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Ray C. (ray441) - , - Reviews

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Jesus, Interrupted: Revealing the Hidden Contradictions in the Bible (And Why We Don't Know About Them)
Review Date: 11/1/2011
Helpful Score: 2


The contradictions are not so hidden. They are openly discussed in churches everyday. Also, I did know about them--so I do not understand the book title. If you have never studied the Bible and do not attend church and are looking for an excuse to be agnostic, then this book will appeal to you. If you are a serious student of the Bible this book will appear to be nit picking and Dr. Ehrman will come across as a master of the obvious. There are some "contradictions" in the Bible--no doubt. It's just that the book title is designed to sell books instead of be an accurate reflection of the substance of the book.


Pigs at the Trough : How Corporate Greed and Political Corruption Are Undermining America
Review Date: 10/13/2011
Helpful Score: 1


Arianna Huffington is disingenuous on several fronts. 1. She does not identify herslf as a Socialist, which she proudly proclaims (only she uses the politically correct term "progressive") elsewhere. 2. While making use of emotionally based phrases such as "grossly inflated pay" for CEOs, she never gets around to explaining while Congressional pay raises have gone unchecked for years. 3. While she points her very wealthy finger at corporations for making a profit, she avoids giving any reason as to why the government runs rampant in taking money at the point of a gun from citizens. 4. Her idea that government is intrinsically good and people owe their lives to it (because it protects us from the free enterprise based corporations) is without logic. 5. She argues that corporations have hurt minorities (few Black and Hispanic CEOs) yet she rails against the smallest minority in existence--the individual. As an example, she starts off one sentence with" "Even as our country has takens steps to abolish welfare, forcing the poor to sink or swim, we've allowed the high end corporate-class to weave a giant safety net for its members" This is class warfare at it its prime. Several questions come to mind. Why doesn't she give an example of what steps have been taken ANYWHERE to abolish welfare? We still have food stamps and unemployment benefits have been EXTENDED by the feds, not shortened. Also, who exactly is in the "corporate class"? I have an LLC, am I in the corporate class? What about all the small business owners with S-corps? Who exactly are the poor? The continual throwing out of vague, nebulous statements like these leaves the reader thirsty for facts. Instead of fact based thirst quenchers, you just get more of these shadowy statements made up of liberal wispiness. Do not be fooled, part of the title may contain the words "political corruption", but this is always in connection with "corporate greed". What about government greed? What about the greed in Hollywood? Why does she not have rage for actors who make $20 million for one movie? Is that not too much money for her? She never gets around to explaining why a CEO who gets a million dollar severance package is evil, yet billionaire Oprah Winfrey is a paragon of virtue. While there is no requirement that any book present a balanced point of view, Huffington's book is so far to the left that it may as well be titled Das Kapital.


Portrait of a Killer: Jack the Ripper -- Case Closed
Portrait of a Killer: Jack the Ripper -- Case Closed
Author: Patricia Cornwell
Book Type: Mass Market Paperback
  • Currently 3.4/5 Stars.
 352
Review Date: 3/18/2010


While appreciate the time, effort and money that Ms. Cornwell put into this work. There are several problems with it. 1. The obnoxious title "...Case Closed", as if this is even remotely THE definitive work on the subject. 2. She is dead wrong about who Jack the Ripper was. (John Douglas, the founder of FBI profiling, has stated the exact personality type of the Ripper and it was not at all that of Sickert. John Douglas and other FBI profilers have also stated that this would be a RELATIVELY simple case to solve if it happened today.) 3. As other reviewers have stated, the author starts off with an assumption and builds facts around it. 4. There are lots of better books on Jack the Ripper, two of gthem were written by Paul Begg. 5. And worth mentioning again, the obnoxious title.


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