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The Secret History of the American Empire: The Truth About Economic Hit Men, Jackals, and How to Change the World | 
| Author: John Perkins Publisher: Plume Category: Book
List Price: $15.00 Buy New: $8.36 You Save: $6.64 (44%)
New (55) Used (14) from $8.20
Rating: 61 reviews Sales Rank: 4748
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 384 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 7.9 x 5.2 x 0.7
ISBN: 0452289572 Dewey Decimal Number: 337.73 EAN: 9780452289574 ASIN: 0452289572
Publication Date: April 29, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description In his stunning memoir, Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, John Perkins detailed his former role as an "economic hit man" in the international corporate skulduggery of a de facto American Empire. Now Perkins zeroes in on hot spots around the world, drawing on interviews to examine the current geopolitical crisis, and providing a compassionate plan to reimagine our world.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 56 more reviews...
No cover jacket on book sent November 25, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
Just thought I'd inform fellow customers that I ordered a hardback book and received it without the cover jacket.
We must never let the military-industrial complex endanger our liberties (D. Eisenhower) November 19, 2008 After a life of `robbing from the poor and giving to the rich' as an economic hit man, thereby pocketing his commissions, John Perkins became an environment activist and a militant for change in the policies of the corporatocracy.
Corporatocracy The author delivers in this book many well directed punches into the face of his former employers, transnational companies which act as imperial dictatorships in the global economy. Together with their long arms (controlled or corrupt governments, the IMF, the World Bank, the WTO, intelligence services, infiltrated or outright controlled NGOs and the military) the corporations are building an empire for the wealthy few. Behind the rhetoric of `free trade', `free markets` and `free choice' the author discovers disinformation, corruption, oligopolies and market and export protection. This empire claims to defend democracy, but ousts or assassinates democratically elected presidents like P. Lumumba, S. Allende, O. Torrijos, D. Roldos). The corporations profit heavily from the empire's War Machine (a trillion dollar business) which invents its own enemies. After the fall of the Berlin Wall Islamic revolutionaries took the place of the Communists in order to justify bulging military budgets.
A few examples In Nigeria, the great writer, Ken Saro-Wiwa was hanged for opposing environmental havoc in the territories of the Ogoni people. In Diego Garcia the entire population was forced out of their country without compensation in order to build a military base. In East-Timor, the slaughtering of the population by Indonesian troops was approved by the US government. In Columbia, the drug war is a subterfuge for protecting oil interests.
Change If the many want to change the world, they must force change on the corporations. The latter are vulnerable because they need us as clients and consumers. We should impose on them policies of ecological sustainability and social responsibility. Governments should be elected by `real' democracy. The ultimate goal of all policies should be `a stable, sustainable and peaceful world for everybody.'
Although this book is sometimes too anecdotic, it is a must read for all those who want to understand the world we live in.
This book will change your view of the USA in the world! September 25, 2008 As a former "Economic Hit Man", Perkins reveals the damage done to nations who do not yield to US demands for their resources. He shows how the usual pattern is to send in the "Jackals" (the CIA) to do the initial dirty work including assassinations, starting internal wars, and many other things. The EHMs then move in to privatise local institutions which are acquired by US interests, and set up massive loans which poor countries can never afford to repay. Among the examples given are Indonesia, Bolivia, Ecuador and, of course, Chile. The role of the World Bank and the IMF as USA-centred institutions is also discussed. Most of the book reads like a thriller, and only moves to a slower pace when Perkins proposes solutions to reforming the practices of the American Empire. He is positive that the growing group of South American countries who are resisting the US 'invasions' may at least slow these insidious activities.
Personal testimony gives flavor & readability but makes for unverifiability August 20, 2008 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
The US State Dept website's description of Perkins' previous book (Confessions of an Economic Hit Man) works here, as well: "an exciting, first-person, cloak-and-dagger tale that plays to popular images about alleged U.S. economic exploitation of Third World countries."
In an easy to read style, Perkins weaves his personal stories around generally established events from around the world that one can usually trace to sources other than Perkins. Although it certainly doesn't hurt to have such incidents brought to mind again, his inclusion of them end up leading the reader in a way that make his behind-the-scenes stories feel more plausible, seeming to simply fill in ground level details of US/corporate exploitation. Together it goes down more smoothly as narrative, a great format for popular consumption.
Yet, as other reviewers have already pointed out, the lack of verifiability really limits the book. The "secrets" Perkins is trying to reveal are, of course, based on personal or anonymous testimony. On the one hand, the circumstances he describes warrant such anonymity, and we should not dismiss singular personal testimony out of hand (especially when regarding such alleged clandestine incidents, where scattered personal testimony may be all there is). On the other hand, since readers' cannot cross-examine his evidence, many of his claims simply must remain unproven, which is unfortunate. Perkins' work would be a stronger contribution to informing the public if it could do so objectively.
At best, perhaps his stories (along with the more established incidents he mentions) should be kept in mind as what powerful corporations and countries are capable of, causing us to be all the more on our guard against corruption.
What the empire has done, and what we can do to heal the world. July 15, 2008 John Perkins, a former "economic hit man", revealed his emotional turmoil in Confessions of an Economic Hitman. He illustrated from an insider's perspective the evils of the modern-day empire building of corporations or "corporatocracy" in action. He lifted the veil on the military-industrial complex, which partners with Government in bewitching consumers with guile, corruption and big marketing budgets, whilst carrying out gross environmental and human rights abuses.
In this sequel, Perkins has a more mature view of the world. Gone is the continuous guilt and egotistical self-reflection, and in its place, is more depth, plenty of anecdotes, solutions for a better world, and many exciting world travels thrown in. Not only does it read like a spy novel at times, but also a travel book. Perkins is no journalist, and there is an opportunity here for a follow-up research piece on his vignettes. There are also times when unsubstantiated conspiracy theories run a bit far. His sources are not always vetted for quality. However, I believe Perkins' heart is in the right place and he should be forgiven for less than perfect journalism.
One major faux pas is in his discussion on the 2006 Israel-Lebanon war. He mentions that Israel launched an attack on Beirut, as if they were making afternoon tea, and faced international criticism. Perkins conceals the major facts of this war - that Hizbollah instigated it by kidnapping an Israeli soldier from sovereign Israel, and launched a missile attack on Haifa. This error of omission calls to question many of his other theories. I wonder what the book could have been if he had employed a fact-checker.
There is no doubt that corporate hegemony is casting a chilling shadow on our world, and the more aware people become, the more we can do. Whilst this is by no means, a 5-star book, it is redeemed by the solutions provided, and Perkins' open-minded approach. Everyone with an interest in why the world is in the situation it's in, why we're so dependent on oil, politics, economics, and the environment, will find this book worthwhile. I would recommend it to everyone interested in the future of humanity and the world we inhabit. This is a must-read for anyone wondering why so much of Asia, Africa and the Middle East hate America.
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