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The Overton Window Mass Market Paperback – December 28, 2010
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There is a powerful technique called the Overton Window that can shape our lives, our laws, and our future. It works by manipulating public perception so that ideas previously thought of as radical begin to seem acceptable over time. Move the Window and you change the debate. Change the debate and you change the country.
For Noah Gardner, a twentysomething public relations executive, it’s safe to say that political theory is the furthest thing from his mind. Smart, single, handsome, and insulated from the world’s problems by the wealth and power of his father, Noah is far more concerned about the future of his social life than the future of his country.
But all of that changes when Noah meets Molly Ross, a woman who is consumed by the knowledge that the America we know is about to be lost forever. She and her group of patriots have vowed to remember the past and fight for the future—but Noah, convinced they’re just misguided conspiracy-theorists, isn’t interested in lending his considerable skills to their cause.
And then the world changes.
An unprecedented attack on U.S. soil shakes the country to the core and puts into motion a frightening plan, decades in the making, to transform America and demonize all those who stand in the way. Amidst the chaos, many don’t know the difference between conspiracy theory and conspiracy fact—or, more important, which side to fight for.
But for Noah, the choice is clear: Exposing the plan, and revealing the conspirators behind it, is the only way to save both the woman he loves and the individual freedoms he once took for granted.
After five back-to-back #1 New York Times bestsellers, national radio and Fox News television host Glenn Beck has delivered a ripped-from-the-headlines thriller that seamlessly weaves together American history, frightening facts about our present condition, and a heart-stopping plot. The Overton Window will educate, enlighten, and, most important, entertain—with twists and revelations
no one will see coming.
- Print length480 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherThreshold Editions
- Publication dateDecember 28, 2010
- Dimensions4.13 x 1 x 7.5 inches
- ISBN-101451625286
- ISBN-13978-1451625288
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Editorial Reviews
Review
--James Rollins, "New York Times" bestselling author
"A visionary work of fiction. One of the best thrillers I've read in years."
--Vince Flynn, "New York Times" bestselling author
"From the moment you open Glenn Beck's The Overton Window, you are looking through his eyes -- and like the best thriller writers out there, Glenn knows that the very best way to scare us is to show us what can really happen. Get ready to sleep with the lights on. This is the one. You'll never look at history the same way again." -#1 NYT bestselling author Brad Meltzer
"Glenn Beck has just shattered the fiction barrier. "The Overton Window" is the "perfect" all-American thriller."
--Brad Thor, #1 "New York Times" bestselling author
"Glenn Beck never fails to amaze. "The Overton Window", a rip-roaring read of the first order, is as good a political thriller as you're going to find this year."
--Nelson DeMille, " New York Times" bestselling author
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Most people think about age and experience in terms of years, but it’s really only moments that define us. We stay mostly the same and then grow up suddenly, at the turning points.
His life being pretty sweet just as it was, Noah Gardner had devoted a great deal of effort in his first twenty-something years to avoiding such defining moments at all costs.
Not that his time had gone entirely wasted. Far from it. For one thing, he’d spent a full decade building what most guys would call an outstanding record of success with the ladies. Good-looking, great job, fine education, puckishly amusing and even clever when he put his mind to it, reasonably fit and trim for an office jockey, Noah had all the bona fide credentials for a killer eHarmony profile. Since freshman year at NYU he’d rarely spent a weekend night alone; all he’d had to do was keep the bar for an evening’s companionship set at only medium-high.
As he’d rounded the corner of age twenty-seven and stared the dreaded number thirty right in the face, Noah had begun to realize something about that medium-high bar: it takes two to tango. While he’d been aiming low with his standards in the game of love, the women he’d been meeting might all have been doing exactly the same thing. Now, on his twenty-eighth birthday, he still wasn’t sure what he wanted in a woman but he knew what he didn’t want: arm candy. He was sick of it. Maybe, just maybe, it was time to consider thinking about getting serious.
