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Featured on CNN, C-SPAN, FOX News, NBC's Today Show, Democracy NOW , News Hour with Jim Lehrer and other leading talk shows. In the late 1960s, the bipartisan Eisenhower Violence Commission, formed by President Lyndon Baines Johnson and extended by President Richard Nixon, warned that most civilizations have fallen less from external assault than from internal decay. Over recent years, the internal decay prophesied by the Violence Commission, but also by President Dwight D. Eisenhower in his military-industrial complex farewell speech, has been reflected in American public policies. The fault lies on both sides of the political aisle. After Pearl Harbor, "Mr. Republican," Senator Robert A. Taft, said criticism is patriotic. Patriotism, Democracy, and Common Sense assembles more than three dozen patriots. They range from Kevin Phillips, chief political strategist for Richard Nixon's victory in 1968, and former Ambassador Joseph Wilson IV, called a "true American hero" by President George H. W. Bush in 1991, to Jessica Tuchman Mathews, President of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, and former Oklahoma Senator Fred R. Harris, who advocated grassroots, populist policies when he ran for president in the 1970s. Why have American policies failed? What alternative policies can return America to its promise, internally and in the eyes of a global community shaken by, among other things, American torture and sexual humiliation of prisoners in Iraq? Patriotism, Democracy and Common Sense answers these questions in a preposterous way. It asks citizens and policy makers to actually connect the dots-to move America forward by developing mutually supportive and complementary foreign, national security, Middle East, economic, domestic, inner city, media, campaign finance and voting reform policies. Too much to expect of our civilization? This important and timely effort is published in cooperation with The Milton S. Eisenhower Foundation. From Patriotism, Democracy, and Common Se
'I seek a kind person who will educate my intelligent boy, aged 11.' In 1938, Jewish families under Nazi rule were scrambling to get out of the Reich. In desperation, children were advertised in the pages of the Manchester Guardian, their virtues and skills extolled in brief. The right words in the right order could mean the difference between life and death. Eighty-three years later, Guardian's Pulitzer prize-winning World Affairs Editor, Julian Borger, found the intelligent boy was his father, Robert. This led to an investigation to retrace the lives of his family members, and in doing so excavating secrets of the past, From the Viennese archives to the Shanghai ghetto, from internment camps and family homes in the UK to German forests, concentration camps and a secret Austrian cell within the French Resistance, Borger retraces his father's escape and survival, as well as the remarkable stories of six other advertised Viennese children. I Seek a Kind Person is a powerful, investigative memoir unveiling the long-lasting shadow that is cast on future generations by history.
'I look for an au pair for my girl, aged 14; well educated Jewess.' 'Who would give a home to a grammar school scholar, aged 14; healthy, clever, very musical.' 'I seek a kind person who will educate my intelligent boy, aged 11.' In 1938, Jewish families under Nazi rule were scrambling to get their children out of the Reich. Newspaper advertisements were one avenue of escape. Scores of children were 'advertised' in the pages of the Manchester Guardian, their virtues and skills extolled in brief. The right words in the right order could mean the difference between life and death. Reading these advertisements eighty-three years later, the Guardian's Pulitzer prize-winning World Affairs Editor, Julian Borger, found his surname and an address beneath it: 'Borger, 5/12 Hintzerstrasse, Vienna 3'. The address had been his grandparents', the intelligent boy was his father, Robert. In I Seek A Kind Person, Borger retraces his father's escape and survival, as well as the remarkable stories of six other Viennese children who sought and found sanctuary in the same way. Blending memoir and history with investigative journalism, Borger returns to Vienna with his grandparents' passports, emblazoned with swastikas and a 'J' for Jew on the first page, to retrace their lives. In doing so, he excavates the secrets of his own family history and its long shadow.
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