Rating: Summary: saving the tradition of bigotry Review: One more book written by a bigot for bigots. Do not waste your money on supporting ignorance and hatred.
Rating: Summary: Simple and to the point Review: Personally, I didn't take a stand on any factors of the breakdown of the family. I lived my life from my heart, for my children and my marriage, knowing it was the right thing for me. After reading this book I can see the purpose and strength of family and the union of male/female marriage....in writing. I am requiring my older children to read this book for a broader perspective.
Rating: Summary: Simple and to the point Review: Personally, I didn't take a stand on any factors of the breakdown of the family. I lived my life from my heart, for my children and my marriage, knowing it was the right thing for me. After reading this book I can see the purpose and strength of family and the union of male/female marriage....in writing. I am requiring my older children to read this book for a broader perspective.
Rating: Summary: This sanctimonious blowhard is cynical and greedy. Review: This report of Bennett's latest attempt to make money off of the death of thousands of his fellow citizens is from the 10/25/01 edition of the Washington Post:• We hear that Virtues Czar William Bennett is busily writing a quickie book on the terrorist attacks for Doubleday -- to be finished in a month and published two months after that. The as-yet untitled hardcover, which Bennett plans to offer in adult and young-adult versions, will contain his pensées on Sept. 11, what the U.S. response reveals about Americans as a people, the moral arguments for and against war, and other weighty issues.
Rating: Summary: bennett tackles tough issues Review: william bennett does an excellent job in explaining and demonstrating his position on such controversial topics as divorse,homosexuality abortion and single parenting. he clearly presents a logical and defensible position on these subjects substantiated by sociological, demographic, and fiscal data. even if you do not subscribe to his philosophy, it is very hard to argue with his presentation of fact.
Rating: Summary: Another Fine Mess We?ve Gotten Ourselves Into Review: William Bennett has a knack for turning out relatively short books that manage to be both timely and timeless. The Broken Hearth shines a spotlight on the deteriorating state of the nuclear family. In a straightforward manner, he advocates common sense and traditional virtues. He intellectually articulates obvious facts which are far too often simplistically dismissed as antediluvian or discriminatory by powerful forces throughout society. One of Mr. Bennett's strong points is his dedication to veraciously stating the facts--even when they prove to be very inconvenient. Discussing the spiraling rate of single parent households, he ignores the feel-good cliches and boldy says, "in attempting to raise children without two parents, we are seeing on a massive scale, the voluntary breakup of the minimal family unit. This is historically unprecedented, an authentic cultural revolution and I believe socially calamitous." Then Rather than citing specious studies showing the veritable irrelevance of parents, he acknowledges some of these much-ballyhooed findings and astutely refutes them. The subject of gay marriage has become very controversial and even many who know how deleterious and debased the concept is, shy from enunciating the problems with such a notion. Here Mr. Bennett truly deserves commendation for his head-on approach in arguing the sensible, but politically untenable position against imploding the sanctity of marriage. He writes the truth in all its unpopular, activist-enraging glory, "tolerance means treating people with respect and without malice; it does not require us to dissolve social norms or to weaken our commitment to ancient and honorable beliefs." While legions of movers and hordes of shakers will cringe at the mention of it, Mr. Bennett hits a home run with "if same-sex marriage were to prevail, society would have to accept certain basic assumptions; it would have to accept that Jewish and Christian understanding of marriage and family life is simply wrong." While his couragous statement is potent as is, to further enforce his argument and co-opt a politically correct shibboleth to boot, he could have added that Islam, Buddhism, and several other religions view the concept of homosexuality marriage as decadent and are far more condemning of it that Judaism and Christianity. Equally polemic is the painfully true statement that "for homosexuals themselves gay liberation has wrought much agony, instability, promiscuity, and early death." Still his blunt acknowledgement shows compassion that activists often lack; not everyone is happy in the sexually uninhibited gay lifestyle. In perhaps the book's most appropriate passage, he countervails the charge that conservatives overlook the transgressions of like-minded players. Mr. Bennett validly denounces Newt Gingrich for the extra-marital affair, and he gets to the heart of the former Speaker's peccadillo. Too many conservatives concentrated on the authentic difference that Bill Clinton's adultery lead to felonious crimes, while Newt was merely morally guilty. Mr. Bennett wisely ignores that diversionary fact in chastising Gingrich for his serious wrongdoing. He comments that "to the degree that Newt Gingrich was criticized, and he was, it was for his hypocrisy...Gingrich's hypocrisy was disturbing, but so too were his actions." "The Broken Hearth" offers no banal quick-fix to a crisis that has been decades in the making, but it comprehensively summarizes the precariousness of where we now find ourselves. Hopefully it will serve as an impetus for a few readers to reevaluate their lives. A problem that didn't develop overnight will not be solved quickly either.
