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Loading... Moyers on Democracyby Bill Moyers
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. This is a collection of Moyer's speeches over many years that touch on the subject of democracy. If I could, I'd give a copy to everyone in the world to read. Forget Nicholas Cage movies, Bill Moyers is THE National Treasure. Mr. Moyers probably doesn't believe in reincarnation - though he would respect my right to do so - but I think in one of his previous lives he must have been a bard, and in another one of those court jesters who was the only person to tell the king the truth. For he has both the journalistic integrity to be dedicated to finding the truth and to sharing it with the public. The speech he gave on Hubert Humphrey is one of the best pieces of writing, fiction or non-fiction, I've ever read in my life, and many of the other pieces are of similar quality. It is hard to give a sense of the book, because it wanders many places in talking about democracy. There are obituaries here, to such people as Barbara Jordan, William Sloane Coffin, and Fred Friendly. There is a commencement address. Issues of media, politics, and religion are discussed. And always, Moyers gives us history, often history of the relatively unknown and their struggles to be free. It is an inspirational book, one that sets the mind alight to preserve and restore freedom and its handmaiden, responsibility. I'm about halfway through this book, and it's superb. Moyer's writing style is a treat to read, and his theme of the threat to democracy of the increasing wealth disparity in the US is tremendously important. no reviews | add a review
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(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:17 -0400)
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“All I can say is that if reporting what happens to ordinary people because of events beyond their control, and the indifference of government to their fate, is ‘liberal,’ I plead guilty.”
Moyers' speeches are filled with powerful words of caution and hope. He is a Baptist with a divinity degree and a faith strong enough that it is deepened, not weakened, as he learns from Buddhists, Sufis, Jews, Hindus, and Confucianists, and he is ever mindful of Christianity’s focus on the poorest of humanity. He is a true patriot, with love for the promise of the American dream and the ideals embodied in the Constitution, and stern words for the powerful who lose sight of it.
This one's worth getting in hardcover, folks. (