Coups can tell us all about democracy. Review: Coups d'État in Cold War Latin America, 1964–1982, eds Sebastián Carassai and Kevin Coleman, by Gavin O'Toole
Like the Vietnam war era US soldiers who explained it was necessary to destroy some villages in order to save them, this armchair revisionist exercise bespeaks a thought process with no grasp of the reality of dictatorship or the self perpetuating logic of power through force. Put this one on my list of dangerous books to burn.
Fatal flaws in civilian rule result from nationalizing communities for monopolies that deprive them of historic access to (unpolluted) food and water sheds.
Like the Vietnam war era US soldiers who explained it was necessary to destroy some villages in order to save them, this armchair revisionist exercise bespeaks a thought process with no grasp of the reality of dictatorship or the self perpetuating logic of power through force. Put this one on my list of dangerous books to burn.
Fatal flaws in civilian rule result from nationalizing communities for monopolies that deprive them of historic access to (unpolluted) food and water sheds.