From Pusan to Panmunjom: Wartime Memoirs of the Republic of Korea's First Four-Star General
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • Same War, Different Angle.
  • Excellent memoir and very insightful
  • Great look at the Korean Side of the conflict
  • The Korean War from the neglected South Korean Perspective
  • A different perspective on the war in Korea
From Pusan to Panmunjom: Wartime Memoirs of the Republic of Korea's First Four-Star General
Paik Sun Yup
Manufacturer: Potomac Books Inc.
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback

GeneralGeneral | Biographies & Memoirs | Subjects | Books
Military & SpiesMilitary & Spies | Professionals & Academics | Biographies & Memoirs | Subjects | Books
GeneralGeneral | Military | Leaders & Notable People | Biographies & Memoirs | Subjects | Books
GeneralGeneral | Asia | History | Subjects | Books
GeneralGeneral | Korea | Asia | History | Subjects | Books
GeneralGeneral | Middle East | History | Subjects | Books
StrategyStrategy | Military | History | Subjects | Books
GeneralGeneral | Korean War | Military | History | Subjects | Books
Life & InstitutionsLife & Institutions | Military | History | Subjects | Books
Look Inside History BooksLook Inside History Books | Trip | Specialty Stores | Books
Similar Items:
  1. This Kind of War: The Classic Korean War History - Fiftieth Anniversary Edition This Kind of War: The Classic Korean War History - Fiftieth Anniversary Edition
  2. The Korean War: How We Met the Challenge : How All-Out Asian War Was Averted : Why Macarthur Was Dismissed : Why Today's War Objectives Must Be Limi (Da Capo Paperback) The Korean War: How We Met the Challenge : How All-Out Asian War Was Averted : Why Macarthur Was Dismissed : Why Today's War Objectives Must Be Limi (Da Capo Paperback)
  3. Air Campaign: Planning for Combat (An Afa Book Future Warfare, Vol 3) Air Campaign: Planning for Combat (An Afa Book Future Warfare, Vol 3)
  4. Silver Stallion: A Novel of Korea Silver Stallion: A Novel of Korea
  5. The Marines of Autumn: A Novel of the Korean War The Marines of Autumn: A Novel of the Korean War

ASIN: 1574882023

Book Description

Brassey's presents the candid and revealing wartime memoir of the twenty-nine year-old man who became South Korea's first four-star general. With photographs and a foreword by the commanders of U.S. forces in the war, Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway and Gen. James A. Van Fleet, FROM PUSAN TO PANMUNJON brings an unprecedented perspective to a cataclysmic war.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Same War, Different Angle........2007-03-28

This is a fairly important book to anyone interested in the Korean War. General Yup was South Korea's first four star general and was a field commander of various units during the war.

What makes this book important is that it covers the same war as many other books, but that it is written not from an American viewpoint but from the view of a soldier whose country was being attacked. This has made the Association of the United States Army (AUSA) through its Institute for Land Warfare put this title on their list of books that should be kept in print for study by AUSA members and others concerned about important issues.

This book was first published in 1992, the copies being sold by Amazon are reprints of the original book.

5 out of 5 stars Excellent memoir and very insightful.......2006-06-26

This is an excellent autobiography. The General's career and development is amazing to have reached 4-Stars at such a young age. His modesty and emphasis on the South Korean Army's development into a complete military organization while at war is remarkable.
What makes this book sobering is when the General describes how thousands of South Koreans volunteered and were sent straight into combat with little training, only to quickly become casualties themselves, sacrificing their lives for their country. Another key item from the General's writing is how only after having the time to fully train, equip, and organize into Divisions with adequate firepower, were they able to successfully conduct offensive operations.
Bravery and courage helped them hold against the North Korean Communist attack along the desperate Pusan perimeter, but it was the firepower of the attached US artillery units that were supporting his South Korean Division that allowed them to counterattack successfully and reach Panmunjom.
The personal family dangers in war is also brought out where he writes about his family, who had to be left behind in Seoul, unable to flee when the North Koreans captured the city. The additional suffering of the civilian populace is also described in this book, caught trying to flee the Communist Army.
Highly recommended reading for the South Korean view of the war. Excellent insight into how important it is to have trained and properly equipped soldiers when fighting a war rather than relying on conscripted soldiers after war has started as the conscripted soldiers will suffer excessive casualties and deaths when fighting against a motivated, trained, and fully armed enemy.

