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Arax's Stories Share Wealth Of Experience

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  • Arax's Stories Share Wealth Of Experience

    ARAX'S STORIES SHARE WEALTH OF EXPERIENCE

    Visalia Times-Delta
    http://www.visaliatimesdelta.com/artic le/20090828/ENTERTAINMENT/90828005
    Aug 28 2009

    "West of the West," Mark Arax (2009)

    Raised in the Fresno area in an Armenian family and having worked
    as a reporter for the L.A. Times, Arax has a wealth of experience in
    telling stories about the Valley and California, as he demonstrated
    in the book "The King of California."

    "West" is a wonderful collection of stories of all types from all
    over the state. Among the topics: the growing of marijuana in Humboldt
    County, apparently unobstructed by any authorities; immigrant Mexican
    farmworkers who survive under pitiable conditions and also are torn
    by their relationships back home; the changes in the cultures of
    Berkeley and San Francisco; the participation of FBI officers in
    Sacramento in the prosecution of lowly Muslims in the War on Terror
    and his own involvement in his family's production of illegal booze.

    All the stories are told with verve and insight and understanding of
    those who suffer and those who win.

    It' s a wonderful book by a guy who wrote in my signed copy, "Book
    Reviewer Extraordinaire." How could I not like his books?

    "The Limits of Power," Andrew J. Bacevich (2008)

    Bacevich's book is a thorough rebuke and condemnation of U.S. policy
    toward the world. Interestingly, he begins with an attack on American
    profligacy, always wanting more things, such as cheap oil, unlimited
    borrowing and a higher standard of living.

    Then he takes on the modern structure of government, which is largely
    characterized as an imperial presidency, with the legislative branch
    failing utterly to provide the checks and balances envisioned by the
    framers of the Constitution.

    The president rules with a batch of cronies and overwhelms any
    opposition, leading us to wars without end as in Iraq and Afghanistan,
    Bacevich writes. But this is not new, since it goes back to end
    of the Eisenhower era, when there was at least the semblance of
    executive-legislative coordination.

    Then he goes on to attack military policy, run both by the political
    leaders and the uniformed men who have made unending mistakes, getting
    us into wars, taking risks that nearly always end in blunders and
    high costs in various dimensions.

    His remedies: more humility in foreign policy, work with our normal
    allies, let Islam be Islam -- except for its extremists -- and give
    our attention to more important things, such as saving the planet
    from destruction of the environment.

    This is a bold and powerful statement, probably acceptable to few
    Americans, especially Bushites, but much of it rings true for me
    as I despair over recent policy, which largely continues even in a
    new administration.

    â~@¢Dean is a retired University of California, Santa Barbara
    professor.
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