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interesting and inciting, but with substantial flaws
A Great Read
Best of its type. Made my blood boil. And I'm not naive

Ambitious, but ultimately disappointing
An analysis of where society is and where it may go...If you expect to interact with people and exchange information, you need to read this book. Being part of society is what makes societies and governments function. Without some level of connection/involvement between people, nothing would be accomplished.
Read and re-read... it will change the way you think, and even possibly make you a more enriched person...
invaluable and different taste

Stupid MeWhat I got was a picture book suited to 7th/8th graders at best. The bibliography is a joke. If you have children of these ages in your home, this is a passable book. I don't. For me, the book was a waste of money
Teaching the Declaration? Then look at this last chapterHowever, the title of his book remains problematic for me. I picked it up because I was checking out juvenile histories dealing with the Declaration of Independence and while Freedman is certainly not alone in putting the Declaration in the full context of the American Revolution and colonial relations with the British crown, I am still looking for a first rate book about what happened in Philadelphia during the summer of 1776. Yes, I am basically looking for something that will tell young students the story behind the musical "1776," which has enjoyed a Broadway revival and been touring the nation the last couple of years. "Give Me Liberty" has excellent historic paintings and etchings, and Freedman usually works in some analysis along with the historical facts. It is for that reason in general, and his last chapter in particular, that I am willing to overlook the problems with the title. Any teacher covering the Declaration of Independence in class would be well served to take notes on the points covered in that last chapter.
Give Me Liberty

Debate Mediocrity
THE LD Debate textbook
Definitely a must read for any Lincoln-Douglas Debater.

Totally UNoriginal
The Passion and the Pain
Emtionally, Inspriing

freedom isn't free....As Dershowitz says, the contest to develop and maintain rights is a perpetual one, and for the past several decades, he's done his part, and then some. Read this clear-thinking, interesting, and well-written book, and you'll be better equipped to do your share, as well.
Health Food for the Mind
Building rights to defend against wrongs.These "nurtural rights" are anchored in a slowly changing collective human experience of injustice. Persistent struggle and persuasive advocates are required to define rights. The process starts with identifying injustices and seeking remedies. This bottom up approach emphasizes the view that human rights are limitations on government power. Dershowitz briefly addresses economic rights and affirmative rights but they are not the focus of this book. His United States legal training and experience is reflected in this book's focus.
For the remainder of the book Dershowitz applies these ideas to a broad range of contemporary United States legal issues. Sometimes he reaches definite legal policy conclusions, such as deferring to legislative laws regarding grandparents visitation rights. He sometimes advocates legislative remedies, such as giving organ recipient candidates who voluntered to donate their organs preference over those who did not volunter to donate. Sometimes he makes fine distinctions, as when he favors seat belt laws but opposes motorcycle helmet laws. Sometimes he delves into history.
He defends freedom of expression, the rights to believe and disbelieve and favors the eventual abolishment of capital punishment, although he makes an exception for pre-emptive targeted assassination of suicide terrorists. He argues persuasively that the lack of restrictions on undercover police scams is a serious problem and he advocates the creation of a scam warrant, similiar to search and wiretap warrants, as a remedy. He argues for a torture warrant applicable when coercion of confession can pre-empt terrorist plans and save lives. He also argues persuasively that the law currently allows psychiatrists to routinely provide "expert" testimony or advice concerning legal matters that are outside of their expertise and that this subjectivity leads to unjust detentions. He argues that judicial review should be used primarily as a check and balance in defense of minority rights against the excesses of untrammeled democratic majoritarian rule. He argues that Senaters should vote for or against Supreme Court nominees based on their own political, judicial, philosophical opinions without deferring to the president but should be deferential towards the president's executive nominees. He argues that unaccountable warrantless surveillance authorized by the attorney general is a major breach of separation of powers and results in politically motivated violations of privacy. And much more...