5 out of 5 stars Great look at the Korean Side of the conflict.......2006-01-19

I really enjoyed reading this book by probably the most celebrated Korean General of all time. While it is true that the Korean Army wasn't usually up to the standards of the American Army, Paik's units always seemed to be pretty close in every history of the war. Highly recommended book for anyone that wants to learn more about the Korean War.

5 out of 5 stars The Korean War from the neglected South Korean Perspective.......2005-04-05

I'm glad I found this gem of a book. I've read more then a few Korean War books and they take a decidedly American point of view. It's not to say that this is wrong, but it's certainly unbalanced. Many of these other books go on to describe the ROK army as cowardly, unreliable and prone to breaking. Finally there is a Korean commander that puts the record straight.

Yes, it was true that the ROK army at the time were not up to American Army standards, but it's not fair to put the same expectations on them. It doesn't take a genius to know what happens when militia goes against a heavily equipped professional army head-to-head in the open field. Militia loses every time, just look at how the British man handled continental armies in the first few years of the Revolutionary War. In 1950 the ROK army was the equivalent of a militia as it was very much under equipped, with no armor, air force and very little artillery (some 60mm and 80mm mortars and a few light 105mm pieces).

The U.S. had purposely left the ROK army under equipped and it was designed from the ground up as a lightly armed anti-guerilla force. The ROK army had a very poor junior officer corps, there was not school to train junior officers. The U.S. was too preoccupied in rebuilding Japan and sent very limited funds to South Korea. Proper equipment was not sent, no school for junior officers was established. Anyone who knows something about military matters knows that the backbone of an effective army are the junior officers, the lieutenants, captains and majors that lead the troops into the teeth of enemy fire. The North Korean Army (NKA), on the other hand, had an effective junior officer corps because many of the veterans were anti-Japanese guerilla fighters. Furthermore, the Russians supplied NKA with T-34 tanks, YAK fighter bombers, 155mm artillery, etc. Heavy artillery, tanks and close air support gave the NKA heavy offensive power.

It is not mentioned very often, but American trooped faired NO BETTER against the NKA during the first few months of the war. 24th ID troops ran from their positions when their antiquated WWII era bazookas just scratched the paint off NKA T-34s. It was carrier based air power that saved the Americans from being overrun.

General Paik tells stories of desperate battles, where ROK soldiers wrapped satchel charges around their bodies and threw themselves in suicide missions onto NKA tanks. ROK soldiers did the best they could with the weapons and training they had on hand. General Paik provides a fair and often underappreciated reason for why ROK units faired badly in the early part of the Korean War. As far as I'm concerned, any student of the Korean War cannot consider himself a expert unless he's read Paik's book. It is wrong to not put into consideration the viewpoint of the nation that contributed the most manpower and had the most casualties of all the UN forces. No Korean War library can be considered complete without this book (how many Korea War books have a glowing foreword by Mathew B. Ridgeway himself, huh?).

General Paik Sun Yup was the 29 year old commander of the ROK 1st division. The 1st ROK division had the distinction of the only ROK unit that never retreated from their positions without orders. It was also the only ROK unit that was attached to a U.S. Army Corp for the duration of the war and given tasks expected of a regular U.S. infantry division. General Paik was adamant about the fact that given the proper artillery, armor and air support, the 1st ROK division always performed as well, if not better then any regular U.S. infantry division. The 1st ROK also had the distinction of being the first UN unit to enter Pyongyang, beating several better equipped U.S. units in the race to the NK capital.

4 out of 5 stars A different perspective on the war in Korea.......2000-05-15

General Paik's work stands out among the many works on the Korean War because of his focus on the operations of the Republic of Korea (ROK) forces. Highly recommended to readers looking for information that goes beyond the American contributions to the struggle. The operational details and accounts of the interaction of American and ROK commanders are fascinating. The book suffers slightly from a lack of detailed maps that assist readers in following the movements of the oppossing forces.

