| Selected Product: | How to Ruin the United States of America Hardcover Author: Ben Stein, Phil DeMuth Publisher: New Beginnings Press Release Date: 2008-06-30 ISBN-10: 1401918697 ISBN-13: 9781401918699 List Price: $14.95 Average Customer Rating: | | Fleeced: How Barack Obama, Media Mockery of Terrorist Threats, Liberals Who Want to Kill Talk Radio, the Do-Nothing Congress, Companies That Help Iran, and Washington Lobbyists for Foreign Governments Are Scamming Us ... and What to Do About It ISBN-10: 0061547751 ISBN-13: 9780061547751 List Price:$26.95 The Obama Nation: Leftist Politics and the Cult of Personality ISBN-10: 1416598065 ISBN-13: 9781416598060 List Price:$28.00 The Real Stars: In Today's America, Who Are the True Heroes? ISBN-10: 1401911447 ISBN-13: 9781401911447 List Price:$14.95 Can America Survive? The Rage of the Left, the Truth, and What to Do About It ISBN-10: 1401903339 ISBN-13: 9781401903336 List Price:$24.95 | To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for How to Ruin the United States of America by Ben Stein, Phil DeMuth (ISBN-10: 1401918697, ISBN-13: 9781401918699). At this time we have not yet written a review for How to Ruin the United States of America by Ben Stein, Phil DeMuth (ISBN-10: 1401918697, ISBN-13: 9781401918699). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com
On the heels of his very successful books, How to Ruin Your Life, How to Ruin Your Love Life, and How to Ruin Your Financial Life, Ben Stein, in collaboration with his pal Phil DeMuth, has tongue firmly in cheek once again as he comes up with surefire ways to ruin the greatest nation in the history of the human race. Try a few of these on for size: · Trust the United Nations to protect us and our security. · Make it unlawful to worship God or even to show images of the Ten Commandments. · Convert our universities into fortresses of anti-Americanism, hatred of freedom, and centers of confusion and ignorance. · Encourage contempt for the family and for the community. · Allow Hollywood to brainwash us into believing that only suckers and criminals fight for their country. · Treat the military, the police, firefighters, and teachers as losers and pay them starvation wages. Hey, does any of this sound familiar? Maybe that’s because it’s already happening! Ben and Phil give you all the information you’ll ever need in order to successfully ruin the USA even further! Sardonic, humorous, but also angrily emphatic, this is a book every old-fashioned patriot really needs to read! Knock-out Book | Customer Rating: | | Mr. Stein and Mr. DeMuth have a great book here. You can really connect with what they have to say. This book is simple yet straight to the point. | Never gets around to making its point | Customer Rating: | This book seems unable to finish an argument at any point. For example it spends 5 pages convincing us how many liberals there are in higher education, but forgets to explain why that's a bad thing. For those of us that don't hate liberals (I'm non politcal, not left wing), it's a lot of talking with no point. The only mild attempt it makes at proving it's a bad thing is that if one viewpoint is very common, it will lead to groupthink. Besides the preposterousness of this unfounded conclusion, I'm quite certain that the authors would have no such complaints if the pervasive majority were christian rather than liberal.
Examples of this inability to finish an argument are prevalent, including the primary subject for every chapter. To provide just one more such example, the first chapter is about how we can ruin america by getting rid of God, then goes on to explain at length how the founding fathers and early America were all christian. It then talks about how we've removed God from schools and such. It never explains why getting rid of God is a bad thing, or even if we assume it's morally bad, how it will ruin America. Sure, if you're a Christian you might be bitter enough about the facts he illuminates to miss the fact that he never really gets to the point.
Other major issues with the book are biased statistics (do some of your own research and compare it to what the book says), as well as constantly mistaking correlation for causality. For example, people that watch more tv expect more government handouts. That doesn't mean watching tv CAUSES that mentality, more likely is that an inherently lazy person will watch more tv and expect more handouts. Eliminating tv does not make a person less lazy.
In conclusion, the whole book reads as a propaganda manifesto to make people that agree with the authors cheer and people that don't bewildered. | How to Ruin America | Customer Rating: | | It's a shame when it takes a comedian to speak with the voice of reason. In a rather small book, Ben Stein lays out what is wrong with America and the likely results. That's spelled ruin. Stein is actually much more than a comedian and his work shows deep thought. A small book deserves a concise review. Buy it! | The Truth Hurts | Customer Rating: | | The authors take an honest and sometimes humorous, no punches pulled, look at many of the major issues and problems facing the United States of America. A great read! I didn't want to put this one down. If we can only encourage Americans and our leaders to use the common sense needed to strengthen our country and unite us once again. Otherwise, some of the scary scenarios in this book could soon be our reality and then, if it isn't already, it will be too late. | I hope everyone reads and thinks about what this terrific book has to say. | Customer Rating: | I hope you take the time to read this terrific book. It won't take very long to read, but I hope you ponder its meaning for a long time to come. In a way it is one of those tests that reveals who you are by your responses to what it says. I found myself deeply in sympathy with what Ben Stein and Phil DeMuth say in these pages and I think that most people who truly love America for its history, traditions, and potential will love this book. Those who see only America's flaws and judge it a failed nation will be on the other side of things. I think it is helpful to know who stands where and why.
