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The Culture of Fear : Why Americans Are Afraid of the Wrong Things

The Culture of Fear : Why Americans Are Afraid of the Wrong Things

List Price: $24.95
Your Price: $15.72
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Superb. Don't watch TV without it!
Review: I have read a great number of media criticisms, but this is absolutely the best I have found. On the back cover, there is a rave from Neil Postman (one of my heroes), and he is right about what a great book this is. The writer does not blame the media, he says good things about journalists who are responsible, and he skewers the others hwo spread lots of fears about crime, drugs, road rage, airline safety, women, minorities, etc. etc. etc. As an added plus, he has a great sense of humor.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Buy the origianl book by Frank Furedi if you are interested
Review: If you are interested in this topic, buy Frank Furedi's book also entitled the Culture of Fear (1997). Furedi's book covers virtually of the same topics and you don't have to endure the bad jokes and excessive liberal, left-wing bias of Mr. Glassner. (It is pretty strange that Glassner picks the same topics and the same title as Furedi two years have Furedi's book. Glassner apparently doesn't have enough imagination to come up with his own book idea.) If you are interested in a factual discussion of the costs and benefits of gun ownership, buy the book by John Lott.

Glassner's book just over does it on political feelings and facts that are too superficial. I agree with the review from The Economist magazine reprinted below by the person from Philadelphia.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A superb, tremendously important study
Review: I saw this author destroy John Lott on Hardball last night. As the author rightly points out in the notes to his book, while he critizes people (like Lott) who use phony statistics, he also notes that to eschew statistics altogether would be foolish. This author's statistics have been checked carefully and come from peer-reviewed journals. That, in my mind, is what makes this a crucially important book and a useful antidote to conservative "misdirection." I would encourage everyone to keep an open mind and read the book before listening to the ill-informed rants below.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Carefully researched, well argued and a great read.
Review: Wow, the comments on here from people who haven't read the book but only seen Mr. Glassner on TV are truly strange to me.Excuse me, but I READ the book, and it is incredibly well documented, plus it is fun to read. Incidentally, Glassner covers a great many topics, not just those that the ringwing loonies write Amazon about. Some of my favorite chapters are about "metaphorical illnesses" (there he criticizes the left, incidentally) and airplane crashes.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Dumb Boring Jokes and a Lot of Unsubstantiated Opinions
Review: This guy is the darling of the politically correct media. The media may cover some things too much and teh really important left wing causes too little, but all their big government solutions -- more taxes and regulation -- will "solve" what real problems do exist.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: HE CRITIQUES FACTS WITHOUT FACTS
Review: I wish that I had read the Economist's review of Glassner'sbook before I wasted my time reading the book. The Economist (July17, 1999) sums it up perfectly: "But Mr Glassner's humour is too laboured, his liberal-Democrat soft-heartedness can be too insistent, and his figures -- for one who is often taking issue with absurd extrapolations -- are surprisingly vague. When airily dismissing other people's statistics, it is important to say where you got your own."

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great, important, timely book.
Review: I ordered The Culture of Fear after reading a favorable review of it in the Washington Post. This book is worth it just for the parts about "killer kids." With all of the media going insane about school shooting and the like, Glassner's calm and research-oriented approach is very welcome. I see that someone sent in a comment that the book will appeal only to leftists, but I don't know what they're talking about. Glassner's book is about as balanced as anything I've ever seen. He takes out after liberals, conservatives and in-between whenever they inflict useless fears on the population. Read it and decide for yourself! As for me, I think The Culture of Fear is a really important book.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Important topic, flawed study
Review: Glassner addresses an important topic: US media makes a big deal out of, probabilistically speaking, unlikely dangers, while largely ignoring much more likely ones. An example of the former are plane crashes, while workplace injuries represent the latter. Unfortunately, Glassner decided to write a political tract rather than a balanced study. Readers who adhere to the leftist American liberal point of view are likely to shout ``Hear, hear,'' while reading this book, others will find it flawed, biased and, occasionally, succumbing to temptation to do a little fear-mongering itself.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A thoughtful, encouraging book.
Review: Mr. Glassner writes well and carefully, a rare combination these days, imho. Reading this book left me feeling ecnouraged because I had long suspected that some of the myths he lays to rest were just that, myths. I have already ordered another copy to give to a worrywort friend of mine for her birthday.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: A rather disappointing, one-sided polemic.
Review: This book is very uneven. The author has his own very strong political agenda and, while he does a good job of debunking those irrational fears that impede his agenda, he shamelessly engages in the same kind of fearmongering to promote his own views. This is most noticeable in his discussions of gun control, where his own paranoid fear of guns and gun owners is clearly evident.

On the other hand, the book does an excellent job of exposing the irrational hysteria that underlies the War on [some] Drugs, Satanic child abuse allegations, Road Rage, Crack Babies, and similar modern day witch-hunts.

The problem with this book is neatly summarized in the subtitle: (Why Americans are Afraid of the "Wrong" Things.) "Right" and "wrong" in this context are highly subjective moral and political judgements. The author doesn't really want us to give up irrational fears entirely; he wants to ensure that we are afraid of the same things that he is afraid of: Guns, Conservatives, Country music, Heartless corporations, Unemployment, Income inequality, etc. And he wants us to stop being afraid of the things that he supports: Political correctness, Hillary-care, Income redistribution, and a strong collectivist government with enough power to "...feed, house, educate, insure, and disarm ..." the entire population.


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