Customer Reviews


9 Reviews
5 star:
 (7)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
 
 
Only search this product's reviews

The most helpful favorable review
The most helpful critical review


73 of 76 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars None Dare Call It Treason
Is our current administration intentionally lying? Yes. Fog Facts is about key data evaporating into obscurity. Fog Facts is NOT a Right or Left wing propaganda book. This is an anti-propaganda book.

Professor Douglas Rushkoff recently published that the best way to help the masses see the Truth is to speak plainly. Game on. Beinhart has filled this...
Published on September 29, 2005 by Ben Mack

versus
11 of 62 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Lousy book
The only piece of info I trust in this book was actually on the book jacket: Beinhart is a novelist. Listen, the WMD "case" was trumped up...we all know that now. But this book is no more than a thinly disguised rant about Bush and Cheney, how Bush stole the election, blah blah blah. Of course it's "balanced" with helpful facts about how Clinton personally ushered the...
Published on February 20, 2006 by M. Robinson


Most Helpful First | Newest First

73 of 76 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars None Dare Call It Treason, September 29, 2005
By 
This review is from: Fog Facts : Searching for Truth in the Land of Spin (Nation Books) (Hardcover)
Is our current administration intentionally lying? Yes. Fog Facts is about key data evaporating into obscurity. Fog Facts is NOT a Right or Left wing propaganda book. This is an anti-propaganda book.

Professor Douglas Rushkoff recently published that the best way to help the masses see the Truth is to speak plainly. Game on. Beinhart has filled this bill.

In Wag The Dog Beinhart taught me more about propaganda than I had learned from multiple other texts. Fog Facts reveals the path that lead to our modern state of mass delusion. So long as most Americans keep seeing "the other side" as responsible for corruption, our current media system is secure. The greatest trick our media has pulled is the illusion of the two-party system. Both sides are ignoring fundamental lies and unprecedented changes to our constitution. The two-sides is two-faces of the same machine. When humans are two-faced we don't trust them.

Harry Blackstone used to walk a live elephant on stage and nobody would see him do that. It appeared as magic. Beinhart explains how crucial facts are lead on to the main stage of mass media without anybody seeming to notice. Presto, the world has changed. Media is not the magic by misdirection I was envisioning, it is a mass willingness to suspend disbelief.

Thank you Larry for helping me better understand the mechanism. However, I don't think you have gone far enough. Heads of media should be fired for misrepresenting the facts. Those that forged data should be charged with treason. Those that ordered the data be forged should be charged with crimes against humanity. But, as you point out, they changed the courts to preclude this possibility.

If this book disappears without debate, it will simply be one more bit of evidence to show the fix is in.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


53 of 56 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Makes the case for a People's Bank-Union-Intelligence Agency, October 23, 2005
This review is from: Fog Facts : Searching for Truth in the Land of Spin (Nation Books) (Hardcover)
This is quite an extraordinary book, one of five I picked up while browsing at Barnes & Noble today. It gets a full five stars for elegant writing, logical presentation, and a lovely index. I read it together with Noam Chomsky's Imperial Ambitions: Conversations on the Post-9/11 World (American Empire Project) interviews, and the two complement one another.

"Fog facts" are facts that are out in the open, but "invisible" in the sense that no one acts on them. The stolen Florida election--30,000 plus disenfranchised blacks *and* "overcount" votes where Al Gore was both checked and written, rejected as invalid instead of returned for verification--the specious claims against Iraq; the 9-11 Commission apologia; the list goes on. For myself, the most interesting fog facts dealt with the number of terrorists caught and jailed by France and other nations, as a tiny fraction of the cost of invading Afghanistan and Iraq, and with little to show for it excepts casualties, including significant numbers of US amputations being concealed from the public.

The author "outs" Judith Miller as an agent of Karl Rove in the run-up to the war in Iraq, earnestly selling the Administration's line on weapons of mass destruction, and perhaps one reason she was both favored by Rove in the current Valerie Plume case, and also sought to protect Rove.

THe author gets the jump on the current scandal of the disappearing billions in Iraq--not just the billions for Halliburton in sole source contracts, but the outright theft and squandering of the $19 billion in Iraqi bank credits that Paul Bremer managed to fritter away--and they still do not have running water or electricity.

