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Glenn Beck's Common Sense: The Case Against an Ouf-of-Control Government, Inspired by Thomas Paine
 
 

Glenn Beck's Common Sense: The Case Against an Ouf-of-Control Government, Inspired by Thomas Paine [Audiobook, Unabridged] [Audio CD]

Glenn Beck
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In any era, great Americans inspire us to reach our full potential. They know with conviction what they believe within themselves. They understand that all actions have consequences. And they find common sense solutions to the nation’s problems.

 

Thomas Paine was an ordinary man who changed the course of history by penning Common Sense, the concise 1776 masterpiece in which, through his extraordinarily straightforward and indisputable arguments, he encouraged his fellow citizens to take control of America’s future—and ultimately, her freedom.

 

Nearly two and a half centuries later, those very freedoms hang in the balance. And now, Glenn Beck revisits Paine’s powerful treatise with one purpose: to galvanize Americans to see past government’s easy solutions, two-party monopoly, and illogical methods and take back our great country.

About the Author

GLENN BECK is a nationally syndicated radio host, founder of GBTV, and the author of nine national bestselling books, seven of which reached the #1 position on the New York Times list: The Original Argument; Arguing with Idiots; Glenn Beck’s Common Sense; An Inconvenient Book; the novels The Overton Window and The Christmas Sweater; and the children’s book, The Christmas Sweater: A Picture Book. His new holiday novel, The Snow Angel, is available in hardcover from Threshold Editions. Visit www.glennbeck.com.

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4.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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12 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Summer Soldier + Sunshine Patriot, Jun 16 2009
By 
David Avender (Los Palomitas, British Columbia, CANADA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
These are the books that try an history professor's patience. And having said that, I say now that nothing of greater veracity, nor consequence, concerning the management, (or mismanagement), and exercise of the subject of history, in the fumbling hands of an impish, doe-eyed, Reebok-wearing commentary idol, has been uttered since early breakfast this morning.

TV's living ping-pong ball and Radio/TV commentator, Glenn Beck, has written a work entitled, Common Sense. And, yes, that title has been used before by another author who, though not American by birth, did have an affection for the Good `Young' USA, which did, I am quite certain, match Mr. Beck's affection for the Good `Old' USA, by both stentorian timber and tone.

He, Mr. Beck, has offered us a moderately priced reworking of Mr. Paine's exposition of the same name. Beck is a man of opinions and, in Common Sense, Beck has collected together some of the most critical issues of this very moment in time, and offered his calculation as to how we should confront these issues - if confrontation is the resulting sum of his calculation - and resolve them.

There is a sense of urgency found in Glenn Beck's Common Sense. That sense of urgency is found there because Beck wishes it to be there. He fears there are, in Washington, men and women of good intention, mucking about with bad notions of how to better all that works in America; and solve all the does not. He believes that much of what is wrong with America will, if left untreated and unaddressed, metastasize from its originating source, and move through the various branches and bureaus, until mere bad notions become cemented into bad law. There is found here, in his nervous, ping-pongish quality of urgency, something truly of merit; and something, believe it or not, of substance.

This is, in a way, an updating of sorts, of the Common Sense written by Thomas Paine anonymously in January of 1776. Paine's work helped initiate the War of Independence, and has been described by some as the singular spark that set off the American Revolution. Thomas Paine's next great treatise, "The Crisis," kept the revolutionary war going at a point when many thought it lost. It is "The Crisis" and not "Common Sense" that begins quite beautifully:

» THESE are the times that try men's souls. The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of their country; but he that stands by it now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman. «

"The Crisis," was an extemporaneous work written on an overturned skin of bass drum, during the freezing midwinter of 1776. Common Sense was, quite sensibly, not.

What Thomas Paine created in Common Sense was a truly brilliant work of propaganda. To the American who'd had enough of this colonial status, the work inspired - among other virtues - a desire for American independence, a desire for American liberty and for republican ideals. A craving for written and understood individuated freedoms, and for the understood nobility found in fighting for a just cause. That Christmas Eve night in 1776, when General George Washington had parked his 4,600 troops on bank of the Delaware River, he had his aide-de-camp read aloud, not from The Crisis, but from Common Sense, the Paine treatise owning words that lit a brilliant patriotic fire in all 4,600 bellies.

On that particular evening, those words worked some kind fantastic magic; and proved a worth greater than guns alone. From General Washington's own lips came his estimation of treatise's worth:

» My countrymen, I know from [the British] form of government, and [their soldier's] steady attachment heretofore to royalty[. They] will come reluctantly into the idea of independency, but time and persecution brings many wonderful things to pass, and by private letters which I have lately received from Virginia, I find Common Sense is working a powerful change there in the minds of many men. «

That brilliant, and beautifully illuminating fire, the one that was sparked to life by Paine's words, brought to those soldiers, on the very next day, and for many days to follow, many, many brilliant victories. Christmas Day, 1776, was a truly marvelous day for America.

