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The current emphasis on get tough approaches to crime has had
and will continue to have a disastrous impact on society as a
whole. Cook, who has worked extensively in various capacities
throughout the criminal justice system, argues that the failure to
encourage treatment and rehabilitation is extremely shortsighted
and serves only to postpone societal ills. He examines the prison
experience as a psychological experience and suggests that
restructuring the prison environment to focus on changing the
behavior of criminals will ultimately be more cost effective and
more beneficial to society. Approaching the problem of crime in a
coordinated and systematic way will produce more results than the
current reliance on political posturing and media sound bites.
Recent formulation of crime policy often seems driven by
statistically rare and exceptional events, and the new laws passed
in response to sensational events have actually resulted in an
ever-growing and increasingly violent criminal underclass.
Similarly, the trend toward incarceration and extreme punishment as
the primary means of correction has led to unfortunate
consequences. Overcrowding, massive prison construction, and the
siphoning of funds from the rest of the public sector are all get
tough byproducts. This study proposes solutions to current systemic
problems aimed at those interested in trying to develop plans or
treatment strategies within correctional settings.
John R. Cook was an American original. He witnessed or participated
in a string of important events that shaped the nation and sculpted
the history of the West. Born in Ohio in 1844, Cook moved with his
family to Kansas. He joined the Union Army at sixteen and fought
along the Kansas-Missouri border, in Indian Territory, and in
Arkansas. After the Civil War, he ventured out to establish a
homestead and work cattle. Several hardships forced Cook to try his
luck at various enterprises. He became a prospector in New Mexico,
a buffalo hunter in Texas and Kansas, and an Indian fighter.
Santa Fe, Adobe Walls, Fort Elliot, and Rath City were among
Cook's Great Plains haunts. His accounts of the 1878 Hunters War
against Comanche leader Black Horse and the battle of Yellow House
Canyon near present-day Lubbock are rare glimpses into the last
great effort of the Comanche people to maintain their way of life.
He eventually found employment as a government scout and guide with
the army.
In later years, Cook recorded his adventures in a modest volume,
The Border and the Buffalo, first published in a small edition in
1907. Historians quickly recognized it as one of the most important
first- hand accounts about buffalo hunting ever written. The
organization of hunts, camp routines, and marketing of the buffalo
hides are all described in detail.
Award-winning author and Texas historian James L. Haley provides a
new foreword in this reprint edition of this classic of Texana.
This book refutes the 21st-century zeitgeist that views advancing
technology as an unambiguous social good, and examines the effects
of this uncritical acceptance and dependence. It argues that
technology has become the new religion for the digital age, and
that elevating technology to the status of deity serves as a
mechanism to allow for the denial of problems created by reliance
upon machines. From the release of toxins into the environment to
the unsustainable energy demands of the modern era, technological
dependence and overreach are driving humanity to the brink of
extinction. Despite these problems, existential issues such as
artificial intelligence, and the proliferation of nuclear weapons,
there is an unwavering belief in the ability of technology,
particularly any device labeled "smart," to create a perfect future
while denying the history of unmet promises and unintended
consequences of technological innovation. In this book, the
psychological underpinnings of these beliefs are explored from both
a clinical and cognitive perspective. In addition, it critiques the
social and economic forces that maintain our reliance on, or
addiction to, technology, and examines the ethical and security
issues associated with the control of advanced technology.
The Bloody Border Of Missouri And Kansas, The Story Of The
Slaughter Of The Buffalo, Westward Among The Big Game And Wild
Tribes, A Story Of Mountain And Plain.
The Bloody Border Of Missouri And Kansas, The Story Of The
Slaughter Of The Buffalo, Westward Among The Big Game And Wild
Tribes, A Story Of Mountain And Plain.
The Bloody Border Of Missouri And Kansas, The Story Of The
Slaughter Of The Buffalo, Westward Among The Big Game And Wild
Tribes, A Story Of Mountain And Plain.
The Bloody Border Of Missouri And Kansas, The Story Of The
Slaughter Of The Buffalo, Westward Among The Big Game And Wild
Tribes, A Story Of Mountain And Plain.
"Hitchhikers"-This collection is about the joy of being alive. It's
about the magic of the shimmering summer sun dancing on the surface
of a river. It's about that timeless river of liquid gold that
stimulates and illuminates our lives. It is about love, laughter,
kudzu, companionship, faith and justice.
John R. Cooke grew up in the rural South during the 1940s and
50s. He closely observed the birth of rock-n-roll and the societal
tsunami precipitated by "Brown v the Board of Education." His was a
world of gracious tradition, a world of snake and mosquito infested
swamps-a world of great pride and great shame. It was a world of
countless humming and spinning cotton gins, soul-soothing southern
hospitality, a myriad of ramshackled sharecropper shacks, and
innumerable little signs saying, ""whites only."" As a young man
Cooke was well acquainted with the land of revivals, honky-tonks,
fish-camps, dirt roads, horses, dogs, and guns.
"I call this work "Hitchhikers,"" Cooke said, "because I
believe that life is a journey. And I believe that we are all here
to give one another a lift along the way." Cooke served as a
helicopter pilot in the Vietnam War, and after leaving the army he
taught History with the University of Maryland (European Division).
And then later he taught at Brunswick Community College in
Shallotte, North Carolina. He now resides with his wife, Astrid, in
Wilmington, North Carolina. He has also published an historical
novel entitled "Voltaire Six " (iUniverse, 2002).
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