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5 teosta 100 jäsentä 2 arvostelua

Tietoja tekijästä

Stuart Wexler has been considered one of the top investigative researchers in domestic terrorism and radical religious activities. His groundbreaking work on forensics and historical crimes has been featured on NBC News and in The Boston Clolic, Newsweek, and USA Today. Wexler is the co-author of näytä lisää two books, The Awful Grace of God and Shadow Warfare. He received the prestigious James Madion Fellowship to pursue post-graduate political science studies at Rutgers University. He now lives and teaches in New Jersey. näytä vähemmän

Tekijän teokset

Merkitty avainsanalla

Yleistieto

Sukupuoli
male
Kansalaisuus
USA
Koulutus
Tulane University (BA|History)

Jäseniä

Kirja-arvosteluja

Fifty-three years and nothing has changed. I wouldn't recommend this as your first book about the assassination of Dr.King, but it offers up some intriguing theories about who else may have been involved. Surprise! It's pretty much who you would think. The same sort of "very fine people" who still plague us today.
 
Merkitty asiattomaksi
5hrdrive | Feb 11, 2021 |
The author explores American religious extremism, tracing much violence in the latter 20th century and since to a group known as Christian Identity that made inroads into racist groups such as the KKK, and added an anti-Semitic component to much racist thought. He documents everything with data collected from FBI FOIA requests and interviews with key players, and demonstrates just the right amount of skepticism to keep him from being branded a "conspiracy theorist" in the pejorative sense. He does not assume the existence of conspiratorial attempts to kill individuals such as MLK Jr means that James Earl Ray did not kill him, and did not act alone; he merely traces the roots of Ray's thought, and the presence of Ray as a scout, to the Christian Identity group. Other issues abound. The author commits the majority of the book to the mid-decades of the 20th century, particularly the 1950s and 1960s, during the Civil Rights era, and moves with the speed of a whirlwind through the remaining decades since then; he establishes the set up, then simply relates events back to the people and groups he has already introduced us to. This is both a strength and a weakness, as it does give us a solid background of familiar names, but it also shortchanges the latter period, and leaves a lot out as a result.

The main weakness of the book is that the author continually addresses all of this as being somehow a perversion of Christianity, and seems to dismiss the history of Christian violence, and particularly violence against the Jews. His statement that prior to this period Jews had at least been regarded as human is questionable, especially to anyone familiar with the literature of earlier times, such as Shakespeare and Marlowe, where characters refer to Jews as "dogs" and "demons", neither of which are considered human by anyone. He also shortchanges the actual violence in the Bible itself, and rather than seeing this as an interpretation of things present throughout the history of Biblical exegesis, prefers to see it as something new that has been tacked on.. While the two-seed concept of Christianity may be a new reading of Genesis, the violence advocated by these individuals is not that unique, and is not that difficult to support from the Bible; it is simply a focus on different Biblical verses than those of the more liberal, tolerant versions.

Overall, a worthwhile read, and it will give a person a lot to think about.
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Devil_llama | Oct 22, 2016 |

Tilastot

Teokset
5
Jäseniä
100
Suosituimmuussija
#190,120
Arvio (tähdet)
½ 3.6
Kirja-arvosteluja
2
ISBN:t
13

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