It was in the midst of these deep ruminations on life and love that the woman of his dreams first caught his eye.
There was nothing remotely romantic about the surroundings or the situation. She was standing on tiptoe, reaching up high to pin a red, white, and blue flier onto a patch of open cork on the company bulletin board. And he was watching, frozen in time between the second and third digits of his afternoon selection at the snack machine.
Top psychologists tell us in Maxim magazine that the all-important first impression is set in stone within about ten seconds. That might not sound like much, but when you count it off it’s a long damn time for a guy to stare uninvited at a female coworker. By the four-second mark Noah had made three observations.
First, she was hot, but it was an aloof and effortless hotness that almost double-dared you to bring it up. Second, she wasn’t permanent staff, probably just working as a seasonal temp in the mailroom or another high-turnover department. And third, even in that lowly position, she wasn’t going to survive very long at Doyle & Merchant.
They say you should dress for the job you want, not the job you have. That’s especially true in the public relations business, considering that that’s where appearance is reality. Apparently the job this girl wanted was head greeter at the Grateful Dead Cultural Preservation Society. But that wasn’t quite right; she didn’t strike him as a wannabe hipster or a retro-sixties flower child. It was more than the clothes, it was the whole picture, the way she carried herself, like a genuine free spirit. An appealing vibe, to be sure, but there was really no place for that sort of thing—neither the outfit nor the attitude—in the buttoned-up world of top-shelf New York City PR.
At about five seconds into his first impression, something else about her struck him, and he completely lost track of time.
What struck him was a word, or, more precisely, the meaning of a word: line. More powerful than any other element of design, a line is the living soul of a piece of art. It’s the reason a simple logo can be worth tens of millions of dollars to a corporation. It’s the thing that makes you believe that a certain car, or a pair of sunglasses, or the cut of a jacket can make you into the person you want to be.
The definition he’d received from an artist friend was rendered not in words but in a picture. Just seven light strokes of a felt-tip marker on a blank white page and before his eyes had appeared the purest essence of a woman. There was nothing lewd about it, but it was the sexiest drawing Noah had ever seen in his life.
And that is what struck him. There it was at the bulletin board, that same exquisite line, from the toes of her sandals all the long, lovely way up to her fingertips. Unlikely as it must seem, he knew right then that he was in love.
© 2009 Glenn Beck
Product details
- Publisher : Threshold Editions; Reprint edition (December 28, 2010)
- Language : English
- Mass Market Paperback : 480 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1451625286
- ISBN-13 : 978-1451625288
- Item Weight : 10.7 ounces
- Dimensions : 4.13 x 1 x 7.5 inches
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Glenn Beck, a nationally syndicated radio host and founder of TheBlaze, is the author of thirteen #1 bestselling books. Beck is also the publisher of Mercury Ink, a publishing imprint (www.mercuryink.com) that, in conjunction with Simon & Schuster, released the #1 bestselling young adult series Michael Vey.
Glenn can be found on the web at www.glennbeck.com and www.theblaze.com.
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It's probably no surprise to anyone who's read my books, but I'm a long-time fan of what might best be called the Paranoid Thriller.
"Paranoid Thriller" isn't a book publishing category. You won't find such a classification in the Library of Congress, or in the shelving system of Borders or Barnes and Noble. Amazon.com has the most cross-referenced indexing system of any bookseller I can think of and even it doesn't seem to have that as a sub-category of fiction.
Technically -- because these stories are often set in the "near future" or "the day after tomorrow" or sometimes in an alternate history -- the Paranoid Thriller is a sub-genre of science fiction. But usually, beyond the element of political speculation, there are none of the usual tropes of science fiction -- extraterrestrials, space, time, or dimensional travel, artificial intelligence, biological engineering, new inventions, scientists as action heroes, virtual realities, and so forth.