THe author quotes several times from Mein Kamph in discussing the extremist Republican use of "the big lie" and the comparisons are disconcertingly clear. He weaves a tale of draft-dodging hypocrisy among the Bush Junior and Cheney gang that is all too distasteful when combined with their corruption in favoring Halliburton--his listing of Cheney's ignominious failures as CEO of HAlliburton are fun--and also a sign that Halliburton knew what it was doing in suffering the fool that would deliver the people's treasure. His accounting of Bush Juniors many failures in business, each time living on his father's name and getting bailed out by the forgiving rich that he has repaid many times over with tax cuts and exemptions from asbestos claims, among other loopholes, is dismaying in the extreme. We "know" these things, but we do not act.

On page 82 he repeats what is now perhaps the most famous quote to come out of the Bush Junior White House, where an arrogant aide dismisses a "reality-based" person and says that the U.S. is an empire now, and makes its own reality. That the reality we are making is one of our own destruction escapes this witless aide to the President, so full of himself is he.

The books adds to my understanding of the current Social Security arrangements as a pass through system (each generation funds the next) as opposed to the Administration's proposal for privatization, which converts it to a pension fund that dies with each generation. I am persuaded that we must defend Social Security, it is present form, to the death, and that we must remove the caps and make the wealthy contribute for every dollar, not just up to $90,000.

The author concludes that there is a war today, not between civilizations, but between faith-based and reality-based communities.

I put the book down reflecting to myself that it is time for the American labor union pension funds to lead a revolution. It is time for the people to form their own bank, their own credit card company, their own intelligence agency, and their own media. Although this is happening in fits and starts with the Internet, it is disjointed. We need to marry up money, willpower, and honest information, and we need to out these carpetbaggers and regain control of the commonwealth.

Truth and morality are here to be found, but the question that remains is: will the people act? This is a very fine book for anyone who cares about future generations and resents being robbed.

Ten Other Recommended Books (Five Bad News, Five Good News):
Vice: Dick Cheney and the Hijacking of the American Presidency
Running on Empty: How the Democratic and Republican Parties Are Bankrupting Our Future and What Americans Can Do About It
The Global Class War: How America's Bipartisan Elite Lost Our Future - and What It Will Take to Win It Back
The Working Poor: Invisible in America
American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War On America
A Power Governments Cannot Suppress
The Tao of Democracy: Using Co-Intelligence to Create a World That Works for All
Society's Breakthrough!: Releasing Essential Wisdom and Virtue in All the People
Escaping the Matrix: How We the People can change the world
The Wealth of Networks: How Social Production Transforms Markets and Freedom
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


37 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Big Lie: Alive and Well, November 9, 2005
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Fog Facts : Searching for Truth in the Land of Spin (Nation Books) (Hardcover)
Who needs sleep, anyway: as with Beinhart's last book, The Librarian, this one kept me glued to the page througout half the night with it's sarcastic humor and disturbing observations: The Big Lie, a propaganda technique cherished by Hitler, is alive and well and has come to new heights of perfection with the Bush administration. Beinhart makes no empty claims when he shows that clear, unequivocal and published documentation for the government's policies (and failures) exist - court rulings, official investigations, confirmed media reports, economic statistics, frank testimony from the power players about their intentions and motives - and yet, the obvious conclusions are lost in the fog, turned upside down, or remain unknow to the general population.
"Fog Facts" stands in the tradition of Noam Chomsky's poignant analyses "Necessary Illusions" and "Manufacturing Consent" as it shows by example how large scale indoctrination and the selling of obviously wrong, irrational and detrimental policies can succeed in a democratic society with a nominally free media system.
As a slow reader I appreciate how Beinhart focusses on a well selected sample of cases without getting lost in minutiae, how he keeps the writing crisp and entertaining, and the book short (187p). An index and footnotes throughout make it a valuable reference tool, and the associated website offers further material and invites readers to share their own fog facts.
So what's a citizen to do against the evils described? The book itself is an analysis, not a manual. As such it provides case studies of the major issues of recent years and provides excellent ammunition to bring reason into the discussion. But while not given explicitely, answers to the "what to do?" questions are easy to infer: Start with skepticism towards power, read watchdog sites that monitor the players and the political PR industry, and make your voice heard when politicians and the media start obscuring the issues.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


26 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Important addition to our language, December 26, 2005
By 
David C N Swanson (Charlottesville VA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Fog Facts : Searching for Truth in the Land of Spin (Nation Books) (Hardcover)
Beinhart has done us a remarkable service by giving language to a new and critically important concept, that of the fact that is neither secret nor known. By "fog facts," Beinhart means to indicate pieces of information that have been published on back pages of business sections of newspapers or picked up by a columnist or two, information that has perhaps been circulated on the internet by those with a passionate interest in the issue and enough free time, information that is accepted as known and established by reporters, editors, producers, and pundits, but which the vast majority of the public has never heard about and would find incredibly important and shocking.

