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Michael Lux's The Progressive Revolution: How the Best in America Came to Be -- Thom Hartmann's Independent Thinker Review

THOM HARTMANN'S INDEPENDENT THINKER REVIEW OF THE MONTH

Each month, BuzzFlash is privileged to have Air America progressive talk show host Thom Hartmann review a progressive book or DVD exclusively for BuzzFlash. See other DVDs and progressive premiums at the BuzzFlash Progressive Marketplace.


There’s no shortage of excellent histories of the progressive movement, from the beginning of this nation to today. One of the very best of the early Progressive/Revolutionary Era is Harvey Kaye’s “Thomas Paine and the Promise of America,” an earlier one of my BuzzFlash Book of the Month reviews. Others are large and fairly substantial tomes, rich with information, such as several of the writings of Chomsky and Zinn, or Charles and Mary Beard's brilliant (and encyclopedic) 1928 "History of America."

But what’s nice about Michael Lux’s “The Progressive Revolution: How the Best in America Came To Be” is that it’s tight and largely focused on events within the past fifty years. Bookend it with Kaye’s book, and one of the excellent histories of the progressive era of the late 19th and early 20th centuries (Beard in particular), and you’ll have the entire arc of Progressive History in America.

Of course, Lux starts with Paine and Jefferson and the early progressives in his second chapter, “A Progressive Revolution: How Tom Paine and Thomas Jefferson Literally Invented the Idea of America,” and it’s a great summary. The following chapter, “The Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and the Right to Think and Speak Freely” lay out how Paine’s and Jefferson’s liberal/progressive ideas came into concrete form in our founding documents and the American ethos. Lux lays out how the radical ideas of the Enlightenment birthed this nation, and how conservative/hierarchical/kleptocratic/autocratic forces have fought the progressive notions present at our founding quite literally since those first days.

The last half of the book, led into through the transitional chapter five, “The Battle over Democracy,” arcs from the Civil War era right into today’s ongoing battle to hold conservatives at bay, and is particularly thorough and readable. For those old enough to remember the sixties, it’s a great recap and condensation of forty years of “culture wars” and efforts to keep America American. For those who were born after the sixties, this is one of the great and must-read historical summaries of the previous generation’s early battles against anti-American conservatives.

The nicest thing about “The Progressive Revolution” is how cleanly and neatly Lux frames the issues and the players. The book is comfortably readable in a weekend (224 pages) yet drills into enough depth that you’re well armed for the water cooler wars. It manages to condense over 230 years of American history – through the lens of progressives from Paine to today’s Obama generation – into a history that is coherent, linear, and (amazing/impressive to me as a writer) manages to avoid the temptation to wander off into rambling detailed discursions.

Michael Lux’s “The Progressive Revolution” should be required reading (along with Kaye’s book). And you’ll want to be sure to pick up a couple of extra copies to share with your friends and relatives – it’s that good …

Thom Hartmann is a New York Times bestselling Project Censored Award winning author and host of a daily talk show on Air America Radio. You can learn more about Thom Hartmann at http://www.thomhartmann.com and find out what stations broadcast his program.

THOM HARTMANN'S INDEPENDENT THINKER REVIEW OF THE MONTH


declaration of independence

and other civics lessons deliberately avoided by rim rock conservatives and weak kneed liberals (those afraid of being thought of as less than polite when confronting the fascists that pass themselves off as conservatives)....time to take a stand...eight to thirty years late but....never too late as the farmers who stood at "the rude bridge that arched the flood" found out....maybe we need a new declaration of independence...reagan/bush et al used the old for toilet paper in larry craig's stall.....i am a recovering rep who voted for nixon in 72 and have awakened from stupor of depression and hopelessness....if obama doesn't man up and finish what he has started we need to find someone who will and not curl up and quit as they (i was on the other side then) did after kent state, chicago 68 and gene macarthy lost....lp

Go Green And Lean.

Green squads are on the way. Millions of new jobs will be created making America more energy efficient. It is a sin to waste precious energy and it must be stopped. The first task of the green squads will be to weatherproof homes and buildings. If the proposal is put into law you will soon hear green squad members knocking on your door ready to weatherproof your home at no cost. It will not take them long before every leaky window and hole is repaired. Those that want to continue wasting energy and refuse entrance to the green squad will be heavily fined. Millions of homes and buildings will be weatherproofed and millions of new workers will become unemployment proof. Go green stay lean and keep the environment clean.

Students need to be discussing "We the People"

I'm a fifth-grade teacher in Colorado, and an intrical part of teaching civics is providing students with our primary sources: the founding documents. This is critical in understanding what “We the People” really means. Today, as they did over 230 years ago, those documents instill in students the belief that all our voices are important. Everyone of our citizens are given the right to pursue liberty. Futures do not have to be inevitable and "Little voices" can make dramatic impacts on events. That is Thomas Paine's greatest contribution to our country. His pamphlet, Common Sense, spoke to all the voices in the 13 colonies during a time of great fear and indecision. He gave a vast number of citizens a vision of what each could do, 176 days before the Declaration of Independence. A belief that power should radiate from the citizens. That message is still paramount to all our students today. For that pamphlet alone, Paine needs to be recognized as a intrical part of the American miracle. Mark Wilensky, author of "The Elementary Common Sense of Thomas Paine: An Interactive Adaptation for All Ages"