I'm sure even this list shows what an old fogey I am when it comes to what's being published as science-fiction these days, which within the publishing genre has abandoned all those cardinal literary virtues of clarity, kindness to the reader, and just good storytelling in favor of all those fractal fetishes that previously made much of "mainstream" fiction garbage unworthy of reading: dysfunctional characters, an overwhelming sense of helplessness and despair, and of course hatred of anything ever accomplished to better the entire human race by old dead European-extraction white men.
The Paranoid Thriller is an atavistic throwback to earlier forms of literature. There are suspense plots, adventure, a focus on characters driven to make decisions by intellect rather than addiction, and -- God bless them! -- often enough a happy ending after you've ploughed through the wreckage caused by the miserable wretches who actually make life decisions based on the gulf oil sludge that passes for literature in those committees who for the last few decades have been passing out once-worthy awards to writers who if they tried to tell a story around a campfire would soon find themselves alone, talking to the coyotes.
And with some poetic justice eaten by them.
The Paranoid Thriller is not actually based on any emotion, much less fear. The Paranoid Thriller is specifically a type of intellectual libertarian literature, the purpose of which is to sound a clarion call to wake up the sleepwalkers among us who have been hypnotized by government-run schools, socialist-dominated universities, misanthropic organs of popular culture, and cynical destroyers of all sense of public honor or decorum for fun, profit, and sick love of power.
The Paranoid Thriller is the literature of liberation -- and often enough, the cinema of liberation as well.
The Paranoid Thriller is step-brother to the Dystopian novel, such as Yvgeny Zamyatin's We, Ayn Rand's Anthem, Aldous Huxley's Brave New World, and George Orwell's Nineteen-eighty-four, and brother to the espionage novel -- everything from Ian Fleming's James Bond novels to John Le Carre and Tom Clancy's spy novels; and at least kissing cousin to alternate history thrillers like Brad Linaweaver's 1988 Prometheus Award-winning novel, Moon of Ice, about a Cold War not between the United States and the Soviet Union but between a non-interventionist libertarian United States and a victorious Nazi Germany.
Some good examples of the Paranoid Thriller?
In books, let's start with Sinclair Lewis's 1935 novel It Can't Happen Here, the story of an American president who rises to power by enforcing a Mussolini-type fascism in America, published three years after the movie Gabriel Over the White House enthusiastically endorsed such a presidency, well into the presidency of Franklin Delano Roosevelt who did it for real, and a year after Adolf Hitler became the Führer of Germany.
Three years before Jack Finney's novel The Body Snatchers was serialized in Colliers, Robert A. Heinlein's 1951 Doubleday hardcover novel, The Puppet Masters crossed genre between futuristic science-fiction and the Paranoid Thriller -- in effect creating an entire new genre of Paranoid Science-Fiction Horror -- in which unlike H.G. Wells' invaders from Mars in The War of the Worlds didn't have the decency to exterminate you, but instead jumped onto your back and controlled your brain making you their zombie.
But then again, Heinlein had already created the Ultimate Paranoid Thrillers in his 1941 short story "They" and 1942 novella "The Unpleasant Profession of Jonathan Hoag" -- over a-half-century before The Wachowski Brothers' 1999 movie The Matrix -- in which the entire world is a vast conspiracy to convince one man of its reality.
Jumping two decades forward I'll use as my next example Ayn Rand's 1957 epic Atlas Shrugged, in which the Soviet-refugee author warned how the United States -- by following the path of a kindler, gentler socialism -- could end up as the fetid garbage dump that had devolved from her once European-bound Mother Russia.
The Cold War gave us several classic Paranoid Thrillers about either attempts at -- or successful -- Soviet communist takeovers of the United States.
We had Richard Condon's 1959 brilliantly ironic novel -- adapted into a wonderful movie in 1962 -- The Manchurian Candidate, about a Soviet agent who controls both her son -- a brainwashed assassin -- and her husband, an anti-Communist United States Senator loosely based on Joseph McCarthy who comes close to securing his party's nomination for president.