The subtitle that Beinhart gives his website is "Known Facts That Have Been Lost in the Fog," and by the fog he means to indicate, as described in his book, the onslaught of abundant facts and information about unimportant stories: Monica Lewinski and O.J. Simpson are two examples Beinhart gives. But Beinhart suggests at least one other force that helps keep some fog facts in the fog: people's reluctance to believe a really big lie. This, Beinhart writes, is "why it was easy to believe that Bill Clinton lied about having sex with that woman and hard to believe that Bush and his entire cabinet were telling bald faced lies about Saddam's connection to Al Qaeda and his weapons of mass destruction."

In fact, one of the fog facts Beinhart discusses is the Downing Street Minutes.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Packs a wallop, January 27, 2007
This review is from: Fog Facts : Searching for Truth in the Land of Spin (Nation Books) (Hardcover)
Novelist and very sharp social commentator Larry Beinhart's main premise in this somewhat breezy but always incisive book is that the truth is right in front of our eyes but we are unable to see it because it is obscured by a prevailing fog of lies and misinformation.

He notes, for example, that the truth about Saddam Hussein's alleged ties to Al Qaeda and the weapons of mass destruction that weren't there, and especially the disaster that was likely to follow if we invaded Iraq, was known, available and understood, but unfortunately buried on page three or four of the New York Times or in an academic tome or on some obscure Website or beneath the radar of the six o'clock news so that your average person (especially your average congressperson) didn't know about it. Besides they (and we) were watching Fox News, which was putting "the news in context," was giving "it a perspective," was telling us "how to think about the stories" it reported. In fact, as Beinhart so incisively notes, Fox News was and is doing us "a service" because even if Fox News has it wrong, "for many of their viewers it is still more satisfying than the conventional, non-judgmental approach that leaves the audience with work to do." (p. 182)

This sort of incisive understanding of what is really going on is part of what makes this little book such a fantastic read. Beinhart sees things in a way that others do not. He sees past the spin and the hype and the conventional wisdom to what is really going on--or has gone on. He sees that what has propelled the right to power in this country and has persuaded its leaders to embrace hypocrisy and authoritarianism is a belief by many that "the source of order is authority" and that hypocritical lies are often necessary to maintain that order. He recalls that George W. Bush "mocked Vice President Al Gore for acknowledging marijuana use, saying, "Baby boomers have got to grow up and say, yeah, I may have done drugs, but instead of admitting it, say to kids, don't do them." (p. 96)

This "Bush logic" in part explains why he and his administration spew out so many lies and so much misinformation. Quite simply, Bush believes lies and secrecy are good policy. The general public are like children. They should not be told the truth lest it misguide them or confuse them. Beinhart asserts that hypocrisy and mendacity are in fact part of the Republican Party's program and have "a great deal [to] do with its appeal." (p. 96) The idea is we like being lied to, or at least we believe that other people--the unwashed masses probably--need to be lied to, and this can only be done effectively if the lies come from authority figures. Order is made by authority. "A choice, a statement, or a rule is not made valid by logic or proof or evidence. It comes from the authority of the source." (p. 96)

Of course the real authority in the world is empirical fact as understood by rationality and by the sciences, not just the hard sciences, but the social, political and economic sciences as well, and by technology. Beinhart notes that the split between those who follow "the constellation of Republicanism, conservatism, and Christianity" (p. 96) and the rest of us is "not between right and left but between the faith-based and reality-based communities." (p. 181)

I think Beinhart has got it right. The Bush administration and its supporters, in following a faith-based way of dealing with the world and its problems, are in reality applying an ignorance-based approach that will inevitably lead to the end of America as the world's leading economic, technological and scientific power. Unless we find a way to navigate through the lies and misinformation spun out by the right wing "noise machine" we are headed for not only a further loss in power and prestige, but a lowered standard of living that will inevitably result from that loss.