Paine's Common Sense was of incalculable value to the men who fought the balance of the American Revolution. Pamphlets aplenty followed with the same general lilt, furthering the brave men on with their Rah Rah! Go Get `Em, Boys! content, but no treatise did more to bring about, and SUSTAIN, the fighting spirit for America's Independence from Great Britain than did Paine's exhilarating Common Sense. Can Glenn Beck's Common Sense do what so many did not?

I had expected ebullience, but very little else than that. I had expected something close to a transcribed tirade of his; one on each issue of interest. Ten or twelve chapters, and each beginning with Glenn Beck's doom + gloom studded rants (over the 9th circuit, or the misadventures of some junior congressman who strayed too far into the rough, and then casually mumbled something about socialized something or other) and each concluding with the long awaited blood shooting from Mr. Beck periwinkle blue eyes. Silliness, but now on the printed page.

I am never so pleased than when my ugly expectations are shown to be dead wrong; and all were quite wrong, for this is a rather thoughtful, and readable treatise on the state of affairs in the USA. Bravo, Mr. Beck.

He has, in my estimation, written a very passionate, and deeply honest work. A work that is, as advertised, written by Glenn Beck. These ARE the opinions of Mr. Beck; the estimations as he takes a hard look at a country he obviously loves, and feels is becoming less lovable; less recognizable, election by election, vote by vote.

Neither party is immune from Mr. Beck's criticism. He challenges all those who truly love America to reject party labels and name themselves "patriots." Guilty are those who attempt to subvert America from what the Founding Fathers had initially created. And guilty, too, are those who abide such subversive governance; allowing laws to be passed, judges to be confirmed, without vigorous opposition. As a conservative, Beck is most brutal when he is chastising his own family.

The US Constitution and the Bill of Rights can total fewer than 10 pages. These are the foundations for the workings of the greatest experiment in republican democracy. Glenn Beck believes the further America moves from the Founder's interpretation of the Constitution, the further America moves from being America. He makes this point from differing points of attack; most often when questioning the role that government should have - or lack - when there is no mention of it in the US Constitution.

Should health care should remain a private enterprise, where Medicaid and Medicare remain the only two primary governmental organizations providing healthcare for the poor; or should the whole system be scraped for one imitating the one which we "enjoy" in Canada.

There is wit to be found in Glenn Beck's Common Sense. His opinions are strong, but well substantiated, and, in the midst of reading this short book, I found myself responding to Beck most often in one of four ways. All readers should be prepared to:

(a) Furrow Brows, Curse the text, Fling the Book Hither and Yon
(b) Furrow Brows, Scratch noodle, Run to Funk & Wagnall's Encyclopedia Set
(c) Raise Brows, Grin BIG, Snatch Pen, Underline + Scribble as in One's History 101 Text
(d) Raise Brows, Giggle/Titter/Snort/Snicker/Guffaww, Snatch Pen + Underline

This is, foremost, an engaging book. It is a book full of those issues about which we are chatting today; everywhere in North America: the nature of governmental control vs. the private sector, the government as corporate watchdog vs. the government's previous task as watchdog and resulting failure to act in the past, and whether culture in America, (and for that matter, Canada), is growing up or atrophying - - and taking the minds of our youth down and out with it.

Truly, such a book could be as dull as an assigned college text, but Glenn Beck has become a rockstar of sorts, and certainly not because he offers a dull presentation. Beck make issues interesting to the uninterested, and wholly comprehensible to the lightest intellectual slug. Most significantly, Beck is able to make the issues relevant to the reader - - irrespective of age, nationality, or political inclination. Does the Beck shtick work on the printed page? Indeed, it does. And Glenn Beck's wit and energy is laced throughout Common Sense.

Common Sense is a clever read. The book is humorous and challenging, sometimes infuriating, always fascinating and very pertinent for this very day.


dma.6.16.2009
[...]