Less well known were the pseudonymous Oliver Lange's 1971 novel Vandenberg, about a Soviet takeover of the United States, or In the Heat of the Night author John Ball's 1973 Soviet takeover novel, The First Team, in which a single undetected American nuclear submarine holds the hope for forcing the Soviets out of their occupation of America.
Likewise, fears of appeasement of the Soviet Union led to Fletcher Knebel and Charles W. Bailey II's 1962 novel, Seven Days in May, about a Pentagon General's attempt to overthrow the President -- which two years later Rod Serling adapted into a Burt Lancaster/ Kirk Douglas movie directed by John Frankenheimer, who two years earlier had directed Frank Sinatra, Laurence Harvey, Janet Leigh, and Angela Lansbury in The Manchurian Candidate.
Television gave us the classic Patrick McGoohan 1967-1968 paranoid thriller TV series, The Prisoner, granddaddy to all the knock-offs of people kidnapped by mysterious forces and transported to gilded cages and danger-filled islands.
Movies gave us:
The Parallax View (1974)
Twilight's Last Gleaming (1977)
Rollover (1981)
Red Dawn (1984)
JFK (1991)
Wag the Dog (1997)
Murder at 1600 (1997)
The Siege (1998)
Arlington Road (1999)
Josie and the Pussycats (2001)
Yes, Josie and the Pussycats -- though played as a comedy -- eminently qualifies for the genre.
I could go on and on -- Wired-magazine-founder Louis Rosetto, Jr.'s pre-Watergate-written Paranoid Thriller novel of President Nixon's coup d'etats, Takeover -- published in January 1974 just six months before Nixon was forced from office; John Ross's 1996 post-Waco/post Oklahoma City bombing novel Unintended Consequences.
In that sub-genre of the Economic Paranoid Thriller we have financial writer Paul E. Erdman's 1976 Paranoid Thriller The Crash of `79 (Erdman had good reason to be paranoid -- he'd served time in a Swiss prison for financial fraud); and Nixon-administration economic mavens Herbert Stein and his son Benjamin Stein's 1977 novel of America suffering from hyperinflation, On the Brink.
My own 1979 novel, Alongside Night, just misses being in the Paranoid Thriller category only because hyperinflation and government conspiracy is only the launching point for a novel which is mostly an exploration of how the principles of the Declaration of Independence might be implemented by a "new guard" other than re-upping the Constitution of the United States after its failure to maintain a limited government -- as is the endgame of Atlas Shrugged and the novel I come here today to review, The Overton Window.
Let me start by saying that everything the mainstream critics will say about this novel is true. It's talky. I expect the words "preachy" and "didactic" to be used a lot. There are long speeches -- even by the main villain, who like many destructive people are disappointed idealists. Events of the novel seem to have been picked not because they advance the plot but because they're popular topics in the news. It quotes the Founding Fathers as if they'd written the Bible.
Screw these critics all to hell. These are what make a novel worth reading.
Why in the name of God would anyone waste a moment of their precious reading time on a novel that doesn't have ideas, doesn't have characters who are capable of making coherent speeches, doesn't have an author who thinks he knows something worthwhile and has a passion to gift you with them?
What the mainstream literary critics use to condemn novels like The Overton Window are the very virtues that makes them literature.
Think I'm sounding defensive here?
No, I'm on the offense, and have been ever since these same bogus standards were used by uncreative drones to make lame attacks on my novels, three decades ago.
Here's how I answered them in my article "There Are Two Sides to Every Review" published August 10, 1980 in the Los Angeles Times Book Review:
1. "The writing is heavy-handed."
The author says things explicitly.
2. "The story is melodramatic."
The book is strongly plotted.
3. "The plot is contrived."
The plot is original and intricately logical.
4. "The novel is polemical."
The novel has a discernible theme.
5. "The novel is preachy."
The theme phrases a moral proposition.
6. "The book's intent is didactic."
The plot demonstrates practical consequences of the theme.
7. "The author manipulates characters."
The characters do things that fit into the plot.
