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Paperback Barbarians Inside the Gates and Other Controversial Essays: Volume 450 Book

ISBN: 081799582X

ISBN13: 9780817995829

Barbarians Inside the Gates and Other Controversial Essays: Volume 450

In this latest collection of his highly provocative essays, Thomas Sowell once again demonstrates why he is one of the most thoughtful, readable, and controversial thinkers of our time. With his usual unrelenting candor, he cuts through the stereotypes, popular mythology, and what he calls the "mush" surrounding the critical issues facing the American social, economic, political, legal, racial, and education scenes. Sowell's hard-hitting, and ruthlessly...

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5 ratings

Classic Sowell

The book is a collection of his short articles, organized in the following categories; Social, Economic, Political, Legal, Racial, Education. Sowell's logical and concise arguments hit like a hammer blow to those on the political left how tend to disagree with him. The title of the book comes from the first essay in the book. The relevant line in the essay is: "The Barbarians are not at the gates. They are inside the gates -and have academic tenure, judicial appointments, government grants and control of the movies, television and other media." Rome didn't fall in a day. Events which caused the fall of the Roman Empire happened decades before Rome fell. Sowell gives us a warning on the future of the USA and some hope that society can improve.

Thomas Sowell=5 stars. No, make it 10

While I've read plenty of work by plenty of writers influencing my beliefs on one issue or another, Thomas Sowell's writing has had a much more profound influence on my thinking: it's changed the very way that I view the world around me. As America becomes more divided and less free, Thomas Sowell is one of the only places I can reliably turn for an interesting dissident voice. In this collection of remarkably succint and insightful essays, Sowell pokes at the foundations of the prevailing ideologies of the day until the whole house of cards comes tumbling down. Although he's typically assigned the simplistic label "conservative," Sowell's analyses go well beyond the tired, often irrelevant divide between the "left" and the "right." Sowell isn't trying to get elected or win any popularity contests, and he doesn't have an ideological axe to grind; he's just a guy with a great deal of respect for logic, truth, and the founding ideals of this country. Indeed, Sowell dispenses with the drivel spouted by politicians of both parties as he cuts through what he calls the "mush" that typically passes for informed debate these days. Sowell has written much about the self-satisfied "anointed" who hold so much power and shape so much of the debate in this country, and he launches a frontal assault in these essays against every bastion of their power. No one is spared from Sowell's disdain for our self-appointed betters: politicians, welfare statists, race hucksters, feminists, the media, the judiciary, and most of all the educational establishment that has sold generations of kids down the river in the name of feel-good "progressive" ideas. Although he typically writes with the utmost restraint, Sowell can be outrageous and sometimes even hilarious, as in this little nugget: "Liberals love to say things like, 'We're just asking everyone to pay their fair share'. But government is not about asking. It is about telling. The difference is fundamental. It is the difference between making love and being raped, between working for a living and being a slave." There are plenty more such penetrating insights to be found here, along with an avalanche of facts, to go along with Sowell's justified contempt at America's modern-day elites. If you read Thomas Sowell and you're not quickly converted to his way of thinking, well then, as someone once said, "You can't handle the truth!"

I am in agreement with the other reviewers

Thomas Sowell is more than just a critical thinker: he has a penchant for expressing his ideas with a clarity with which it is difficult to argue. He uses that uncommon commodity known, for some strange reason, as "common sense."Sowell points out`the ludicrous incongruities of the liberal "philosophy" in terms so plain and unvarnished that only one attempting a proctological examination on themselves could miss it.An example: "The point of being a superpower is so that no one will attack you and require the sacrifice of more and more young Americans like those buried in this cemetery. We were attacked at Pearl Harbor because we were sitting ducks who had allowed our military forces to dwindle away until we had an army smaller than Portugal's--and not enough equipment even for this small force." Page 7.Or: "Multiculturism is one of those affectations that people can indulge in when they are enjoying all the fruits of modern technology and can grandly disdain the processes that produced them. None of this would be anything more than another of the many foibles of the human race, except that the cult of multiculturism has become the new religion of our schools and colleges, contributing to the mushing of America. It has become part of the unexamined assumptions underlying public policy and even decisions in courts of law." Page 19.Or: "Much of the current uproar about IQ differences between blacks and whites does not get down to the rock-bottom question: What is there to explain? The average score of blacks in IQ tests in the United States is about 85, compared to a national averge of 100. Is that unusual? No. It is not." He goes on to explain that various groups of various ancestries have had IQs of 85 at various times and places, and he names some of them, and says that the phenomenon is not peculiar to the United States, and he admits that he doesn't know why. Even American aoldiers of the First World War had lower IQs than our soldiers of the Second World War. Page 176.This is a man to be reckoned with, and these essays are valuable for their insights, most of which effectively puncture widely and emotionally held ideas, especially those that are deemed "politically correct," and institutionalized unquestioned dogma of the liberal anointed who think they are qualified to tell the rest of us how to think and act.Joseph (Joe) Pierreauthor of Handguns and Freedom...their care and maintenanceand other books

Thought Provoking...As Always

If you're familiar with Thomas Sowell's newspaper column or his earlier books, you'll love this collection of essays from one of the most remarkable thinkers of our time. As a former economist and professor, Mr. Sowell offers readers a rare perspective on social and political issues. For him, problems like "scarcity" and the "law of diminishing returns" don't stop when they reach the banks of the Potomac or the professor's lectern. Many readers will label the author as a conservative. I describe him as a man who understands how the world works and desperately wants to inject common sense into the public discourse. The author pulls no punches. He just tells it like it is. Where else will you read: "It is used to be said that taxes are the price we pay to live in a civilized society. Today, taxes are the price we pay so that politicians can buy the votes of those who are feeding at the public trough?" Not only will you be nodding your head with every bit of wisdom, you'll find yourself laughing with him at the stupidity of our national elites. No sacred cow of the political left escapes his wrath. As a reader, I couldn't consume this book fast enough. If you purchase this book too, you'll be overcome by a similar craving.

Typical Sowell--Very Intelligent

Anyone familiar with Thomas Sowell's widely syndicated columnes will not be surprised by the abundant wisdom that permeates this chrestomathy. Politically Incorrect to the hilt, Sowell has an amazing ability to elevate common sense to an art form. Whether taking on the multiculturalists' drive to Balkanize America, environmental extremists, or self-mutilating corporations, his arguments are eloquent in their profound simplicity While liberal bashaws certainly will not embrace his erudite dialectics, no reasonable person can dismiss his viewpoints. Even those who disagree with Sowell's observations will be challenged to rethink their positions if they approach his essays with an objective and discerning mind.
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