The question might be, why has the culture of mendacity and faith-based authority taken over so much of America? In Europe and elsewhere people are amazed at our growing stupidity. Beinhart blames the media in part. He writes that "since 9/11...there no longer seem to be any consequences for political lying." This is because the media fails to report the lies as lies. "The failure of the media to take responsibility is the reason that political lying--especially in the soft-core, public relations style that misleads--has no penalties anymore." (p. 185)

Part of this book is devoted to exposing George W. Bush for what he is, a mediocre opportunist who is clever at manipulating people and spinning events in a way that benefits him. He avoided service in Vietnam, but nobody seemed to notice as he now struts around like a war hero. His various business enterprises were failures. They lost money. But Bush himself did not lose money, mainly because he was the son of prominent political family that included his father who was the President of the United States. He got cheapie loans and bailouts and favorable insider trading decisions from the SEC so that when he ran for governor of Texas he was already a rich man. Beinhart also looks into the past of Vice President Dick Cheney and his association with Halliburton. It is in part a picture of a scheming politician corrupt to the core.

But mainly Beinhart looks into the fog. It's dense and thick and, for now, it prevails.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


7 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book!!, July 10, 2006
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Fog Facts : Searching for Truth in the Land of Spin (Nation Books) (Hardcover)
Easy reading, short but informative. I highly recommend this book and believe it should be necessary reading for every american.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Digging Facts out of Political Fog., October 2, 2008
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This is the first exposure I have had to Mr. Beinhart's writing. He is an excellent author in that he took a fairly well-known subject, (propaganda) and made it an exciting topic.

He casts a critical eye at the M.O. of the Bush administration.
Bushenomics is one of the topics. Bushenomics= taking tax dollars and giving it to the rich. Remind anyone else of the Bush plan to bail out Wall Street last week?

He examines the work of White House attorneys like John Yoo and Alberto Gonzalez who accomplished the feat of creating two classes of people: those beneath the law and those above the law. Of course George W. Bush is in the last category.

Larry Beinhart delved into Bush's business history as well as Cheney's less than stellar record at Halliburton.

I found Cheney's draft deferment record more than a little interesting!

There are two quotes that I thought really stood out in "Fog Facts":
On Page 30 "What if someday, somebody who was not a neoconservative Republican loyalist stumbled into a position of authority at the Justice Department and begin to prosecute people under section 18 of the United States Code 2441, the War Crimes Act?"
An intriguing idea that I'm sure would receive wide support!

The other is the "Random Stupididity Theory"
"The most brilliant person in the world will make a stupid decision occasionally. If that person is in charge of the entire economy, then the whole economy goes in a stupid direction. If that person has stupid subordinates, and they follow his directions stupidly, then the economy will go wrong too."

I found "Fog Facts" to be a quick and entertaining read.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


5.0 out of 5 stars Great Read, June 23, 2011
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
Five stars as the Larry has the same outlook and memory that I do about recent (last 30-40yrs) political morass that this country and the middle class have endured ('course we are responsible for accepting the pandering and lies). I'm sure he'd be able to find the same things have been going on in the last 3yrs. Crooks and Liars all of' em.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


11 of 62 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Lousy book, February 20, 2006
By 
M. Robinson (Portland, ME USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Fog Facts : Searching for Truth in the Land of Spin (Nation Books) (Hardcover)
The only piece of info I trust in this book was actually on the book jacket: Beinhart is a novelist. Listen, the WMD "case" was trumped up...we all know that now. But this book is no more than a thinly disguised rant about Bush and Cheney, how Bush stole the election, blah blah blah. Of course it's "balanced" with helpful facts about how Clinton personally ushered the economy into its white hot expansion in the late 1990's. What a load of hogwash. This book is itself one garguantuan Fog Fact.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


Most Helpful First | Newest First

This product

Fog Facts : Searching for Truth in the Land of Spin (Nation Books)
Fog Facts : Searching for Truth in the Land of Spin (Nation Books) by Larry Beinhart (Hardcover - August 31, 2005)
Used & New from: $0.01
Add to wishlist See buying options