8. "The characters are two-dimensional."
The characters are only shown doing things that fit into the plot.
9. "The book is Pollyannish."
The author finds things in life that make it worth living.
10. "The story depends upon coincidence."
Events in the story logically coincide.
11. "The book is a roman à clef."
The characters are so realistically drawn, they can be confused with real people.
12. "The characters are unrealistic."
The characters are shown being heroic, moral and intelligent, while the critic views his own character as cowardly, amoral and stupid.
13. "The author has no feeling for his subject."
The author portrays things differently from what the critic thinks they are.
14. "The characters give speeches."
The characters are capable of expressing a coherent viewpoint.
15. "This character is the author's mouthpiece."
This character makes more sense than the others.
16. "The book is utopian."
The author thinks things can get better.
17. "The book is an exercise in paranoia."
The author thinks things can get worse.
I find myself here -- as both a novelist myself and a critic -- having to be didactic, myself. I have to teach you the very standards that need to be used when criticizing a work of literature. I have to arm you with the very tools necessary to understand what it is that critics are trying to steer you away from -- and why.
Critics who are not themselves practitioners of the art they are writing about are -- with rare exceptions, caused by a dedication to reason and honesty above all else -- the enemies of art. Without the ability to create it themselves, they are wannabes sitting on the sidelines envious, spiteful, and on a mission to destroy that which they, themselves, do not have the power to create.
The failed artists -- the one who gave up -- tend to be the most dangerous of all.
Adolf Hitler was a failed painter. His hatred of Jews likely started because a Jewish art teacher had the strength of character to point out his failings.
Saddam Hussein was a failed novelist. As dictator of Iraq he self-published his novels and his minions forced people to buy them.
The Roman Emperor Nero played the lyre while Rome burned.
And Bill Clinton was either a failed saxophonist or someone who didn't have the perseverance to find out if he could spend his life supporting himself doing it.
The critics who were never artists and the critics who are failed artists don't like art that clearly communicates. They thrive on murk and obscurity. They shrink from any sort of standards. They hide behind a doctrine they've invented called deconstructionism, which when you strip away the academic veneer of respectability means that a work of art has no objective meaning at all, but means only what an audience member imagines it means.
Sonny boy, I did not go through eight drafts of my first novel -- and more recently fourteen cuts of my first movie -- because I don't think I am capable of refining what I'm trying to communicate to my audience down to the subatomic level. Screw Heisenberg and his uncertainty principle when it comes to the business I have chosen to be in.
If my art does not communicate precisely and absolutely what I intend it to mean, either I have failed as an artist or I have failed to find an audience worthy of me.
My father did not practice the violin for hours every day for over half a century because he was satisfied with being sloppy in front of an audience without an ear to tell the difference. He heard the difference -- and on that day when his strength and agility and hearing had failed him and he could no longer perform to the lofty standards he had set for himself, on that day he began to die.
The Overton Window is told third person from several viewpoints, the most important being Noah Gardner, whom we meet on his 28th birthday -- and what an eventful birthday it is, having him stopped in a New York City cab by Haliburton-type security contractees protecting political candidates in town, and arrested at a Tea party type meeting taking place in a beer hall -- and I'm sure the authors picked that meeting location pointedly.
Noah is the scion to a New York public relations firm into everything from making pet rocks a fad to saving politicians from sex scandals. Noah's father is an cynical bastard who is smart enough to see the writing on the wall from previous misuse of power, but not smart enough to understand that when the game of musical chairs which is the world economy stops he won't be conducting the music any more. Noah's possible salvation lies in a chance meeting with a beautiful young libertarian woman who begins to seduce him away from the dark side.
An "Overton Window" is what's called "the realm of the possible" in politics -- it's that which is on the table for current discussion. So if you're in the business of politics, job one is moving the Overton Window in your direction -- getting what the public can accept as possible to include your agenda. If your agenda is total control, you create incidents that scare the public into incremental losses of their privacy and liberty. If your agenda is expanding freedom, you create loopholes for people to escape through.