Much ado about nothing
The Work and Philosophy of a Civil LibertarianIt is a shame that Ms Kennedy does not spend more time discussing her experiences in the ACLU, but those events that she does relate show how there is no shortage of politicians and bureaucrats who are willing to restrict the rights of the citizen. While sworn to uphold the US Constitution, elected officials often quickly cater to special interest groups who want their agendas advanced even though they violate the bill of rights.
I'm a fairly liberal Democrat, and found myself agreeing with everything Ms. Kennedy said. Is one of us in the wrong political party?
Very Informative!!!

TERRIBLE!
Economic Freedom = The Key to Development?
Superb resource

Awful!
Not the best, but not the worstHowever, I do think the author did a good job in portraying how the war in the colonies pitted families against friends and split families between Tory and Colonist.
I would recommend this book.
Inccredible I never read a book that fast.

A good summary, but ...Michael Les Benedict's otherwise serviceable textbook on American constitutional history is a case in point. Both in the Introduction and in a footnote to chapter 1, Benedict apologizes for using the word "Englishmen," as in "the Rights of Englishmen," which he says reflected the "sexist reality" of a bygone age.
Really, this is nonsense on stilts. Not only English, but over two dozen other Indo-European languages have neuter words for "person" that are also used for the masculine. In each case, the feminine subset of "people" is denoted via a modified version of the neuter (or masculine).
If people like Benedict really wanted to get rid of sex-specific language, they would cease using _feminine_ forms, all of which are modified forms of masculine/neuter words (e.g., fe-male, act-ress, host-ess). They don't really care to do that, however; it does not have anything like the Pharisaical thrill of using a neologism in place of a perfectly good, old, English word ("mailcarrier" for "mailman," "server" for "waitress," "English people" for "Englishmen," etc.).
At the beginning of chapter 7, "Andrew Jackson, Democracy, and 'State Rights,'" Benedict says, "The late 1820s and 1830s witnessed the development of a strong belief in the character and intelligence of the common man and woman known as 'Jacksonian Democracy.'" There is no evidence that anyone associated with Andrew Jackson had such views. In fact, to the extent that anyone had them, they were Whigs, Garrisonians, and other OPPONENTS of "Jacksonian Democracy," and they were (from the perspective of 2003) amazingly few.
Readers of this book certainly get a feeling for Benedict's politics and personality from these features. Other than that, the book is generally useful.
Solid Introduction, with Fine Bibliography
Solid Book with Excellent Bibliography
The book never addresses the fundamental causal issue in judging whether someone has been unduly influenced by a contribution. To wit: How can we tell if 1) a legislator has voted for X because he got money from a group supporting X or 2) if a group supporting X wisely give money to a legislator likely to support X? This may seem trivial, but it is the heart of the matter since the difference determines if a vote was due to conscience or corruption. Compounding the problem, Lewis seems to assume that for every problem, there is a solution in law or regulation that would fix it and anyone opposing that solution is corrupt. What if there are just going to be some dangerous things in life and it isn't the government's job to provide us with an idiot-proof, Nerf world in which to live?
In addition, the book is very politically one-sided in its choice of examples. That is, there are more than a dozen chapters on big corporations with lobbies concerned with environmental laws, FDA regulations, et cetera (and the cliche diatribes against the NRA). But there is no mention of left-leaning groups like AARP, the trial lawyers, trade unions, teachers, et cetera who wield plenty of influence on the Hill. I would never claim that plenty of big companies don't do their best to buy votes, but the focus on traditionally Democratic groups buying legislation is conspicuous in its absence.
On behalf of the book, I will say that *within* any particular arena, the author goes out of his way to point to suspicious activities by both Republicans and Democrats. And, rather than explicitly suggesting new campaign laws, he promotes voter vigilance. Of course the examples cited are very enticing (if inconclusive) and if they prompt people to pay more attention to Congressional goings-on then Lewis will have done everyone a service.
- Mike Brokowski