BUSH
IS READING: The Case For Democracy:
2/1/05 - C-SAPN SPECIAL BUSH'S READING...
http://www.cspan.org
The Case For Democracy:
The Power of Freedom to Overcome Tyranny and Terror

Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Drawing on his autobiography—from Soviet refusenik to Israeli cabinet
minister – Sharansky distinguishes between "fear" and "free" societies. He
spends a significant amount of time taking on conservative "realists" who
prize stability in international relations, as well as liberals who he says
fail to distinguish between flawed democracies that struggle to implement
human rights and authoritarian or totalitarian states that flout human
rights as a matter of course. Sharansky criticizes those who argue that
democracy is culturally contingent and therefore unsuited for Muslim
societies. Turning to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, he mentions
documented Israeli human rights abuses, but places the bulk of the blame for
the conflict on the dictatorial systems prevalent in Arab societies. He also
weighs in on the vexing subject of how to distinguish legitimate criticism
of Israel from the "new anti-Semitism." Such criticism must pass the "3D"
test of "[no] demonization, double standards, or delegitimation." Sharansky
does not grapple deeply with the current situation in Iraq, but his opinions
throughout, honed through years in a Soviet prison and in the corridors of
power, feel earned.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All
rights reserved.
Product Description:
Natan Sharansky has lived an unusual life, spending nine years as a Soviet
political prisoner and nine years as an Israeli politician. He brings the
unique perspective of his experiences in order to make the case for
democracy with his longtime friend and adviser Ron Dermer. In this
brilliantly analytical yet personal book, nondemocratic societies are put
under a microscope to reveal the mechanics of tyranny that sustain them. In
exposing the inner workings of a "fear society," the authors explain why
democracy is not beyond any nation's reach, why it is essential for our
security and why there is much that can be done to promote it around the
world.
Freedom, the authors claim, is rooted in the right to dissent, to walk into
the town square and declare one's views without fear of punishment or
reprisal. The authors persuasively argue that societies that do not protect
that right can never be reliable partners for peace and that the democracy
that hates us is much safer than the dictatorship that loves us. The price
for stability inside nondemocratic regimes, the authors explain, is terror
outside of them. Indeed, the security of the free world depends on using all
possible leverage-moral, political, and financial-to support democracy.
This book is about much more than theory. After explaining why the expansion
of democracy is so critical to our future, the authors take us on a
fascinating journey to see firsthand how an evil empire was destroyed and
how the principles that led to that destruction were abandoned in the search
for peace in the Middle East.
But the criticism contained in this book does not dampen its profound
optimism. When there is every reason to doubt that freedom will prevail in
the Middle East, this book declares unequivocally that the skeptics are
wrong. The argument advanced here makes clear why lasting tyranny can be
consigned to history's dustbin if the free world stays true to its ideals.
The question is not whether we have the power to change the world but
whether we have the will. Summoning that will demands that we move beyond
Right and Left and start thinking about right and wrong.
See all Editorial Reviews
==========
FrontPage magazine.com :: The Case for Democracy by Jamie Glazov
The Case for Democracy, By Jamie Glazov FrontPageMagazine.com | December 17,
2004. ... So let’s get started. What inspired you to write The Case for
Democracy? ...
CSPAN WASHINGTON JOUNAL ... INTERVIEW WITH AUTHOR THIS
MORNING...
I'D SAY IT'S IMORTANT TO SEE THIS PROGRAM!
Washington Journal Entire Program (02/11/2005)
Main Page - Friday, 02/11/05
Message Board by American
Patriot Friends Network [APFN]
APFN MESSAGEBOARD
ARCHIVES