The Transparent Mind: A Journey with Krishnamurti
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • The Walter Cronkite of Australia Speaks Out
The Transparent Mind: A Journey with Krishnamurti
Ingram Smith
Manufacturer: Edwin House Publishing
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback

GeneralGeneral | Biographies & Memoirs | Subjects | Books
ReligiousReligious | Leaders & Notable People | Biographies & Memoirs | Subjects | Books
PhilosophersPhilosophers | Professionals & Academics | Biographies & Memoirs | Subjects | Books
GeneralGeneral | Eastern | Philosophy | Nonfiction | Subjects | Books
GeneralGeneral | Philosophy | Nonfiction | Subjects | Books
GeneralGeneral | Religion & Spirituality | Subjects | Books
ASIN: 0964924730

Book Description

Ingram Smith, famous media host and the Walter Cronkite of Australia, traveled with J. Krishnamurti worldwide and recorded his talks and dialogues over a forty year period. At the age of he has written of his life long search for meaning, the pain and mysteries of finding the truth where you least expect it, and insights on life and living.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars The Walter Cronkite of Australia Speaks Out.......1999-12-29

Ingram Smith was renouned for provocative radio programs on the air at ABC. Often he ended his program with a power audio clip of Krishnamurti speaking on a topical, current subject. Now Ingram Smith has come out with his memoirs and they too are punctuated with the powerful works of his mentor, J. Krishnamurti. This new title is a rewrite of Smith's earlier book TRUTH IS A PATHLESS LAND, with much more provocative writings about the authors own experiments with truth and his own consciousness. The book is dense with insightful information on Krishnamurti and the impact the great teacher had on Smith's lie and work. This is an important book for students of consciousness and those intrigued by Krishnamurti's life and work.
The Transparent Mind: A Journey with Krishnamurti
Average customer rating: Not rated
    The Transparent Mind: A Journey with Krishnamurti

    Manufacturer: Penguin
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Paperback
    ASIN: B000HYSSA8

    Trust Us We're Experts: How Industry Manipulates Science and Gambles with Your Future
    Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
    • The Death of Capitalism
    • The book is very idealistic/ unrealistic
    • If Everybody Believes Something, It's Probably Wrong
    • Take critical thinking one step further...
    • Beware of "Experts" -- Follow the Money!
    Trust Us We're Experts: How Industry Manipulates Science and Gambles with Your Future
    Sheldon Rampton , and John Stauber
    Manufacturer: Tarcher
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Paperback

    GeneralGeneral | Business & Investing | Subjects | Books
    EthicsEthics | Business Life | Business & Investing | Subjects | Books
    Conspiracy TheoriesConspiracy Theories | Current Events | Nonfiction | Subjects | Books
    GeneralGeneral | Politics | Nonfiction | Subjects | Books
    Practical PoliticsPractical Politics | Politics | Nonfiction | Subjects | Books
    U.S.U.S. | Politics | Nonfiction | Subjects | Books
    Similar Items:
    1. Toxic Sludge Is Good for You!: Lies, Damn Lies and the Public Relations Industry Toxic Sludge Is Good for You!: Lies, Damn Lies and the Public Relations Industry
    2. Don't Believe It!: How Lies Become News Don't Believe It!: How Lies Become News
    3. The Best War Ever: Lies, Damned Lies, and the Mess in Iraq The Best War Ever: Lies, Damned Lies, and the Mess in Iraq
    4. Weapons of Mass Deception: The Uses of Propaganda in Bush's War on Iraq Weapons of Mass Deception: The Uses of Propaganda in Bush's War on Iraq
    5. The Wadsworth Guide to MLA Documentation (with InfoTrac ) The Wadsworth Guide to MLA Documentation (with InfoTrac )

    ASIN: 1585421391
    Release Date: 2002-01-10

    Amazon.com

    Fearless investigative journalists Sheldon Rampton and John Stauber (Toxic Sludge Is Good for You! and Mad Cow U.S.A.) are back with a gripping exposé of the public relations industry and the scientists who back their business-funded, anti-consumer-safety agendas. There are two kinds of "experts" in question--the PR spin doctors behind the scenes and the "independent" experts paraded before the public, scientists who have been hand-selected, cultivated, and paid handsomely to promote the views of corporations involved in controversial actions. Lively writing on controversial topics such as dioxin, bovine growth hormone, and genetically modified food makes this a real page-turner, shocking in its portrayal of the real and potential dangers in each of these technological innovations and of the "media pseudo-environment" created to obfuscate the risks. By financing and publicizing views that support the goals of corporate sponsors, PR campaigns have, over the course of the century, managed to suppress the dangers of lead poisoning for decades, silence the scientist who discovered that rats fed on genetically modified corn had significant organ abnormalities, squelch television and newspaper stories about the risks of bovine growth hormone, and place enough confusion and doubt in the public's mind about global warming to suppress any mobilization for action.