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Telling "IT" like it is !, Nov 20 2009
By 
R. J. Harwood (Brockville, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This is a "MUST" read !
An eye opener well written. Thanks Glenn !
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Amazon.com: 4.0 out of 5 stars (1,159 customer reviews)

414 of 613 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Beck makes his point, but misses Paine's Reasoning., Aug 31 2009
By Alan Smithee "Reason..." - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Glenn Beck's Common Sense: The Case Against an Ouf-of-Control Government, Inspired by Thomas Paine (Paperback)
As a fan on Thomas Paine (especially Common Sense and Age of Reason), I was very much excited to read Beck's book. After the first few chapters, I realized there is almost NO connection at all to Paine's work. It seems that it is more of marketing ploy to attach one's name to Paine and use a famous title of Paine's work that inspired a nation, to generate book sales. That initial frustration got me off to a bad start. That is of course in no way reflects Beck's view or his writing. However, I was "fooled" thinking this was a revisit of that classic work "Common Sense" to modern times. Unfortunately the book, other than title, has little if any connection to Paine's work.

Ironically - for those unfamiliar to Paine's work, but a fan of Becks - I wonder how they would find Paine's "Age of Reason" - it would almost stand to reason that he would lose half (if not more) of his supporters if he visited "Age of Reason" - he might even lose his show on Fox. Note any reference to that work is completely devoid in this book (which is a shame - if it where REALLY a tribute or inspiration of Paine - which I begin to wonder.)

However, are we to judge or compare Paine to Beck? Of course not and this certainly is NOT even close to measuring up to any of Paine's works. But the question is it worth the read?

Beck's writing is very weak and many cases repetitive. Not able to grasp tangible arguments he sometimes ventures down ad hominem methods - which lower the value of his arguments. It is important to note that regardless if I agree or disagree with some of this points, his methods and suspicions are conjecture and rudimentary. The connections to past affiliations can lead to suspicion, but certainly does not make the case. It's is logical in approach, but fails in Reason - and that is probably the greatest flaw in Beck's work (as compared to Paine).

Paine used "reason", not just logic to forward his view and arguments, Beck falls flat in this regard. Beck's approach is simple (and I hate to say, but kindergarten) logic. If X is Y, and Y is Z, then Z must be X. On the surface you can make some very stunning conclusions, but the logic is flawed by reason - (unfortunately).

I say unfortunately because Beck has some important points to make and does bring dialogue to the table as per the state of our federal government. This is an important debate as to where we are going, what our future holds, what is the role of the government. However, his ability to string a fluid thought process together with not just logic, but also reason, in order to give weight to his message fails. It is geared way below the bar and is so embarrassingly written for such an important topic that he does his view a disservice.

Beck's problem is not his message, it's his delivery. It reads poorly and a ranting narrative trying to connect minutia based on logic. It most certainly will charge both the left and right (just like his show), but don't expect intelligent debate.

5 stars for a rehash of Beck's message, introducing people to a great and important work (Common Sense). If you love his delivery and his message - then by all means - purchase this book.

1 star for offering any intelligent debate that goes beyond a basic dot-to-dot connection on some frivolous examples. I really wanted this to be an inspirational book, but it significantly falls flat. Unfortunatly it reads as if the town jester is giving an inspiring message.

-5 (that's negative) stars - for making any connection to one of the most important works in U.S. political history, "Common Sense". I would suggest reading "Common Sense", "Age of Reason", "Federalist Papers", and "Anti-Federalist Papers" - to see not only how logic and reason collectively work together, but to gain insight as to what Beck is TRYING to accomplish in this very rudimentary work. At the very least he brings awarness.

The book should be called "Beck's Sense" (logic without reason)

This great quote by Paine explains why the book fails to deliver its important message:
"The most formidable weapon against errors of every kind is Reason. I have never used any other, and I trust I never shall."

Reviewers Politics: Libertarian/ Laissez Faire

46 of 68 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Has Beck read Paine?, July 4 2010
By J. P. Craig - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Glenn Beck's Common Sense: The Case Against an Ouf-of-Control Government, Inspired by Thomas Paine (Paperback)
I've read Paine's work. The version of Paine provided by Beck and his friends is not the real thing. Beck's beliefs not only have little to do with Paine; they are in many respects the exact of opposite of Paine's beliefs. Paine was an opponent of revealed religion (Christianity is a revealed religion). He advocated redistribution of wealth, and he regarded private ownership of land as an abomination. He believed that children should receive a government stipend funded by taxes. And he believed that all adult men should receive quite a large stipend funded from taxes--to compensate for the fact that the wealthy owned so much land. I encourage others to read Paine's writings and perhaps to read Eric Foner's Tom Paine and Revolutionary America. He is a great radical, not a petty reactionary.

3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Come on Glenn, Oct 10 2011
By Trib - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Glenn Beck's Common Sense: The Case Against an Ouf-of-Control Government, Inspired by Thomas Paine (Paperback)
Glenn Beck (I love you man... in a strictly plutonic way of course...) is here, unflatteringly describing Thomas Paine as though he were a righ wing republican instead of what he is: A Libertarian... Common Glenn, you can do better than that!
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