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28+ oeuvres 904 utilisateurs 14 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Daniel Patrick Moynihan is the senior U.S. senator from New York. First elected in 1976 and reelected three times since then, he was previously a member of the cabinet or sub-cabinet of Presidents Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, and Ford. He has also been U.S. ambassador to India and U.S. representative afficher plus to the United Nations. Moynihan has taught at many universities and is the author or editor of eighteen books. He is the recipient of numerous honors and honorary degrees. afficher moins
Crédit image: Daniel Patrick Moynihan (1927-2003)

Œuvres de Daniel Patrick Moynihan

Secrecy: The American Experience (1998) 114 exemplaires
On the Law of Nations (1990) 51 exemplaires
A Dangerous Place (1978) 36 exemplaires
Ethnicity: Theory and Experience (1975) 30 exemplaires
Family and Nation (1986) 28 exemplaires
Loyalties (1984) 14 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

La vie de Disraeli (1927) — Avant-propos, quelques éditions681 exemplaires
A Cartoon History of United States Foreign Policy, 1776-1976 (1968) — Introduction, quelques éditions67 exemplaires
Critical White Studies: Looking Behind the Mirror (1997) — Contributeur — 57 exemplaires
Securing Democracy: Why We Have An Electoral College (2008) — Contributeur — 29 exemplaires
The Tyranny of Numbers: Mismeasurement & Misrule (1992) — Avant-propos — 25 exemplaires
Pennsylvania Avenue: America's Main Street (1988) — Avant-propos — 22 exemplaires
That most distressful nation: the taming of the American Irish (1972) — Avant-propos, quelques éditions19 exemplaires

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A strong analytical and historical account of the growing role of secrecy, particularly during and after the Second World War.
½
 
Signalé
sfj2 | 1 autre critique | Apr 3, 2024 |
“Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not his own facts.”

If that is all the late Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan said or did he would be my hero for life.

But he said and wrote much more and we can thank former editor and journalist Steven R. Weissman for this excellent sampling from Moynihan’s mountain of letters.

Editorialists excoriated Moynihan at the end of his career as having accomplished little as a politician. He wrote many books. He taught at Harvard, and MIT, and Syracuse. Before becoming a politician himself he served four American presidents in succession starting as one of the frontiersmen in John F. Kennedy’s administration.

To his critics he appeared to switch sides from being a liberal Democrat to a conservative for Richard Nixon. He was called a neocon and hated the term.

In his social science research he was labelled a racist by African American scholars for identifying problems in the nuclear family unit as one source of poverty for inner-city blacks.

But the story is more nuanced.

He fought in Nixon’s cabinet for a Guaranteed Annual Income, something Nixon approved of but never came to pass.

He wrote and lobbied for family support payments, something Republican conservatives forced President Clinton to back down on.

He detested the CIA and complained endlessly about secrecy in government. If the CIA was so good, he asked, why didn’t they predict the fall of the Soviet. Union, something he was expecting for a decade or longer.

He was unfairly pinned for gunning down Hilary Clinton’s health reform while he was chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, but even Clinton herself came to acknowledge that she should have listened to him more closely.

Reading the letters of a politician in a democracy could be as dull as watching paint dry, but when you see up close how hard it is, and how poorly compensated these wretches are, you realize all the more how fragile democracy is and must be to work.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
MylesKesten | 2 autres critiques | Jan 23, 2024 |
Reading another Moynihan book and wishing there were more like him in the Senate these days. Smart and reasoned argument here in favor of international rules and norms.
 
Signalé
JBD1 | Jul 31, 2022 |
Typically Moynihanian intelligent analysis of nationalism and ethnicity in the immediate wake of the breakup of the Soviet Union. Witty and provocative, even if it has gotten a bit dated at this point.
½
 
Signalé
JBD1 | Jul 30, 2022 |

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Œuvres
28
Aussi par
8
Membres
904
Popularité
#28,380
Évaluation
½ 3.7
Critiques
14
ISBN
43

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