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Rating:  Summary: ignorance is bliss Review: ...The picture Mander paints has a vast, web-like look andfeel to it, extending from the vastness of the Canadian Northwest Territories, into the boardrooms of the major oil conglomerates, the programming chambers of the television studios, the daily lives of once-free-roaming, nomadic Indian cultures, governmental "Think Chambers", the back rooms where the exploitation of the moon and the possible resources of Mars is being planned, and of course, the burgeoning internet about which many have scarecly a clue as to its worst and greatest potentials. And, surprisingly, your bedroom. Highlighting several points won't get the point of the book across because on any one of them, the reader of this review could say, "Well, that one doesn't much bother me." or "Well, I can't do much about that." or "Gee, that's too bad for those poor indians, but what could I possibly do to change that? I have so much going on already.", and the important message of the book would be completely overlooked. ("Well, what's the point?" you might be asking. Please forgive me. I swore not to spoonfeed the answers.) I strongly suggest that you -do not- read this book if you are living a comfortable lifestyle, or at least hope to live one. There's no point in upsetting yourself if you're not willing to be different in order to make a difference in the future of the world. We might want to be different, or imagine we would be different if we were certain it would help things, but what this book speaks of isn't on the level of 'conspiracy theory', it's about what is actually happening right now... Again, it doesn't pin down any one thing. It pulls in everything starting with the most basic elements: lack of truth in advertising; exploitation of humans as consumer addicts; corporations as -real entities-, composed of people, that share a single-pointed focus on accomplishing a -central aim- (and not necessarily their stated one) at all costs; and many other elements that add up to a "web" that we humans have unwittingly become tangled in. The web tangles those who know about it, and those who don't know about it equally, but the one's who think they know about it sometimes imagine that they are better off than those who don't know about it. So, what does one do? The book addresses this question. This reviewer believes that any attempt to diminish the ideas in the book by associating them with some existing philosopy such as Neo-Ludditism (broadly : a philosophy of being opposed to technological change) would be a misdirection. The underlying motivation behind this book is not to increase paranoia and resistance for resistance's sake, but to introduce the = reader, to as full of an extent as possible, to the conditions and circumstances under which she currently lives and must become aware of if any lasting change is to be possible.
Rating:  Summary: Wake Up Call Review: I originally read this book a few years ago in a college philosophy course and I didn't particularly like it. I am still unsure of some of the ideas. This book does, however, open the readers eyes to a different worldview. If this book doesn't cause you to stop and ponder the world, you might be missing out on life.
Rating:  Summary: Changing old thinking is painful! Review: I resisted many of the ideas in this book when I first read them. ("I'm a good guy! How could my life be harmful to Indians?!") I kept at it, figuring if I reacted so strongly, it must have been hitting close to home! While Mander is sometimes pretty heavy-handed with his arguments, he challenges a lot of assumptions in a straight-forward, deliberate, compelling way that ultimately led me to make some concrete changes in my life. Can't promise that for everyone-- but if you've a gut feeling that says the way we live as a country is a little nuts, this book may help confirm your suspicions. It also manages to offer a few solutions.
Rating:  Summary: A beautifully written book, exposes the truth Review: I would never have found myself reading an indian book when I was in school. Back then, all we had were grades. Even now, I find myself giving a grade to the article I just read, In the Absence of the Sacred. But after I realize I am grading it, I also realize the real premise of how we view the world. As a set of statistics and numbers. Isn't it true, today, that all we do when we rate other countries in accordance to us, is see whether they have economies and buildings and airplanes and factories? Then we grade how well they output their economies, how much influence they have. Even art is part of this influence, and the human, in whatever form it was in, is lost. How sad. Soon countries, together in this vast machine world, become nothing but amalgamations of future and past prophecies of cultural and societal development, all leading forward. Or upward. But what of the societies that have not embraced this trend? The ones that don't show up on the map? Jerry Mander's has written about these peoples, and their names are not used in vain. He gives them a fair voice, showing how their annihilation in map is not the same as character or spirit. I believe we have come to the brink of an edge in time, when we can finally see through the cracks in the infrastructure of this matrix, one that we continue to be trapped in, because of our lack of understanding of the power of the imagination. Though they are just words, I often wonder, how many people could resist feeling sorry for loved ones that died in a faraway country? Or the feeling of being broken, lost, and adrift? Don't all human beings feel these feelings?
