Tags
Language
Tags
April 2024
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
31 1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 1 2 3 4

[Ebook] It Did Happen Here. Recollections of Political Repression in America

Posted By: blitzkrieg
[Ebook] It Did Happen Here. Recollections of Political Repression in America

Ebook: Bud Shultz & Ruth Shultz (1989):
It Did Happen Here. Recollections of Political Repression in America

University of California Press (May 1989) | ISBN: 0520065085 | 267 pages | PDF | 1,94 MB


"Across this century the commandments of repression have been invoked against those who dared to think thoughts of dissent and then had the audacity to act on their thoughts."


From Publishers Weekly:
The tales of political repression compiled here belong to this century and are not confined to the McCarthy era. The government's repression of dissent has relied on an arsenal of techniques, from loyalty tests and punitive grand juries to police violence, paid informers and the FBI's secret, illegal Cointelpro operation against leftist groups and union and civil rights leaders. Among the 34 who speak out here are Leonard Peltier, jailed American Indian activist denied the new trial many feel he deserves, and Margaret Randall, feminist author threatened with deportation because she allegedly advocated world communism. Pete Seeger, Benjamin Spock, Scott Nearing and Ring Lardner Jr. add their testimonies. Other victims of state interference include Wobbly organizer Jack Miller; Minoru Yasui, imprisoned in a WW II internment camp because of his Japanese-American ancestry; and civil rights activist Chuck McDew, jailed in Louisiana under an antiquated "criminal anarchy" statute. This compelling casebook compiled by a pair of Connecticut freelancers effectively makes the point that the assault on constitutional rights is not an isolated or long-vanished phenomenon.

From Library Journal:
Police gunfire at Wobblies in 1916, the wartime internment of Japanese-Americans, and domestic FBI action in the 1970s all exemplify the political repression the Schultzes argue has been pervasive in 20th-century in America. They present interviews with 33 persons, some familiar (Scott Nearing and Ring Lardner Jr. ) but most whose ordeals are not widely known. These grave abuses ought to be lodged in historical memory; unfortunately, the interviews have been edited into a sameness of voice that detracts from their power, and readers may have difficulty in recalling one from the other. Still, whether or not one sees with Victor Navasky (in a foreword) the danger of a police state, the book is affecting and should be an optional choice for public and college libraries.

This Ebook does not contain the photos of the original version

Links:



P.S.: Hi mirror bonus points junkies: The behaviour is quite laughable. But do as you please!