriter

Hello world!

Welcome to BookTalk.org Blogs. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!

See those links at the very top of the page? To get into your control panel for… more

Posted: 30 days ago
by mryan2930

A Second In Time

Its January 1945 and British, Commonwealth, US and POWs from various other nationalities are finally awaiting liberation from the various camps in Eastern Europe, where some of the… more

Posted: 30 days ago
by carolemct

Hiding The Details In The Fine Print Still Works

A good friend of mine recently received a pre-paid credit card. She went to pay for a $20.00 gas purchase only to later find out that over a $70.00 hold was placed on her card for… more

Posted: 31 days ago
by life is a business

There’s No Such Thing As A Blank Canvas In Life

While watching the bube tube (TV) this morning I stumbled on a motivational speaker saying “today marks a new year, you now have a blank canvas to work from.”

After hearing th… more

Posted: 39 days ago
by life is a business

Happy New Year!

The 12th Disciple wishes you and yours a Happy New Year. Many of us hope and pray that 2012 will bring better leadership in the government of the United States, better leadership i… more

Posted: 40 days ago
by 12th disciple

Does fiction have a role to play in educating people about real events?

The Cat & The Nightingale Saga, the docu drama version of The Weekend Trippers, also tells Rifleman Ted TaylorÂ’s story but in a slightly different way. It too tells of the… more

Posted: 41 days ago
by carolemct

Out With The Woe Is Me And in With The “Look At Me”

In 2011 I published my book; in the book I outlined 9 Key Principles to Prosperity (happiness).  Like many of you, I walked through 2011 with the Woe is me attitude. When… more

Posted: 41 days ago
by life is a business

Original Thoughts, Do They Exist Anymore?

More and more these days I see people using social media to quote what someone else has said. I see people posting their favorite rappers lyrics, lines from movies and what seems t… more

Posted: 42 days ago
by life is a business

14th December. Wednesday

IÂ’m down the school for the first time today. My friend visited two weeks ago and said it was chaos. They must have heard I was back because everything is tidy and orderly today… more

Posted: 49 days ago
by heledd

...

I'm quite positive that everyone who enters this site has the same thing in mind: fear of seeing a world without books, without literature. We see it everyday, more people qui… more

Posted: 50 days ago
by aracelip7

12 December, Monday

For once in my life I step off the plane at Banjul, and donÂ’t get a rush of elation. I went home to see my daughterÂ’s twins safely delivered. They are all well now, but IÂ’m goin… more

Posted: 53 days ago
by heledd

It's the Most Wonderful Time of the Year...For Some.

The 12th Disciple is up and running. We have a page on Facebook if you'd like to come join us for updates and other miscellaneous debris.

Hanukkah runs from the 20th-28th. … more

Posted: 56 days ago
by 12th disciple

Handle Your Business!

Last weekend I witnessed a couple of family members literally fall apart at the seams because of a problem with a couple of their employees. They recently opened a group home, and … more

Posted: 57 days ago
by life is a business





BookTalk.org Chat Room 
Enter the BookTalk.org Chat Room

Enter our Chat [0]

Chat Room Always Open!

Tell your friends when to meet you
in the BookTalk.org Chat Room.

Booktalk.org on Facebook 


If you enjoy business bestsellers and would like to expand your business knowledge check out the quality book summaries offered by the world's leading book summary company.




BookTalk.org is a free book discussion group or online reading group or book club. We read and talk about both fiction and non-fiction books as a group. We host live author chats where booktalk members can interact with and interview authors. We give away free books to our members in book giveaway contests. Our booktalks are open to everybody who enjoys talking about books. Our book forums include book reviews, author interviews and book resources for readers and book lovers. Discussing books is our passion. We're a literature forum, or reading forum. Register a free book club account today! Suggest nonfiction and fiction books. Authors and publishers are welcome to advertise their books or ask for an author chat or author interview.


