Guest perspective by Ralph Nader
1. America Beyond Capitalism by Gar Alperovitz (Democracy
Collaborative Press and Dollars and Sense, 2011). If you want to see how
community economies are spreading to displace the sales and influence of
companies such as Bank of America, ExxonMobil, Aetna, ADM and McDonalds, this
is your book. Democratic credit unions, local renewable and efficient energy,
community health clinics and farmer-to-consumer markets are some of the
possibilities outlined in this optimistic book.
2. Retirement Heist: How Companies Plunder and Profit
from the Nest Eggs of American Workers by Ellen E. Schultz (Portfolio/Penguin
Hardcover, 2011), award-winning reporter for The Wall Street Journal. This book
meticulously documents how big business and their attorneys avariciously turned
pension plans into piggy banks, tax shelters and profit centers, at the expense
of millions of trusting, loyal workers. This is the searing story of corporate
greed on steroids.
3. This Changes Everything: Occupy Wall Street and the
99% Movement ed. by Sarah van Gelder of YES! Magazine. (Berrett-Koehler
Publisher, Inc. San Francisco, 2011). Sixteen short essays viewing the Occupy
initiatives around the country from a variety of perspectives. Very lively,
forward-looking, and filled with interesting insights.
4. The Vertical Farm - Feeding the World in the 21st
Century by Columbia University Professor Dickson Despommier (St. Martin's
Press, New York, 2011). Scientific American writes "Imagine a world where
every city has its own local food source grown in the safest way possible,
where no drop of water or particle of light is wasted, and where a simple
elevator ride can transport you to nature's grocery store - imagine the world
of the vertical farm." This mind-stretcher shows how to feed people and
save the environment - see if it is too good to be true!
5. Technology, Globalization, and Sustainable Development
- Transforming the Industrial State by Nicholas A. Ashford and Ralph P. Hall
(Yale University Press, New Haven, 2011). This is a big picture, big book
integrating the design of multipurpose solutions to the sustainability
challenge so that economics, employment, technology, environment, industrial
development, national and international law, trade, finance, and public and
worker health and safety are taken into account. If the piecemeal frustrate you,
try this whole meal.
6. Amglish In, Like, Ten Easy Lessons: A Celebration of
the New World Lingo by Arthur E. Rowse with illustrations and caricatures by
John G. Doherty (Roman and Littlefield, Lanham, Maryland, 2011). Amglish is
described as informal American English, influenced by the syntax of tweets and
the slips-ups of celebrities that has begun to dominate the glob As William
Powers says "Amglish is not only here to stay, it's a kind of party and
Arthur E. Rowse shows us how to join in and have fun. Lively, illuminating and
totally cool-smart."
7. Crude Awakening: Money, Mavericks and Mayhem in Alaska
by Amanda Coyne and Tony Hopfinger (Nation Books, New York 2011). The authors,
renowned for their tough scoops that regularly appeared in Alaska Dispatch pour
out into this wonderful book their inside and outside knowledge of Alaska's
combustible politics of big oil, their politicians and the underhanded dealings
that attracted federal investigators who had their own problems. Read about
power in Alaska and what its future portends for the lower 48.
8. All That We Share: A Field Guide to the Commons by Jay
Walljasper (The New Press, New York, 2010). You may not know all of the
commonwealth in our country that belongs to you and other Americans. Sure we
own the valuable public lands- one third of our country - and the public
airwaves. But the finest writers in this burgeoning field of awareness point to
much more. But what we own - the immensity all around us - we do not control.
Control has been the preoccupation of corporations that strive to turn our
government against the core concept of the commons. Engage these engrossing
pages and see how we can recover the commons for the good life and for our
posterity.
9. While We Were Sleeping: Success Stories in Injury and
Violence Prevention by David Hemenway. (University of California Press,
Berkeley, 2009). In the swirl of corporate propaganda against health/safety
regulation, this book did not receive the notice it and its celebrated author
deserve. From his professional position at the Harvard School of Public Health,
David Hemenway takes you into your daily world and shows how successful
regulation made your immediate surroundings and environment safer and more
healthful. It is an ode to brave legislators and regulators who stood up to the
corporatists for a change, saved lives, and prevented injuries and illnesses.
10. Consequential Learning: A Public Approach to Better
Schools by Jack Shelton (NewSouth Books, Montgomery, Alabama, 2005). A wake-up
call to parents and students so indentured to sterile, high-frequency
multiple-choice standardized tests. Mr. Shelton stresses that student learning
comes from both the classroom and the community, with the lessons of the former
applied to the benefit of the latter. He shows from his experience in Alabama's
schools and colleges how students become "self-aware learners" from
connecting school and community "in the formation of their personal
characters." Filled with examples and strategies for both civic and academic
growth.
11. Save the Humans?: Common Preservation in Action by
Jeremy Brecher (Paradigm Publishers, Boulder, Colorado, 2011). This book is
about "common preservation" past and present as "world leaders
fail" to address problems of deep significance to billions of human beings
and their environment. Brecher shows how common preservation worked in Gandhi's
civil disobedience campaigns in colonial India and the Polish Solidarity
movement that weakened the Soviet Union's control of Poldand. He takes his
theme right to today's Occupy initiatives.
12. Stanley K. Sheinbaum: A 20th Century Knight's Quest
for Peace, Civil Liberties and Economic Justice by Stanley K. Sheinbaum, with
William A Meis Jr. (Fairtree, Los Angeles, 2011). Don't let this just-published,
witty gem fall through the cracks. It is the absorbing story of a civic
renaissance man who shaped foreign policy, influenced police practices in Los
Angeles, protected whistle-blowers, pioneered campaigns of Eugene McCarthy and
George McGovern and took the tough stands to advance first stage
Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations. Called a "fearless activist"
by Norman Lear and "addicted to fairness and justice," by Barbara
Streisand, Scheinbaum's nine decades of robust activity is filled with motivational
and character lessons for a young generation looking for exemplary guidance.
Enjoy and replenish! Happy Holidays!
- Ralph Nader
2 comments:
Hello mate, nice post
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