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Like the rest of the baby-boom generation, Norman Solomon
grew up in a nation of dazzling progress and ominous shadows.
Behind the upbeat TV shows and glib optimism there lurked
private anguish and the specter of nuclear holocaust. Young
people confronted a divisive war in Vietnam and distress
in their own lives. Now, several decades later, Americans
face similar divisions and a potentially endless "war
on terror."
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Blending personal
history and social commentary, Made
Love, Got War traces five
decades of rising American militarism and scant media skepticism.
The author's unique weave
of personal narrative and historical inquiry, Daniel Ellsberg
notes in the foreword, "helps us understand where we
are now and how we got here."
Drawing on 40 years
of intense activism, Solomon shows how the mainstream media
have shaped our view of war, technology, and national purpose.
In the process, he also shows why he is considered "one
of the sharpest media-watchers in the business" (Barbara
Ehrenreich) and "a formidable thinker and activist"
(Los Angeles Times).
Solomon's firsthand
experiences and compelling narrative raise an essential
question: To what ends should America use its awesome political,
economic, media, and scientific power? Made
Love, Got War will help readers
to find meaningful answers.
Norman Solomon is the author of twelve
books, including War Made Easy:
How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death and,
with Reese Erlich, Target Iraq:
What the News Media Didn't Tell You. Solomon is a
nationally syndicated columnist on media and politics. His
articles have appeared in the New
York Times, Washington
Post, USA Today,
Los Angeles Times, Boston
Globe, and many other newspapers. A frequent guest
on television and radio, he was featured in Bill Moyers'
recent PBS documentary Buying
the War and a full-length film adaptation of War
Made Easy produced by the Media Education Foundation.
Solomon is the founder and executive director of the Institute
for Public Accuracy. He is a recipient of the George Orwell
Award, which honors distinguished contributions to honesty
and clarity in public language.
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