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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Parliament of Whores goes abroad, December 4, 2001
(...) [In] this very funny book by P. J. O'Rourke, he sets out to test big government liberalism by seeing how it is playing out in the real world, on a series of issues : overpopulation, famine, ecological disaster, ethnic hatred, plague and poverty. For making this effort to scientifically test the ideology of the Left, in the laboratory of reality, he has been accused of practically fabricating the issues in order to shoot down their solutions. If only....It is all enjoyable and a ringing vindication of free markets, limited government and American culture (circa 1950), but far and away the best chapter is the overpopulation one where he compares that perennial favorite of the Paul Ehrlich crowd, Bangladesh, with Fremont, CA. Why Fremont? How about, because they have roughly the same population density. By the time Mr. O'Rourke is done, the very notion that population growth, in the abstract, is something that we have to be terrified of has been rendered utterly laughable (and laugh you will). Also worth the price of admission, before its author totally fades into obscurity, is the evisceration of Al Gore's deranged magnum opus, Earth in the Balance. Mr. O'Rourke delivers Mr. Gore a well deserved drubbing. The book makes a fine companion piece to Parliament of Whores, sort of a foreign affairs version of the same tale. Taken together, they stand as one of the best and certainly the funniest defenses of liberty you are likely to find. GRADE : A-
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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Entertaining and Intelligent, June 17, 2002
It's always a pleasure to read a witty conservative, if only to know that those who think conservatives are a bunch of cold scolds might learn that it is possible to address serious issues and have a sense of humor. Of course the very fact that O'Rourke finds humor in the temple of "world crises" will convince those people that conservatives can be worse than cold scolds -- they even laugh in the face of serious problems.All The Trouble in the World focuses P.J. O'Rourke's biting satire and sarcasm on several topics that were hot in the early 1990's (and still are): overpopulation, famine, ecological apocalypse, multiculturalism, and miserable third world regimes that hide their brutality and failure behind the facade of socialism and first world envy. Interspersed behind the barbs and wise-guy cracks are usually thoughtful analysis and intelligent criticism. For example, he compares Bangladesh with Fresno, California. Both have the same density, but find themselves in dramatically different conditions. While Bangladesh has some problems not found in Fresno, O'Rourke argues it's lack of free markets and a creaking bureaucracy overwhelm what had historically been a pretty productive population. Of course, his travels there set the stage for many humorous observations and situations (The Ministry of Jute -- Monty Python would have had a time with that one). Some of the best chapters focus on our own living room liberals: those whose mission it is to save America from itself. Two chapters on multiculturalism and the world environmental movement show the length to which people who think of themselves as liberal have really become authoritarians who brook no dissent (nor inconvenient facts) in their quest to make the world right by their mind. The jokes just write themselves in these chapters -- there is such a gulf between some of these people and the real world (not to mention freedom and the Constitution) -- that one alternates between laughter and amazement when reading of what is being done "for" us by those who don't trust us. Sometimes the humor wears -- I get the same feeling when reading Dave Berry. A little time between chapters keeps the material more fresh and sharp. But O'Rourke undergirds all of his criticisms (this is a critical analysis) with facts and thoughtful arguments. He doesn't necessarily have all the answers, but he does have a different and refreshing perspective.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
off-sets the chicken littles of the world, May 3, 2000
Here in Australia, the media gives a very high profile to the environmentalists who proclaim that the world will end in 10 minutes or less.In contrast, P.J. O'Rourke explains why the world is actually improving. The world isn't bursting at the seams and everyone won't die of starvation (supermodels excepted). I highly recommend the book. It's entertaining and informative. I only wish the author had included a David Suzuki dartboard.
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