If you've come to this page expecting me to tell you anything more about the story or characters of The Overton Window, think again. Anything more I tell you would be a spoiler.
Trust me, I'd love to be able to tell you why the Lloyd D. George Federal Courthouse in Las Vegas, Nevada plays a part in this plot. That was the exterior we used for the office of Jack Goldwater's supervisor, IRS Deputy Commissioner Lewis Heinlein, in my movie Lady Magdalene's.
Oh my God -- there's even a sequence in Pahrump, Nevada -- where I filmed most of Lady Magdalene's -- and where I live!
Some Star Wars references, even. Sam Konkin, Victor Koman and I did produce the very first Star Wars fanzine, The Force.
Spooky. More than one place in the novel gives me an eerie feeling of déjà vu.
Ayn Rand told her readers that an author's job is to present facts instead of predigested conclusions, and let the reader make up their own minds.
But my telling you about the plot and characters of a novel by someone else isn't my job. It's the authors' job. Let them communicate their images and events to you. Let their words -- not mine -- be your first introduction. I do not intend to broker the experience of reading The Overton Window for you.
I gave you my standards for judging a work of literature. By these standards I find The Overton Window to be an important work of literature, expertly crafted, relevant to our times, presenting solid values, and on the same mission that I am to liberate this country from the critics who are incapable of creative work yet feel themselves capable of standing in judgment over it.
The critics of The Overton Window will not need to read the novel to condemn it, and many won't even trouble themselves. They already know all they need to know because they've listened to its producer, Glenn Beck, speak to them on his television and radio shows.
The Overton Window is a trenchant and uncompromising critique of power brokers who can not create life but feel themselves competent to rule over it. It is a novel that wants the free will that God gave each of us to be once again free. If that's not literature then to hell with literature. If that's not a good enough reason for you to read a novel, nothing further I say to you will make any difference, anyway.
As it happens, I have many disagreements with Glenn Beck -- both with the content of his presentations and sometimes with his method of presentation. He's been on a journey. This novel is a strong indication to me that he's going in the right direction.
None of anything negative I might perceive in the author is reflected in The Overton Window. Glenn Beck is his best self as a fiction writer -- and the collaboration of producer Kevin Balfe, editor Emily Bestler, and novelist Jack Henderson -- known for his own previous novel Circumference of Darkness -- only enhance Glenn Beck's first outing as a thriller writer.
On June 2, 2010 Glenn Beck praised my novel Alongside Night to the three million listeners of his nationally syndicated and satellite radio show.
I guess this review is the beginning of a mutual admiration society.
As a Prometheus-Awards laureate in 1984 and 1989, I recommend to the next Libertarian Futurist Society's Prometheus Awards Nominating Committee that The Overton Window be placed into consideration for the "Best Novel" category.
Mr. Beck, welcome to the libertarian fight. This time I know our side will win.
I just finished reading "The Overton Window", and then went to Amazon to read the negative reviews after the fact in this case. A little backwards from my normal modus operandi. From the negatives I read I probably would have bought the book anyway and would have been glad I did after reading it.
I wish we could turn back the hands of time and have this book published under a pseudonym and then see what kind of reviews it would have gotten.
But hey, I found the negative reviews almost as entertaining as the book. Thanks guys!
Reading the negative reviews before writing my own review has probably changed what I would have wrote originally, but not the reason I gave Glenn's book only 4 stars, which I'll share at the bottom of my review.
All the negative reviewers probably think anyone who enjoyed the book and/or gave it a more positive review than their's have probably already entered the early stages of baptism into the cult of "Glenn Beck". Hey Glenn, you're not the charismatic "anti-christ" are you buddy?
After reading this, I think I'd buy the autographed copy in the wooden box if Glenn would inclose a personal signed note vouching that he didn't use ghost writers. Did you Glenn? As they claim. If you did, I'm disappointed. Still enjoyed it though, and if you choreographed the whole nine yards; good job regardless of the ghost writing.
