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Most harmful books of the 19th & 20th centuries
San Antonio Express-News ^ | 01/14/2010 | Source: www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=7591

Posted on 01/20/2010 7:26:23 AM PST by Responsibility2nd

1. "The Communist Manifesto" (Marx and Engels)

2. "Mein Kampf" (Hitler)

3. "Quotations from Chairman Mao" (Mao)

4. "The Kinsey Report" (Kinsey)

5. "Democracy and Education" (Dewey)

6. "Das Kapital" (Marx)

7. "The Feminine Mystique" (Friedan)

8. "The Course of Positive Philosophy" (Comte)

9. "Beyond Good and Evil" (Nietzsche)

10. "General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money" (Keynes)


TOPICS: Books/Literature; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: badbooks; books; godsgravesglyphs; pages
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To: Responsibility2nd
"Catcher in the Rye"

The basic thesis of this book is that to grow up is to become a phoney, so whatever you do don't grow up.

21 posted on 01/20/2010 7:48:58 AM PST by who_would_fardels_bear (These fragments I have shored against my ruins)
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To: Responsibility2nd
Bookmark.
I guess the Koran/Qur’an doesn't count. But its effects are. Just imagine if oil wasn't found in the Middle East but in, say, Greenland how history would be different.
22 posted on 01/20/2010 7:50:00 AM PST by IrishCatholic (No local Communist or Socialist Party Chapter? Join the Democrats, it's the same thing!)
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To: Responsibility2nd

The list is a bit stodgy. I think any top ten must include Frantz Fanon’s enormously influential The Wretched of the Earth, a book that made calls for genocide politically acceptable.

I would also include at least one work of Islamic fundamentalism, probably Sayyid Qutb’s Milestones.


23 posted on 01/20/2010 7:50:49 AM PST by denydenydeny (The Left sees taxpayers the way Dr Frankenstein saw the local cemetery; raw material for experiments)
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To: Responsibility2nd

Economic Interpretation of the Constitution of the United States,

by Charles Beard.


24 posted on 01/20/2010 7:51:49 AM PST by dinoparty
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To: ZX12R

25 posted on 01/20/2010 7:52:33 AM PST by paulycy (Demand Constitutionality.)
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To: Responsibility2nd
All three of your choices are the misbegotten offspring of Silent Spring which absolutely deserves to be in the top ten, maybe number four. This psuedoscientific monstrosity has probably killed more people and caused more misery than Stalin or Hitler.
26 posted on 01/20/2010 7:52:54 AM PST by Lonesome in Massachussets (Don't blame me, I'm from Massachusetts)
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To: Responsibility2nd
Any list that omits Sigmund Freud is seriously deficient.

Moreover, David Ricardo probably had a worse influence than did some authors on the list. Without his fatally flawed "labor theory of value," the logical underpinning of Das Kapital would have been kaput.

(I think Ricardo fully deserves infamy in spite of the fact that he got the theory correct when he addressed international trade. Even without Ricardo's theoretical refinement, Adam Smith's anti-mercantilist exposition made a perfectly adequate defense of free trade.)

27 posted on 01/20/2010 7:53:26 AM PST by Hawthorn
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To: Responsibility2nd

When my son was in high school, he began to read various philosophers. He began with the classical, the went on to Nietzsche. I saw him with Beyond Good and Evil and asked him if he saw the obvious flaw int it, He said what do you mean dad, it’s very consistent. I said look at the cover - Beyond good and evil .. You have to give up your moral compass to buy into it. Keen grasp of the obvious.He hates it when I do that to him.


28 posted on 01/20/2010 7:53:45 AM PST by Waverunner ( "Think for yourselves and let others enjoy the privilege to do so too." Voltaire)
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To: Responsibility2nd

The liberal list of most harmful books of the same time period:

1) Capitalism and Freedom
2) The Road to Serfdom
3) Atlas Shrugged
4) Huckleberry Finn—(it’s got the N word in it)
5) Liberal Fascism: The Secret History of the American Left, From Mussolini to the Politics of Meaning
6) Conscience of a Conservative
7) The Gulag
8) Black Rednecks and White Liberals
9) America Alone: The End of the World As We Know It

.....and of course the Christian Bible will always rank very high on the liberal list of harmful books.


29 posted on 01/20/2010 7:54:36 AM PST by Le Chien Rouge
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To: Responsibility2nd

Thanks...


30 posted on 01/20/2010 7:54:44 AM PST by philly-d-kidder (....Nothing is more powerful than a man who prays...(St. John Chrysostom))
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To: Waverunner

Wanda: You’re a big stupid ape.
Otto: Do big stupid apes read Nietzsche?
Wanda: Yes they do Otto, they just don’t understand it.


31 posted on 01/20/2010 7:56:25 AM PST by dfwgator
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To: Harold Shea

Agreed - should definitely be among the top ten.


32 posted on 01/20/2010 7:57:32 AM PST by Natural Born 54
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To: Responsibility2nd

The Art of Loving —Eric Frommer


33 posted on 01/20/2010 7:59:29 AM PST by Renegade (You go tell my buddies)
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To: GiveMeLibertyOrDeath

Give the ENTIRE title is this waste of paper: On the origin of species by means of natural selection,: Or, The preservation of favoured races in the struggle for life


34 posted on 01/20/2010 8:00:40 AM PST by US Navy Vet
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To: who_would_fardels_bear

Sort of like “ The Harrad Experiment “


35 posted on 01/20/2010 8:02:25 AM PST by Renegade (You go tell my buddies)
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To: Seruzawa
I’m not sure I’d include Mein Kampf because it is basically unreadable. At least, it defeated me...twice!

Excellent point! Remember the game, "Is it Al Gore or the Unibomber?", where you'd read a passage and the listener had to guess whether it was from Earth in the Balance or The Unibomber Manifesto. Really hard to tell the difference, actually.

Anyway, I made up a game, "Is it Gephardt or Hitler?", where you do the same thing, with the understanding that certain terms were interchangable: "the Jews" for "the rich", "the German people" for "working families", etc. You get the idea. At least Hitler was sincere. Really hard to tell the difference, actually. (I was on to this long before that plagarist, Jonah Goldberg.)

36 posted on 01/20/2010 8:03:40 AM PST by Lonesome in Massachussets (Don't blame me, I'm from Massachusetts)
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To: Responsibility2nd

The Book of Mormon


37 posted on 01/20/2010 8:05:04 AM PST by T Minus Four (Help Haiti and know your money is going to the right people - www.WorldVision.org)
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To: Le Chien Rouge
You left out Free To Choose by Milton and Rose Freidman.
38 posted on 01/20/2010 8:05:35 AM PST by SeaHawkFan
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To: ClearBlueSky
The Manifesto and the Koran should share #1. Basically the same , with a 10th century twist.

They may both be dangerous, but they are not the same. It's difficult to imagine two ideologies more different than Marxism and Islam.

Marxism is actually closer to Christianity, and indeed has been appropriately called a Christian heresy.

39 posted on 01/20/2010 8:07:46 AM PST by Sherman Logan (Never confuse schooling with education.)
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To: Hawthorn
Moreover, David Ricardo probably had a worse influence than did some authors on the list. Without his fatally flawed "labor theory of value," the logical underpinning of Das Kapital would have been kaput.

(I think Ricardo fully deserves infamy in spite of the fact that he got the theory correct when he addressed international trade. Even without Ricardo's theoretical refinement, Adam Smith's anti-mercantilist exposition made a perfectly adequate defense of free trade.)

Excellent synopsis.

40 posted on 01/20/2010 8:10:03 AM PST by meadsjn (Sarah 2012, or sooner)
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