Navigation 
MAIN NAVIGATION

HOMEFORUMSBOOKSTRANSCRIPTSOLD FORUMSADVERTISELINKSBLOGSFAQDONATETERMS OF USEPRIVACY POLICY

BOOK FORUMS FOR ALL BOOKS WE HAVE DISCUSSED
Lost Memory of Skin: A Novel by Russell BanksThe Structure of Scientific Revolutions by Thomas S. KuhnHobbes: Leviathan by Thomas HobbesThe House of the Spirits - by Isabel AllendeArguably: Essays by Christopher HitchensThe Falls: A Novel (P.S.) by Joyce Carol OatesChrist in Egypt by D.M. MurdockThe Glass Bead Game: A Novel by Hermann HesseA Devil's Chaplain by Richard DawkinsThe Hero with a Thousand Faces by Joseph CampbellThe Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor DostoyevskyThe Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark TwainThe Moral Landscape by Sam HarrisThe Decameron by Giovanni BoccaccioThe Road by Cormac McCarthyThe Grand Design by Stephen HawkingThe Evolution of God by Robert WrightThe Tin Drum by Gunter GrassGood Omens by Neil GaimanPredictably Irrational by Dan ArielyThe Wind-Up Bird Chronicle: A Novel by Haruki MurakamiALONE: Orphaned on the Ocean by Richard Logan & Tere Duperrault FassbenderDon Quixote by Miguel De CervantesMusicophilia by Oliver SacksDiary of a Madman and Other Stories by Nikolai GogolThe Passion of the Western Mind by Richard TarnasThe Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le GuinThe Genius of the Beast by Howard BloomAlice's Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll Empire of Illusion by Chris HedgesThe Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner The Extended Phenotype by Richard DawkinsSmoke and Mirrors by Neil GaimanThe Selfish Gene by Richard DawkinsWhen Good Thinking Goes Bad by Todd C. RinioloHouse of Leaves by Mark Z. DanielewskiAmerican Gods: A Novel by Neil GaimanPrimates and Philosophers by Frans de WaalThe Enormous Room by E.E. CummingsThe Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar WildeGod Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything by Christopher HitchensThe Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco Dreams From My Father by Barack Obama Paradise Lost by John Milton Bad Money by Kevin PhillipsThe Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson BurnettGodless: How an Evangelical Preacher Became One of America's Leading Atheists by Dan BarkerThe Things They Carried by Tim O'BrienThe Limits of Power by Andrew BacevichLolita by Vladimir NabokovOrlando by Virginia Woolf On Being Certain by Robert A. Burton50 reasons people give for believing in a god by Guy P. HarrisonWalden: Or, Life in the Woods by Henry David ThoreauExile and the Kingdom by Albert CamusOur Inner Ape by Frans de WaalYour Inner Fish by Neil ShubinNo Country for Old Men by Cormac McCarthyThe Age of American Unreason by Susan JacobyTen Theories of Human Nature by Leslie Stevenson & David HabermanHeart of Darkness by Joseph ConradThe Stuff of Thought by Stephen PinkerA Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled HosseiniThe Lucifer Effect by Philip ZimbardoResponsibility and Judgment by Hannah ArendtInterventions by Noam ChomskyGodless in America by George A. RickerReligious Expression and the American Constitution by Franklyn S. HaimanDeep Economy by Phil McKibbenThe God Delusion by Richard DawkinsThe Third Chimpanzee by Jared DiamondThe Woman in the Dunes by Abe KoboEvolution vs. Creationism by Eugenie C. ScottThe Omnivore's Dilemma by Michael PollanI, Claudius by Robert GravesBreaking The Spell by Daniel C. DennettA Peace to End All Peace by David FromkinThe Time Traveler's Wife by Audrey NiffeneggerThe End of Faith by Sam HarrisEnder's Game by Orson Scott CardThe Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark HaddonValue and Virtue in a Godless Universe by Erik J. WielenbergThe March by E. L DoctorowThe Ethical Brain by Michael GazzanigaFreethinkers: A History of American Secularism by Susan JacobyCollapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed by Jared DiamondThe Battle for God by Karen ArmstrongThe Future of Life by Edward O. WilsonWhat is Good? by A. C. GraylingCivilization and Its Enemies by Lee HarrisPale Blue Dot by Carl SaganHow We Believe: Science, Skepticism, and the Search for God by Michael ShermerLooking for Spinoza by Antonio DamasioLies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them by Al FrankenThe Red Queen by Matt RidleyThe Blank Slate by Stephen PinkerUnweaving the Rainbow by Richard DawkinsAtheism: A Reader edited by S.T. JoshiGlobal Brain by Howard BloomThe Lucifer Principle by Howard BloomGuns, Germs and Steel by Jared DiamondThe Demon-Haunted World by Carl SaganBury My Heart at Wounded Knee by Dee BrownFuture Shock by Alvin Toffler

OTHER PAGES WORTH EXPLORING
Banned Book ListOur Amazon.com SalesMassimo Pigliucci Rationally SpeakingOnline Reading GroupTop 10 Atheism BooksFACTS Book Selections

cron
Copyright © BookTalk.org 2002-2011. All rights reserved.
Website developed by MidnightCoder.ca
Display Pagerank