I've always thought life wouldn't be too bad as long as I could still play a game of chess and enjoy a good book regardless of my physical condition. When it comes to enjoying a good book, this one would hit the mark for me. To all the pedantic nitpicking points in the negative reviews; come on guys, this is fiction! Plausible fiction. You try to sound so erudite yet display no concept of the suspension of disbelief in literary works. Give me a break!
Okay, "don't tease the panther" might have pushed it a little bit. I probably would have been tempted beyond what I was able to endure if a hot babe I was attracted to hopped in the rack beside me even though I think any male that disrespects the marriage bed is only an immature punk and not a mature man. (Unfortunately thanks to the influence of our culture, I've had my immature punk days. If I could do it over, I'd do it different.) I do appreciate the fact that Glenn didn't go over the top with too explicit sexual displays that goes beyond innuendoes that too many authors think is required to sell novels and movies. Thanks Glenn. I also appreciate the fact that Glenn showed good dialogue does not have to be salted with the use of expletives which is another indicator of immaturity for those who use them.
We live in precarious times. Anyone who can't recognize that has their head buried in the sand. I enjoyed how Glenn blended fact with fiction throughout this book, which he generously elaborated on in the afterword. That should be an eyeopener for all except those who prefer the bliss of ignorance.
A cord was struck with me as I read in the afterword, "When your mind suspends disbelief, it may also become more willing to consider a broader spectrum of possible outcomes to the events and agendas that are playing out around us every day." Yeah! As a pilot I like for my mind to go first where my body might have to follow. That involves looking at the full spectrum of possibilities from best to worse case. Should the worse case attempt to materialize, it makes dealing with it easier than being surprised. Then Glenn followed that with a paragraph about fighter pilots.
All I can say is the fighter pilot's prayer: "Lord I pray for the eyes of an eagle, the heart of a lion and the balls of a combat helicopter pilot." I don't have any combat helicopter time, but I personally know some of these men and am richer for the friendship. Likewise, regardless of the name of the author of "The Overton Window" I am richer for having taken the time to read and enjoy the book. Thank you Glenn!
So, "The most basic question is not what is best, but who shall decide what is best." Are they those who's immune systems are compromised by greed and blind ambition inflicted with the virus of corruption, allowed by a populace asleep at the helm? If so, we are in pretty deep kimchee. It won't be pretty once the fermenting is done.
I don't mind yielding to a superior debate when I believe it is the right thing to do, and I become convinced of its merit. Page 210 describing the four types of people in the world comes close to convincing one to yield. Glenn could have spun this story anyway he chose. He could have made all his detractors happy. Unfortunately it is obvious that our so called visionaries are tainted by corruption and greed. "Do as I say, not as I do!" Yea, no thank you!
"And so this government of the United States was brilliantly designed to keep that weakness of human nature in check, but it required the people to participate daily, to be vigilant, and they have not. It demanded that they behave as though their government was their servant, but they have not. In their silence the people of the United States have spoken. While they slept the servant has become their master." Oops.
Okay, why only four stars? "It was hard, she'd said, because it wasn't a street address that she'd been given, only a latitude and longitude." Sheesh! There was a time when a pilot also had to be skilled in navigating if he/she was to be useful. Now with GPS any dummy who can plug in the numbers is good to go. So how many times does Google Maps turn up an inaccurate location when a street address is entered? Yeah, thank you! If the latitude and longitude is accurate, the location is accurate anywhere in the world. Street addresses are not standard and useful world wide, while latitude and longitude are. You would think a protagonist of Molly's caliber could handle a simple set of latitude and longitude coordinates. That flaw would almost make you want to be a progressive if all the aspects of progressivism were as simple as that. Latitude and longitude are not that hard folks! Otherwise, excellent book Glenn! I enjoyed it from beginning to end. Thanks.