    Rampton and Stauber introduce the movers and shakers of the PR industry, from the "risk communicators" (whose job is to downplay all risks) and "outrage managers" (with their four strategies--deflect, defer, dismiss, or defeat) to those who specialize in "public policy intelligence" (spying on opponents). Evidently, these elaborate PR campaigns are created for our own good. According to public relations philosophers, the public reacts emotionally to topics related to health and safety and is incapable of holding rational discourse. Needless to say, Rampton and Stauber find these views rather antidemocratic and intend to pull back the curtain to reveal the real wizard in Oz. This is one wake-up call that's hard to resist. --Lesley Reed

    Book Description

    The book that unmasks the sneaky and widespread methods industry uses to influence opinion through bogus experts, doctored data, and manufactured facts.

    "Finally a long-overdue exposé of the shenanigans and subterfuge that lie behind the making of experts in America." (Jeremy Rifkin)

    "If you want to know how the world wags, and who's wagging it, here's your answer." (Bill Moyers)

    "Meticulously researched . . . Rampton and Stauber's documentation of PR campaigns proves that they are the real 'experts.' " (Brill's Content) AUTHOBIO: John Stauber is the founder and director of the Center for Media & Democracy. He and Sheldon Rampton write and edit the quarterly PR Watch: Public Interest Reporting on the PR/Public Affairs Industry.

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars The Death of Capitalism.......2007-09-04

    Capitalism - market economy - free enterprise - these are the jewels in the crown of civilization which, since the renaissance, have brought unprecedented wealth, prosperity and freedom to large parts of the world. Capitalism has struggled and eventually triumphed over its historical adversaries; in earlier times, popes and kings and in our time socialism and communism. In the 21st century, since the collapse of the Berlin Wall, international corporate capitalism is bursting, like fireworks, in triumph; merging, globalizing and buying governments. What puny opposition remains is easily dispatched with a broad range of powerful weapons which have been developed over the years. Today the only real threat to capitalism is capitalism!
    Socialists may practice socialism and Christians may practice Christianity but if by capitalism we mean a competitive market driven economic system, then capitalists do not practice capitalism. Theorists notwithstanding, capitalism is not an ideology, it is merely a description. Capitalists are not trying to implement some philosophy, they are only trying to make a buck any way they can. To a capitalist the biggest enemy is not socialism or labor unions or liberals or environmentalists, or even big government, the biggest enemy is risk. Risk of not making money. Risk of losing money.
    Making money and avoiding risk in doing so is what capitalism is all about. But it is precisely in the risk taking that society draws its benefits from capitalism. That is the dilemma. Risk promotes wise investment resulting in efficiency, innovation and the creation of wealth, not just for the capitalist but for society as a whole. But a lot of capitalists fall by the wayside in the process. It is in the capitalist's interest to eliminate risk and society's interest to prevent them from doing so. The way to avoid risk is to control the market and to do that they must also control the government. This struggle has been going on for hundreds of years: capitalists forming monopolies, oligarchies and trusts and society breaking them up.
    So long as society can keep pace with all the tricks and turns that capitalists take to avoid risk, the world would continue to reap the blessings of capitalism. But for the capitalists to succeed in eliminating risk, they would have to eliminate competition resulting in a monopoly of corporations with as much efficiency and innovation as any government bureaucracy. The ultimate risk-free climax would be monopoly and oligarchy and the corporate-run government necessary to keep it that way -- functionally indistinguishable from a Mafia run state or a Stalinist one. Capitalism, instead of an engine which pumps wealth to society and makes some capitalist wealthy in the process, would become an engine which sucks the wealth out of society, making a handful wealthy by impoverishing the rest.
    We see this process going on in third world countries today and we are seeing the beginnings of it at home, in America. All three branches of government are increasingly under the control of corporations. Both political parties are addicted to corporate financing. Mergers, acquisitions and globalization, all techniques for eliminating risk, are rampant. The media is being merged and taken over by corporations and increasingly being used as public relations outlets for the corporations.
    Right now society is not keeping pace. The tricks and turns that corporate capitalists use to avoid risk have gotten trickier and twistier. Just as a mosquito injects an anesthetic so that you will not feel it is sucking your blood, corporations are coopting the very processes by which people recognize what is going on so that more and more we are living in a virtual reality without realizing it. Sort of like a Potemkin village or like the movie The Truman Story where a boy is born and raised on a television set without knowing it. And as corporations merge and grow larger, they have even bigger budgets to build even more elaborate and convincing "sets". But this is not science fiction. The "sets" are being built around us as you read this.
    Sheldon Rampton and John Stauber of the Center for Media & Democracy have been documenting this process for years. Their publications include a quarterly newsletter, PR Watch, and several books including: Toxic Sludge Is Good For You: Lies, Damn Lies and the Public Relations Industry, Mad Cow USA: Could the Nightmare Happen Here?, and now Trust Us, We're Experts. While flippant and amusing, these books and articles tell a very chilling story of corporate public relations manipulation and spin control growing exponentially in size, audacity and sophistication.
    The "father of public relations", Rampton and Stauber point out in Trust Us, is Edward L. Bernays, son in law and disciple of Sigmund Freud. By following Bernays' philosophy one can see the road map to the future. Here are some of his ideas [pp 42 - 44]:

    ** scientific manipulation of public opinion is necessary to overcome chaos and conflict in society
    ** In almost every act of our lives, whether in the sphere of politics or business, in our social conduct or our ethical thinking, we are dominated by the relatively small number of persons ... who understand the mental processes and social patterns of the masses. It is they who pull the wires which control the public mind.
    ** while most people respond to their world instinctively, without thought, there exist an intelligent few who have been charged with the responsibility of contemplating and influencing the tide of history
    ** public relations is an applied science, like engineering, through which society's leaders could bring order out of chaos
    ** being herd like also made people remarkably susceptible to leadership.

    Of course that "leadership" can only be exercised by those who can afford the price of the Hill & Knowltons and APCOs of this world.
    Here are some cases of virtual reality cited in their latest book. Big contributions, free junkets and the promise of future jobs are the more obvious ways of corrupting legislators but less obvious and more subtle is the use of public relations to actually manipulate the "facts". A typical example of how this works is illustrated on page 14.
    "In the Fall of 1997, Georgetown University's Credit Research Center issued a study which concluded that many debtors are using bankruptcy as an excuse to wriggle out of their obligations to creditors. Lobbyists for bank and credit card companies seized on the study as they lobbied Congress for changes in federal law that would make it harder for consumers to file for bankruptcy relief. Former U.S. Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen cited the study in a Washington Times opinion column, offering Georgetown's academic imprimatur as evidence of the need for `bankruptcy reform'. What Bentsen failed to mention was that the Credit Research Center is funded in its entirety by credit card companies, banks, retailers, and others in the credit industry. The study itself was produced with a $100,000 grant from Visa USA and MasterCard International Inc. Bentsen also failed to mention that he himself had been hired to work as a credit-industry lobbyist."
    Coopting and distorting the very sources of knowledge and information which informed people, legislators, scientists, government officials, the press, etc. rely on as being objective and scientific is one of the most clever and the most egregious techniques for creating virtual reality. As an EPA employee I have seen many examples of self-serving corporate sponsored "scientific" studies being foisted off on EPA and used to justify weak ineffective regulations or no regulations at all. The fraud, if discovered at all, is rarely discovered by EPA. In the absence of high level support there is very little incentive for science bureaucrats to look closely at studies with powerful backers.
    From p. 199: If you want to know just how craven some scientists can be, the archives of the tobacco industry offer a treasure trove of examples. Thanks to whistle-blowers and lawsuits, millions of pages of once-secret industry documents have become public and are freely available over the Internet. In 1998, for example, documents came to light regarding an industry- sponsored campaign in the early 1990s to plant sympathetic letters and articles in influential medical journals. Tobacco companies had secretly paid 13 scientists a total of $156,000 simply to write a few letters to influential medical journals. One biostatistician, Nathan Mantel of American University in Washington, received $10,000 for writing a single, eight-paragraph letter that was published in the Journal of the American Medical Association. Cancer researcher Gio Batta Cori received $20,137 for writing four letters and an opinion piece to the Lancet, the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, and the Wall Street Journal - nice work if you can get it, especially since the scientists didn't even have to write the letters themselves. Two tobacco-industry law firms were available to do the actual drafting and editing. All the scientists really had to do was sign their names at the bottom."
    If the virtual reality created by public relation firms were only limited to selling toothpaste and deodorant we might not get too concerned about it. Falsifying medical research to defend harmful and dangerous products is a troublesome escalation. But there appears to be no limits to the uses of PR and no concern by the users of its ultimate impact. The issue of global warming, which could possibly plunge humanity into a new dark age, is being surrounded by the fog of virtual reality by the practitioners of PR as if the stakes were no more important than the selling of mouthwash.
    Rampton and Stauber point out in pp 267-288 of Trust Us that PR firms hired by the major industrial emitters of greenhouse gasses have created dozens of influential sounding front organization such as "The Advancement of Sound Science Coalition", "The Global Climate Information Project", "The Information Council for the Environment" and "The Greening Earth Society" which have saturated the media, Congress and the public with industry spin so as to make their case by sheer volume and noise. Since the facts and the scientific community are so overwhelming against them, the object of the public relations onslaught has been to slow down, confuse and defuse public clamor for resolute action. Friends of the Earth International calls this "lobbying for lethargy".
    There is legitimate scientific debate about the source and rate of global warming and a lot of the spin addresses that, but a lot doesn't. Some of the dirtier tricks played are:

    ** An attempt to stimulate anti Kyoto Treaty email to President Clinton by promising to enter writers' names in a $1000 sweepstakes drawing.
    ** Appealing to anti-abortion activists with the claim that "Al Gore has said abortion should be used to reduce global warming."
    ** Touting phoney petitions of scientists discrediting the theory of global warming.
    ** Circulating phoney "scientific" papers made up to look like they had appeared in reputable peer reviewed scientific journals.
    ** Some industry flacks claim the Earth is actually cooling while other claim that global warming is a good thing.

    The scary thing is that lobbying for lethargy is working.

    3 out of 5 stars The book is very idealistic/ unrealistic.......2007-04-13

    One thing that the authors don't think about is that: Most people are not only not educated enough to understand the specialist jargon that goes with many industrial products, but that if they did try to interpret it *based on their limited information/ understanding* disaster would result.

    The authors also don't get into what happens when a well meaning government agency overregulates an industry SO MUCH that it ends up being of benefit to no one. Examples abound-- that were not dealt with in the book.

    1. The FDA has such tight regulations on drugs that they end up costing 2-3 times more to produce/ sell to the American public than what they should. And much of this cost is legal fees, excessive testing, and clinical trials.

    2. The trucking industry is also something that is heavily regulated. There is a chronic shortage of truck drivers in the industry because there are so many regulations that many people who would be perfectly competent truck drivers can't get a chance at working. (For reference, automobiles kill 40,000+ Americans per year, and trucks kill about 900. An average truck driver might drive 55 hours per week compared to the single digit hours that are driven by a passenger car.)

    3. Everyone is whining about the price of gas, but no one knows whether the high cost is because of refineries operating at peak capacity or because of insufficient existing oil supplies. No one will ever be able to test this, since a single refinery has not been built in the last 30 years in the United States.

    If people were able to regulate industries by the political process (say, by referenda or voting for candidates that would pass strict legislation), whatever came along after what currently exists would be FAR WORSE.

    These authors need to pick up some books on Economics-- specifically ones that deal with information asymmetry (as in, how corporations have a better idea of what they are doing than third party observers).

    Other than that, the book is very well written with lots of good examples. It's worth picking up-- in spite of my low rating thereof.

    5 out of 5 stars If Everybody Believes Something, It's Probably Wrong.......2006-12-29

    If everybody believes something, it's probably wrong! We call that Conventional Wisdom. "Trust Us We're Experts" is one of the few books that I recommend to all of my patients that enter my office. The information in this book has the power to potentially save your life, since it provides the reader with the tools to spot propaganda that's regularly disseminated to the masses.

    Americans are the most conditioned, programmed beings on the planet. Not only are our thoughts and attitudes continually being shaped and molded; our very awareness of the whole design seems like it is being subtly and inexorably erased! It is an exhausting and endless task to keep explaining to people how most issues of conventional wisdom are scientifically implanted in the public consciousness by a thousand media clips per day. I feel that Stauber and Rampton do an excellent job at guiding the reader through the PR industry and expert deception that is propagated daily. My recommendation is to buy this book today then kill your TV!

