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 Polemics and Prophecies 1967-1970Stone, I.F.Publisher:  Vintage Books, New York, USA Year Published:  1972
 Pages:  497pp
 Resource Type:  Book
 
 An anthology of I.F. Stone's articles from 1967 - 1970.
 
 Abstract:
 -
 
 Table of Contents
 
 Preface
 
 Part I: When Two Equals One
 Who Are The Democrats?
 Party of the Rich and Well-Born
 A Grateful Patsy Against a Dirty Fighter?
 The Candidate Least Likely To Make Peace
 The GOP Convention Was Not Without Its Cheering Aspects
 When a Two-Party System Becomes a One-Party Rubber Stamp
 Why Hubert Is As Tricky as Dicky
 
 Part II: 'Saigon Afire Now
'
 The Monster with Little Brain and No Heart
 The Fraud with Which Bomb Resumption was Excused
 The Mendacities Go Marching On, Truce or No Truce
 How TV and Press Were Led to Rehash Those Tet Supply Lies
 They'd Do Anything For the Peasant But Get Off His Back
 The Mindless Momentum of a Runaway Military Machine
 If Daddy Keeps at It, Luci, One Day You Won't Wake Up
 None So Blind as Those Who Will Not See
 Saignon Afire Now - Will It Be Washington In April?
 
 Part III: '
Will It Be Washington in April'
 The Fire Has Only Just Begun
 Billions for Missiles and Pennies for Poverty
 The Mason-Dixon Line Moves to New York
 Nixon About to Abolish Hunger "For All Time" - Again
 The Real Meaning of Nixon's Judicial Philosophies
 
 Part IV Nixon: The Evil of Banality
 So What's a Little Isaiah Between Friends?
 Uncle Sam's Con Man Budget
 Same Old Formulas, Same Tired Rhetoric
 Midway to a Nguyen Van Nixon Era
 Nixon in the Footsteps of Popeye's Elder Statesman
 
 Part V: The Menace of Militarism
 McNamara and the Militarists
 On National Defence, Space, and Foreign Policy, the New GOP Platform Reads as If Written by   General Dynamics for a New Arms Race
 A Goldwater to Head the Pentagon
 Nixon and the Arms Race: The Bomber Boondoggle
 Nixon and the Arms Race: How Much Is "Sufficiency"?
 The War Machine Under Nixon
 Heading for a Bigger Arms Race in the Seventies
 
 Part VI Disarmament: A Century of Futility
 How Earth Day Was Polluted
 Why SALT Spells Fraud
 A Century of Futility
 Theatre of Delusion
 The Test Ban Comedy
 
 Part VII: That Barroom Brawl with the Lights Out Revisited
 All We Really Know Is That We Fired the First Shots
 McNamara and Tonkin Bay: The Unanswered Questions
 The Supineness of the Senate
 
 Part VIII: Endless War
 Why Not Timbuktu or Easter Island?
 Playing for Time to Continue the War?
 The Willful Blindness of McGeorge Bundy
 Why the Casualties Rise as Peace Talks Go On
 The Best-Kept Secret of the Vietnam War
 Immediate Withdrawal Becoming a Bandwagon
 Lessons for Nixon
 The Atrocities Nixon Condones and Continues
 Nixon, Inflation and the War
 Nixon's Iron Curtain on the Coast of the War
 Only the Bums Can Save the Country Now
 
 Part IX: The Mideast
 Holy War
 The Need for Double Vision in the Middle East
 
 Part X: Pax Americana
 How the U.S. Plays Out a Banana Republic Comedy in Greece
 The First Military Dictatorship with a Free (but Suspended) Constitution
 
 Part XI: 'It Wasn't for Lack of Spies
'
 It Wasn't for Lack of Spies That the Czars Fell
 The Mujik as the Negro of the Russian Revolution
 The Rebirth of Freedom - or of Fascism?
 Who Are the Real Kooks in Our Society?
 Where the Fuse on That Dynamite Leads
 
 Part XII: The Streets
 The Rich March on Washington All the Time
 They Pleaded Guilty of Burning Paper Instead of Children
 In Defence of the Campus Rebels
 Bitter Battles Lie Ahead
 
 
 The major issues in the United States in the late 1960s are explored in this anthology of I.F. Stone's articles from 1967 - 1970. These include the Vietnam war, the social unrest in the nation, the conflict in the Middle East and the nature of the American political system, amongst many others. Divided into twelve sections, the book contains chapters with titles like "Why Not Timbuktoo or Easter Island?," "It Wasn't for Lack of Spies That the Czars Fell," "How the U.S. plays Out a Banana Republic Comedy in Greece," and "Nixon in the Footsteps of Popeye's Elder Statesman." It is an in-depth look into the situation of that time from Stone's point of view.
 
 I.F. Stone was a reporter, editorial writer and columnist on the Philadelphia Record, PM, the New York Post, the Washington Star and the New York Daily Compass. He was Washington editor of The Nation from 1940-1946 and then published his own newsletter, I.F. Stone's Weekly.
 
 [Abstract by Nabeeha Chaudhary]
 
 
 I.F Stone's third collection of articles, Polemics and Prophecies, 1967-1970, has come out in paperback. (Vintage, $3.25). Like the first two volumes, The Haunted Fifties and especially In a Time of Torment, it is a superb collection of masterful journalism. With an uncanny sense of news Stone ferrets out facts, many of them in little-known reports of the U.S. government itself, that damn the holders of power. While his analysis is not always perfect (whose is?), his pieces on the two-party system ("When Two Equals One"), The Vietnam War ("The Monster with Little Brain and No Heart"), Richard Nixon ("The Evil of Banality"), militarism, social measures ("Billions for Missiles and Pennies for Poverty"), disarmament ("A Century of Futility"), the Mideast, and other topics, are invaluable. I can't think of a better regular interpreter of the current scene than Stone. When it comes to powerful radical journalism, Stone has a lot to teach
 
 [review by Ulli Diemer]
 
 
 
 
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