Rating:  Summary: Critical For Understanding Where We're Going! Review: No one could accuse author and scholar Jerry Mander of sitting on the fence regarding his position concerning the so-called "Third Wave' of technological changes cascading through our society and culture. Indeed, this book has been described as a powerfully written broadside against the headlong rush into what Mander terms to be "Megatechnology", which is the combination of a number of particularly dangerous aspects of technological innovation, creating synergistic effect he believes will ultimately will be dangerous to us as individuals, consumers, and citizens. Many of the ideas he uses so effectively here were first broached in an earlier book, "Four Arguments For The Elimination Of Television". The author uses a variety of examples to show how the public has been deliberately manipulated and misled by a variety of boosters and cheerleaders for technological innovation, ranging from corporations, the media, academics, and even the government. This, he contends, has led to the emergence of several particularly dangerous predominant technologies such as television, genetic and molecular engineering, and computers. What is surprising is the amount of evidence Mander produces showing clearly adverse aspects of each technology, evidence which heretofore has been deliberately omitted from public scrutiny by the aggregated sponsors and cheerleaders of the technology, who obviously have a vested interest in stacking the deck in favor of their particular interest. While he sometimes strains the reader's patience with arguments that use of a technology such as computers benefits the rise of corporate globalism more than it does individuals, Mander still manages to prove why we must be more aware of the meaning of these technologies in terms of our own self-interest, and in the interest of the community at large. At base, what the author is really arguing for is a return to greater personal responsibility through the restoration of more traditional attitudes and values about our connection to the wider community and to an ethic of social responsibility. To the degree we allow ourselves to continue to be isolated and segregated from the community and its human-oriented interests, the more we play into the hands of forces that wish to fragment this orientation in order to better control resources, social patterns, and participation in the global economy by more forcefully orienting us toward lives as material consumers. Indeed, Mander argues, every aspect of the so-called "New World Order" is designed to acquaint and socialize us into adopting a new orientation that defines citizenship ever more exclusively as enthusiastic consumerism. If Mander sometimes seems a bit shrill and even romantic in his approach, urging us to return to more traditional orientations in small human communities, moving toward more sustainable lifestyles, he counters by reminding us that having the degree of faith evident in contemporary society regarding the outcome of the hell-bent thrust toward economic globalism is also quite a romantic orientation, especially given our almost medieval understanding of just what this new technologically-oriented corporate-ascendant society would look like, or what it would be like to have to live in a world where corporate economic imperatives significantly influence every aspect of our lives. Given the events of the last year with Enron, Tyko, Global Crossing, and other corporate conglomerates, who can have much faith in either their vision or their integrity? Thousands lost their life savings due to nothing less than unbridled corporate greed! This is hardly the pedigree one wants to recommend for our collective futures. We would do well to heed his warning and to each become much better informed. This book can help! Enjoy!
Rating:  Summary: opens your mind ! Review: Provides a good overview of the history between native people's and the US government's policies toward natives. Shows the impact that American economic policy is having upon indigenous peoples here and abroad,as well as, the impacts upon the environment and cultures, worldwide. I would recommend this book, especially to those, who like to hide their heads in the sand and pretend the US and it's economic theories are so innoculose.
Rating:  Summary: Feeling something is going 'very wrong'? - A MUST READ Review: This book is a 'MUST READ' for those interested in Environmental Issues, Technology, Indigenous Peoples, the True Intentions of Corporations & Governments (particularly the US Govt) & General Spirituality - and the connections between each of these. Whether you agree of disagree, this book will SHOCK you out of your HAZE of day to day life. Thereafter you will hopefully begin the process of waking up to the truth of our existence. This is the effect it's had on me. A brilliant account of our era - step out of your 'life' for a few hours and take a look in! What you see may anger and disillusion you, but i feel much of it is the truth and ultimately only the truth will set you on the right course and let you be you free.
Rating:  Summary: opens your mind ! Review: This book should be required reading for every American. This book will take years of corporate and government brain-washing out of your newly enlightened skull. The next time our president calls another nation "evil", you may want to take a good look at our nation's past, present, and possible future. Mander describes Indian cultures that base current decisions on how they will effect childred 7 generations from now. Imagine our short sighted, consumption driven society, even attempting this. The book confirms what I already feel, that unless society changes the way we live and view the natural world, our future is grim. The Indians see the errors in our ways. They know our fate. The question is if we will listen to them in time to save our greedy little selves.
Rating:  Summary: Eye-Opening Non-Fiction Review: This is simply the most important and eye-opening non-fiction book I've ever read. The author, Jerry Mander, puts forth two major postulates: first, that technology is not necessarily always good for humanity, and in fact, is often quite the opposite; and second, that Western Civilization is on a crash course with self-destruction, and the folks who can save our sinking ship are the indigenous peoples of the world, who already know the formula for long-term survival, even though we've never bothered to listen. Both theories resonate with me. Both are, in the final analysis, true. Both should be heeded. This is a great book.
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