Rating: Summary: Another Fine Mess We¿ve Gotten Ourselves Into Review: William Bennett has a knack for turning out relatively short books that manage to be both timely and timeless. The Broken Hearth shines a spotlight on the deteriorating state of the nuclear family. In a straightforward manner, he advocates common sense and traditional virtues. He intellectually articulates obvious facts which are far too often simplistically dismissed as antediluvian or discriminatory by powerful forces throughout society. One of Mr. Bennett's strong points is his dedication to veraciously stating the facts--even when they prove to be very inconvenient. Discussing the spiraling rate of single parent households, he ignores the feel-good cliches and boldy says, "in attempting to raise children without two parents, we are seeing on a massive scale, the voluntary breakup of the minimal family unit. This is historically unprecedented, an authentic cultural revolution and I believe socially calamitous." Then Rather than citing specious studies showing the veritable irrelevance of parents, he acknowledges some of these much-ballyhooed findings and astutely refutes them. The subject of gay marriage has become very controversial and even many who know how deleterious and debased the concept is, shy from enunciating the problems with such a notion. Here Mr. Bennett truly deserves commendation for his head-on approach in arguing the sensible, but politically untenable position against imploding the sanctity of marriage. He writes the truth in all its unpopular, activist-enraging glory, "tolerance means treating people with respect and without malice; it does not require us to dissolve social norms or to weaken our commitment to ancient and honorable beliefs." While legions of movers and hordes of shakers will cringe at the mention of it, Mr. Bennett hits a home run with "if same-sex marriage were to prevail, society would have to accept certain basic assumptions; it would have to accept that Jewish and Christian understanding of marriage and family life is simply wrong." While his couragous statement is potent as is, to further enforce his argument and co-opt a politically correct shibboleth to boot, he could have added that Islam, Buddhism, and several other religions view the concept of homosexuality marriage as decadent and are far more condemning of it that Judaism and Christianity. Equally polemic is the painfully true statement that "for homosexuals themselves gay liberation has wrought much agony, instability, promiscuity, and early death." Still his blunt acknowledgement shows compassion that activists often lack; not everyone is happy in the sexually uninhibited gay lifestyle. In perhaps the book's most appropriate passage, he countervails the charge that conservatives overlook the transgressions of like-minded players. Mr. Bennett validly denounces Newt Gingrich for the extra-marital affair, and he gets to the heart of the former Speaker's peccadillo. Too many conservatives concentrated on the authentic difference that Bill Clinton's adultery lead to felonious crimes, while Newt was merely morally guilty. Mr. Bennett wisely ignores that diversionary fact in chastising Gingrich for his serious wrongdoing. He comments that "to the degree that Newt Gingrich was criticized, and he was, it was for his hypocrisy...Gingrich's hypocrisy was disturbing, but so too were his actions." "The Broken Hearth" offers no banal quick-fix to a crisis that has been decades in the making, but it comprehensively summarizes the precariousness of where we now find ourselves. Hopefully it will serve as an impetus for a few readers to reevaluate their lives. A problem that didn't develop overnight will not be solved quickly either.
Rating: Summary: Poor scholarship; A waste of time Review: William Bennett wastes about 20% of this book in an absurd rant against gay marriage. He bases his criticisms on his pathetically out-dated and scientifically disproven belief that gay people choose to be gay. Evidently he wants gay men to marry his daughters, since he allows no other options for gay men in his world. This book is little but empty-headed ranting, scape-goating, and spreading of unfounded myths. To see the basis of this foolishness, readers would do well to see David Brock's "Blinded by the Right," which reminds us that William Bennett once called Rush Limbaugh "possibly our greatest living American." The happiest families in America, with the warmest hearths, are those that reject Bennett's demagoguery, ignorance, and hatred disguised as morality.
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