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Had Enough?: A Handbook for Fighting Back Hardcover – December 2, 2003
Purchase options and add-ons
- Print length224 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherSimon & Schuster
- Publication dateDecember 2, 2003
- Dimensions5.75 x 1.5 x 8 inches
- ISBN-100743255755
- ISBN-13978-0743255752
Book recommendations, author interviews, editors' picks, and more. Read it now
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- Reviewed in the United States on October 15, 2012I ordered this book after seeing James Carville promote his newest book. When I received it, I began reading immediately. Even though it was written 9 years ago, many of his points still ring true. I began to see things even more as they were, and it did get me pumped up. I have highly recommended this book to people. I read it when ever I could throughout the day, until I was finished. Mr. Carville has the ability to tell it like it is, and pulls no punches. Great book from a brutally honest man who has no qualms about telling it like it is.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 5, 2022Wish everyone would read this
- Reviewed in the United States on July 4, 2010I expected a lot more "gloves off" coming from Mr. Carville, while he does bring out the dark side of Republican Politics - the recipes and "my momma used to say" and side stories that were in the middle of a chapter were distracting. I Want Mr. Carville to be a Pit Bull when it comes to Politics - If you're into Politics, it's worth a read.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 17, 2004You may not agree with everything Carville says but you have to admire the way he says it. He unapologetic and right to the point. He's not worried about who he offends, especially George Bush. Conservatives should be afraid of this guy. He makes sense on a lot of issues, even if you don't agree with him. In any event, the book was educational as well as humorous. If you want to learn a little bit about what goes on in the mind of a "progressive" here's a good place to start. I don't agree with Carville, but I respect him.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 19, 2005This book is a turbo charged read from front to back. This book is straight up with info and great recipes! I miss this kind of passion and brilliant logic from a kick ass progressive like Carville. I wish the democratic party could syphon some of these truthful observations and form a platform to stand on!
- Reviewed in the United States on August 1, 2004Of all the political books on the market right now (and I have read most of them), this is the best. A must read for anyone interestead in sending Bush back to Texas in November.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 20, 2004Both Democrats and Republicans should read HAD ENOUGH?
by James Carville (with Jeff Nussbaum) . . . the noted political
adviser takes on George W. Bush and his party's leaders on
virtually every front--from the economy to education to foreign
affairs.
However, what I liked about the book is that it not only
attacked; it also laid out "had enough" solutions for helping
the country get back on its feet . . . I also liked its the
research that was done . . . every statement that Bush
made was documented with respect to when and where he
said it.
One quote, in particular, stuck with me:
That doesn't mean we can't or shouldn't tell people about successes
when we see them, but remember my first rule for Democrats to live by:
Never just oppose, always propose.
Wouldn't that be something we should all try to do in any situation
we encounter?
There were many other meaningful passages that also got
me thinking . . . for example:
* Not every agreement suits your interests directly, but often pays to
be in rather than out. Which is why it was so amazing to see George
Bush take the United States out of six big international agreements in
his first six months of office.
Here's what they were:
The Kyoto Proposal. Signed by the United States, November 12,
1998. Abandoned by George Bush, March 2001. . . .
The Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT). Signed by Bill Clinton
1996. Opposed by George Bush, from day one. . . .
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty. In force since 1972. Abandoned by
George Bush, May 1, 2001. . . .
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). In force since 1970. Undermined
by George Bush since 2001. . . .
Protocol to the Biological Weapons Convention. Negotiated by the
United States for ten years. Abandoned by George Bush, July 2001. . . .
International Criminal Court (ICC). Supported by every American
administration since World War II. The Bush administration withdrew
our signature from the treaty, May 6, 2002. . . . .
Conference on the Illicit Trade in Small Arms and Light Weapons in All
Its Aspects. Conceived July 2001. Rejected by George Bush W. Bush
outright. . . .
* George W. Bush was sworn into office on January 20, 2001. Every day
that he has been in office, including the remarkable number of days
that he's been on vacation, here's what happened to America under
his leadership:
The stock market has lost $3.6 billion in shareholder value a day.
That's right, every day that this man strutted into the Oval Office,
Americans say the value of their savings, pensions, and investments
decrease by $3.6 billion.
Our fiscal situation has worsened by $9.5 billion a day.
Every day he's been in office, 3,409 private sector jobs went down
the drain.
Every day, 5,114 more people started working part time, because
they couldn't find a full-time job.
Every day, another 250 people have stopped being counted among
the unemployed because they've just plain given up on trying to find a job.
You'd think we'd be able to trust them; after all, if there's one thing they know
about--it's hurting the economy. I'm not just mouthing off here, either. That
statement is empirically true. If you take the last fourteen presidents, you have
eight Republicans and six Democrats. Below is a chart of the annual rate of job
loss or gain, form best to worst, by every president since Calvin Coolidge.
President Rate of Job Gain (or loss)
Roosevelt (1933-45) 5.3
Johnson (1963-69) 3.8
Carter (1977-81) 3.1
Truman (1945-53) 2.5
Clinton (1993-2001) 2.4
Kennedy (1961-63) 2.3
Nixon (1969-74) 2.2
Reagan (1981-89) 2.1
Coolidge (1923-29) 1.1
Ford (1974-77) 1.1
Eisenhower (1953-61) 0.9
G. Bush (1989-93) 0.6
G.W. Bush (2001-present) -0.7
Hoover (1929-33) -9.0
* And in September 2003, THE WASHINGTON MONTHLY magazine
put together a panel of experts to study the last four American
presidents and determine who was responsible for telling the biggest lies.
They looked at Clinton's lying about sex, Reagan's lying about arms for
hostages and welfare claims, George H. W. Bush's request that we read
his lips. But they concluded that George W. Bush blew them all out of the
water with his lies about deficits, tax cuts, and weapons of mass destruction.
When I reported this on Crossfire, Tucker Carlson, my co-host, responded
that he was amazed at the lengths I would go to prove that someone else
lies as much as Bill Clinton. That's always the Republican response-Clinton
lied about sex. Republicans simply can't get over that. I think it comes down
to this: Democrats lied about something we really like: sex. Republicans lie
about something they really like: war and money. The difference is nobody
gives a damn when you lie about your own sex, but it matters when you lie
about a war that other people have to go fight and money that other people
end up losing.