    Dr. Matthew J. Loop

    - Author of "Cracking the Cancer Code"

    2 out of 5 stars Take critical thinking one step further..........2005-11-19

    ...and use the techniques in this book on the book itself. Sadly, a book with so much promise falls victim to its own PR machine all too often. Face it, if you're going to use critical thinking, use it consistently. If you use it against what you don't like, but cast a blind eye on things you are passionate about, how critical is that, really?

    5 out of 5 stars Beware of "Experts" -- Follow the Money! .......2005-07-02

    John Stauber tells it like it is, and I wish this book were a bestseller. Readers who can accept these truths may also want to read a highly detailed yet fascinating expose of a huge and profitable industry that has been manipulating science and gambling with your health -- "The Whole Soy Story:The Dark Side of America's Favorite Health Food" by Kaayla Daniel, The fact that you are probably thinking, "No, we all know that soy is healthy for us" is proof of how thoroughly you've been conned. I was too, but no longer. "Fluoride Deception" by Christopher Bryson is another good one. Thanks to John Stauber, I'm wary of experts and now know enough to follow the money.
    Trust Us, We're Experts!: How Industry Manipulates Science and Gambles with Your Future
    Average customer rating: Not rated
      Trust Us, We're Experts!: How Industry Manipulates Science and Gambles with Your Future

      Manufacturer: Penguin Putnam
      ProductGroup: Book
      Binding: Paperback
      Similar Items:
      1. Toxic Sludge Is Good for You!: Lies, Damn Lies and the Public Relations Industry Toxic Sludge Is Good for You!: Lies, Damn Lies and the Public Relations Industry

      ASIN: 096518868X
      Exposing the PR Experts.(Review) (book review): An article from: Multinational Monitor
      Average customer rating: Not rated
        Exposing the PR Experts.(Review) (book review): An article from: Multinational Monitor
        Charlie Cray
        Manufacturer: Essential Information, Inc.
        ProductGroup: Book
        Binding: Digital

        GeneralGeneral | Business & Investing | Subjects | Books
        GeneralGeneral | Science | Subjects | Books
        Science & TechnologyScience & Technology | Subjects | e-Docs | Formats | Books
        GeneralGeneral | Business & Investing | Subjects | e-Docs | Formats | Books
        ScienceScience | HTML | Formats | e-Docs | Formats | Books
        ASIN: B0008HVEB4
        Release Date: 2005-07-28

        Book Description

        This digital document is an article from Multinational Monitor, published by Essential Information, Inc. on April 1, 2001. The length of the article is 1629 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

        Citation Details
        Title: Exposing the PR Experts.(Review) (book review)
        Author: Charlie Cray
        Publication: Multinational Monitor (Refereed)
        Date: April 1, 2001
        Publisher: Essential Information, Inc.
        Volume: 22 Issue: 4 Page: 27

        Article Type: Book Review

        Distributed by Thomson Gale
        Trust Us, We're Experts: How Industry Manipulates Science And Gambles With Your Future: An article from: The Ecologist
        Average customer rating: Not rated
          Trust Us, We're Experts: How Industry Manipulates Science And Gambles With Your Future: An article from: The Ecologist

          Manufacturer: Ecosystems Limited
          ProductGroup: Book
          Binding: Digital
          ASIN: B000BCQVL4
          Release Date: 2005-09-09
          TRUST US, WE'RE EXPERTS!: HOW INDUSTRY MANIPULATES SCIENCE AND GAMBLES WITH YOUR FUTURE
          Average customer rating: Not rated
            TRUST US, WE'RE EXPERTS!: HOW INDUSTRY MANIPULATES SCIENCE AND GAMBLES WITH YOUR FUTURE
            Sheldon and Stauber, John Rampton
            Manufacturer: Jeremy P. Tarcher/Putnam New York
            ProductGroup: Book
            Binding: Hardcover
            ASIN: B000IWWX82

            Quick from Scratch Italian Cookbook (Quick From Scratch)
            Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
            • Fantastic
            • Simple and Authentic
            Quick from Scratch Italian Cookbook (Quick From Scratch)
            Food & Wine Magazine , and Stering Eds.
            Manufacturer: American Express Publishing
            ProductGroup: Book
            Binding: Hardcover

