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Book reviews for "Martin,_Benjamin_S." sorted by average review score:
Politics by Other Means: Politicians, Prosecutors, and the Press from Watergate to Whitewater
Published in Paperback by W W Norton & Co. (1999)
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The Gilded Age, Part Two
the political shift
This was an excellent book. The authors took an extensive look at the shift in the approach to politics today and examined how the shift stems out of history; including references to political parties and the media. The book explains, in an insightful way, how the current focus on prosecution of political figures has contributed to electoral decay. This book includes fascinating insight into the current political situation and how we have arrived at this point. I highly recommend it to anyone who is interested in why our politics seems to have decayed to the negative state it is at now.
Advances in International Comparative Management: Beyond Theory Z: Global Rationalization Strategies of American, German and Japanese Multinational
Published in Hardcover by JAI Press (1984)
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Memoirs of a Soldier
Published in Paperback by 1stBooks Library (2002)
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Politics by Other Means: Politicians, Prosecutors, and the Press from Watergate to Whitewater, Third Edition
Published in Paperback by W W Norton & Co. (2003)
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There are points that the authors could pursue that would strengthen this work. It would be worthwhile to note that low voter turnout, particularly in the case of primary elections, works to create nominees of the more extreme wings of the parties. If more voters than just the party faithful were to show up perhaps deadlock and institutional combat would be precluded. But the authors seem to blame the failure of voter mobilization on the leaders rather than on the disinterested electorate.
Another notion that could be suggested is that the United States has entered another "Gilded Age" where there are no over-arching issues around which consensus can be reached. Isn't it possible that this combat may be a result of the end of the Cold War? Didn't a new power structure need to be created in that vacuum?
Additionally, the authors write of the media and its rise to power but fail to fully explore the increased capacity, or presence, of the current wall-to-wall coverage.