The book has six short chapters. Ben Stein's other "How to Ruin" books have many more chapters that range from a paragraph or two to a page or two, but these chapters are 20 to 30 pages each. The authors provide a mix of history, stories, and personal analysis of each topic.
The first chapter shows how banishing God from Public Life is against our long held traditions and how this modern innovation has turned the Founders' intentions on their head. It has not been a matter of progress, but a process of corruption. Our society has become not only coarser and crueler, it has taken on practices as normal that have been seen by humanity as abominations for thousands of years.
The second chapter shows how the mis-education of our youth serves one political agenda and it is not the one that reveres our founding and the original intent of our Declaration and Constitution. When the authors show you the way certain views have turned every subject into a nail for its monomaniacal hammer I hope you get energized to get involved and help America reject the rot of the past several decades.
Chapter three shows us the debasement of American culture. Stein and DeMuth show surveys that demonstrate the majority of us understand that things have gotten worse. They also compare literature and movies from early in the 20th Century to recent decades. The review of television, music, and our obsession with celebrity for celebrity's sake is truly disheartening.
Their discussion of the weakening of our military in chapter four is more important that you might at first realize. Despite the costliness of the War on Terror, we are still not spending enough to replace the equipment being used or enough of our GDP to keep our military as strong as we need it to be to face the looming threats. We need more men and women in the military who need to be paid and cared for better. We need more ships, planes, tanks, and other equipment. And we all need to show more public gratitude to the men and women of our armed forces regardless of how you feel about the tasks they do on our behalf.
Chapter five discusses the immigration problem in a very helpful and informative way. Stein and DeMuth show how the current waves of legal and illegal immigration began in 1965 when the quotas put in place in 1924 were repealed. They assign the blame to Ted Kennedy and that is fine with me, but the courts have also helped create this mess. While it is wrong to blame those coming here to feed their families, we don't need to countenance their lawbreaking nor should those who employ them get off free. These employers are not paying the full freight of their employees because they externalize the costs on us, the taxpayers. We need better policies and we need to seriously enforce our laws. If we need immigrants, we should have them but in a legal and orderly way. We shouldn't let a political agenda to change our society or a desire to create more constituents undermine respect for our laws and our economy.
The last chapter discusses VooDoo Economics. I am in sympathy with what Stein and DeMuth are saying here even if I have a couple of qualms with the way they say it. The problem is America is rapidly spending its great wealth on things that do not create wealth. We are incurring debt to buy baubles from China and oil from people who hate us. I agree with the authors that we must be willing to pay taxes for the things we want the government to do. However, I am less confident than they about the efficacy of raising taxes to curb our deficit spending. Neither party has shown a speck of financial maturity or controlled pork responsibly. Every dollar you give them is simply used to spend more.
Think back to George H. W. Bush and his broken pledge of no new taxes. He raised taxes because he was strongly pressured to "be a statesman" and end deficit spending. The idea was that the tax increase would bring the budget in line with the revenues brought in. However, the Congress piled on something like $1.60 or $1.80 of new spending for every dollar of new taxes. That means that every dollar of the new taxes went to new spending not to deficit reduction. Then Bill Clinton and the New Democrats trashed Bush for breaking the pledge the Democrats (among others) urged him to break, blamed him for budget deficits and more. So, I am very concerned that if we follow Stein and DeMuth in adding new taxes, no matter how well intended, it will just give the Congress a green light to spend more.
Yes, we haven't been able to end any government programs and it is terribly sad that we lack the sense and maturity to limit government and make hard choices, but giving a drunk one last round because he promises that it will be the last drink before he goes on the wagon has a long history of failure. So does giving Congress more billions in the name of fiscal responsibility.
Stein and DeMuth do have a great point about the corrosive effects of social economic inequality. However, I will point out that the great fortunes of Carnegie, Rockefeller and others were not used to indulge in lavish and selfish lifestyles. While they lived very well (and more), they used their great wealth to build libraries and universities, to promote medical research, museums, and much more. Look at the buildings of your state's major universities and see how many of the great ones were built by the fortunes of a former time. In my view, the problem is much less about the fortunes being created than it is about the corrupt social values Stein and DeMuth describe in previous chapters.
I always laugh when I hear people like Warren Buffett complain that they should be taxed more. Nothing is stopping them from giving all their wealth to the government. They are free to tax themselves at any higher marginal rate they choose. If we all leave it to the government to take care of the poor and do our level best to minimize the taxes we pay to do that good, doesn't that invert the idea of charity and giving all you can to help your neighbor? The wealthy know that talk is cheap and mouthing niceties is good PR. Do not mistake wealthy businessmen (and women) for free market capitalists. Many of them are for big government because they want the government to dole out favors to them, protect them from competition, and tax the middle class heavily to pay for social programs and subsidies. I know that Buffett and Gates are giving billions to trusts and charities and good for them. But that does not mean their social prescriptions and comments on taxation are not self serving
This is a terrific book and deserves a large audience.
You might want to look at these books by Stein and DeMuth:
Can America Survive? The Rage of the Left, the Truth, and What to Do About It
The Real Stars: In Today's America, Who Are the True Heroes?
How to Ruin Your Life
Reviewed by Craig Matteson, Ann Arbor, MI
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