            GeneralGeneral | Cooking, Food & Wine | Subjects | Books
            GeneralGeneral | Quick & Easy | Cooking, Food & Wine | Subjects | Books
            ItalianItalian | European | Regional & International | Cooking, Food & Wine | Subjects | Books
            GeneralGeneral | Cooking, Food & Wine | 4-for-3 Books Store | Stores | Books
            Quick & EasyQuick & Easy | Cooking, Food & Wine | 4-for-3 Books Store | Stores | Books
            EuropeanEuropean | Regional & International | Cooking, Food & Wine | 4-for-3 Books Store | Stores | Books
            All 4-for-3 DealsAll 4-for-3 Deals | 4-for-3 Books Store | Stores | Books
            Similar Items:
            1. Food & Wine Annual Cookbook 2005: An Entire Year of Recipes (Food & Wine Annual Cookbook) Food & Wine Annual Cookbook 2005: An Entire Year of Recipes (Food & Wine Annual Cookbook)
            2. Good & Garlicky, Thick & Hearty, Soul-Satisfying, More-Than-Minestrone Italian Soup Cookbook Good & Garlicky, Thick & Hearty, Soul-Satisfying, More-Than-Minestrone Italian Soup Cookbook
            3. The North End Italian Cookbook, 5th The North End Italian Cookbook, 5th
            4. Quick from Scratch : Real Food for Busy Weeknights Quick from Scratch : Real Food for Busy Weeknights
            5. The Everything Italian Cookbook: 300 Authentic Recipes to Help You Cook Up a Feast! (Everything: Cooking) The Everything Italian Cookbook: 300 Authentic Recipes to Help You Cook Up a Feast! (Everything: Cooking)

            ASIN: 0916103927

            Book Description

            Simple ingredients, simple techniques, and simply superb results: Italian cuisine made for busy weeknights. From pizza to polenta, these recipes are quick and mouthwatering. Start the meal off deliciously with Grilled Zucchini and Mozzarella, or Roasted Peppers with Caper Dressing. Serve hearty soups, such as a vegetable-packed Minestrone or a family-friendly plate of pasta. Other vibrantly scrumptious dishes include Clam Risotto with Bacon and Chives; Steamed Mussels with Tomato and Garlic Broth; and Sautéed Chicken Breasts with Salsa Verde. Desserts, like Zabaglione with Strawberries, make a sweet end to a wonderful dinner.

            Customer Reviews:

            5 out of 5 stars Fantastic.......2006-11-03

            I have made about 10 recipes out of this cookbook. They have all been great. I prepare food (chop, peel, etc) ahead of time because I'm busy. Once I'm ready to cook it takes about 30-45 minutes for most meals to be ready to serve. Portions are generous and easily serve more than 4 as noted. Some of the ingrediant lists are long, but still easy.

            5 out of 5 stars Simple and Authentic.......2003-10-18

            I lived in Italy for 2 years, and this book has some dishes that I remembered having in Milan and Genoa. There are no extravigant ingredients, everything is simple, and the big color pictures for each recipe make it the best Italian cookbook I own.

            Books:

            1. G-2: Intelligence for Patton: Intelligence for Patton (Schiffer Military History Book)
            2. General Greene, Great Commander Series
            3. General William Maxwell and the New Jersey Continentals (Contributions in Military Studies)
            4. Glory Denied: The Saga of Jim Thompson, America's Longest-Held Prisoner of War
            5. Hell Looks Different Now: One Corpsman's Journey Back to Vietnam
            6. Herndon's Lincoln: The True Story of a Great Life
            7. Hero of Beecher Island: The Life and Military Career of George A. Forsyth
            8. Hero on Horseback: The Story of Casimir Pulaski
            9. History: Fiction or Science? (Chronology, No. 1)
            10. History: Fiction or Science? (Chronology, No. 1)

            Books Index

            Books Home

            Recommended Books

            1. Primates and Philosophers: How Morality Evolved
            2. Holy Image, Hallowed Ground
            3. Business Presentation Success With Harvard Graphics 3.0
            4. Cold Beer and Crocodiles: A Bicycle Journey into Australia
            5. For Women Only: What You Need to Know about the Inner Lives of Men
            6. History: Fiction or Science
            7. Elastic Mechanisms in Animal Movement
            8. Creative Projects with LEGO Mindstorms
            9. Accounting Principles
            10. Christmas Jars