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Our Endangered Values: America's Moral Crisis

Our Endangered Values: America's Moral Crisis

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Author: Jimmy Carter
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Category: Book

List Price: $15.00
Buy New: $5.42
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New (2) Used (7) Collectible (1) from $1.96

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 277 reviews
Sales Rank: 321263

Format: Bargain Price
Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 224
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 9 x 5.9 x 0.6

Dewey Decimal Number: 306.0973090511
ASIN: B001F7ATTY

Publication Date: September 26, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
Even at his most irate, Jimmy Carter projects cool, communicating with a poise that commands attention while gently signaling to opponents that they better do their homework before mounting any sort of debate. Perhaps that's why the former president, Nobel Peace Prize-winner, and bestselling author ranks as one of the planet's most respected voices in the areas of human rights, diplomacy, and good government. And when a clearly agitated Carter suggests America is on a slippery slope, globally speaking, as he does throughout Our Endangered Values: America's Moral Crisis, it's wise to pay heed even if the book's overriding Christian perspective may trip cautionary bells in secular readers.

More a set of loosely connected essays than a single, precise argument, Our Endangered Values outlines Carter's worldview while pondering what he posits are key problems looming in the 21st century. Thematic touchstones such as the war, environmental negligence, civil liberties, the rich-poor divide, and the separation of church and state form the book's backbone, with Carter filtering each through the prism of his own vast experience. He doesn't much like what he sees. Though much of the data Carter presents to support his arguments is familiar, it's worth repeating that "the rate of firearm homicides in the United States is nineteen times higher than that of 35 other high-income countries combined." That "In addition to imprisonment, the United States of America stands almost alone in the world in our fascination with the death penalty, and our few remaining companions are regimes with a lack of respect for basic human rights." That when it comes to sharing the wealth with poor nations "Americans are the stingiest of all industrialized nations. We allow about one-thirtieth as much as is commonly believed [or] sixteen cents out of each $100 of the gross national income." America: land of the free, home of the brave? Try global bully with a bad attitude and reckless sense of entitlement.

Carter spends significant time contextualizing his own spirituality, as if to underscore the urgency of his message that fundamentalism in any form is bad, especially when it encroaches on government. Indeed, Carter persuasively links fundamentalism to harmful policy, the subjugation of women, general xenophobia, and a host of other ills occurring all around him. And while George W. Bush in particular and the current administration in general take fewer clips on the chin than might be expected, Carter's arguments for common-sense change are deeply resonant nonetheless. --Kim Hughes

Product Description
President Jimmy Carter offers a passionate defense of separation of church and state. He warns that fundamentalists are deliberately blurring the lines between politics and religion.

As a believing Christian, Carter takes on issues that are under fierce debate -- women's rights, terrorism, homosexuality, civil liberties, abortion, the death penalty, science and religion, environmental degradation, nuclear arsenals, preemptive war, and America's global image.


Customer Reviews:   Read 272 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Man of Integrity   December 2, 2008
Whether you agree with him or not, it's refreshing to read from a politician who is a thoroughly decent human being. In 2001, Jimmy Carter was the only former president to sit at George W Bush's inauguration (other than his father, of course). As a prominent Democrat supporting Bush's "Compassionate Conservatism," he was well-placed to be the favorite of the White House and conservative community. When Bush turned on his professed values, Jimmy Carter was one of the few who had the guts to break with him, and this book is part of that public break. This came out well before Bush's popularity dropped, and other conservative Christian leaders didn't dare criticize the torture and violation of human rights. You can disagree with a lot of his points, but the book is an inspiring example of a Man of Integrity stating his mind. He takes on the conventional conservative wisdom about issues like abortion in a convincing manner. Definitely worth the read.


5 out of 5 stars A Respected Christian Gives our Nation a Much Needed Warning   September 8, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

In this very readable, wide-ranging and meaty book, Ex-President Jimmy Carter, ruminates, and worries about the erosion of American values as the erosion continue to sink the nation into the quick sand of arrogant, corrupt, mean-spirited, short-sighted and politically motivated partisan leadership as practiced by both the present conservative government and current fundamentalist's Church leaders.

Taking on his own Baptist church and the Bush administration as the first and most obvious test case, Carter expresses more than just a little impatience with the self-righteous and arrogant hypocrisy of those who feel like their mere alignment with God is sufficient to make them and their beliefs "superior and right," and everyone else's "inferior and wrong." He notes that it was this very same set of attitudes, that forged an unholy marriage between church and state during the century of racial discrimination.

His present concern is that there are still those who want this marriage to continue to work and are busy using its license to twist our nation's morality and ideals into a narrow-minded channel where the "self-appointed, self-anointed, and self-selected "chosen few" can continue to ply their proven Neanderthalian brand of witchcraft in the name of "the lord" -- and do so in the post-Modern world.

The problem that worries Carter most is that this kind of "unholy mischief" has been raised to a whole new level, and has been expanded well beyond race and now infects both the church and our government at the highest levels -- so much so that it has begun to tear at the very foundation of the nation's institution, and is beginning to destabilize it at its very moral core.

Once a nation of freedom, equality, tolerance, peace and the last resort defenders of human rights everywhere - all qualities Jesus would have admired -- America has now become the nation that stifles freedoms at the slightest pretext, rolls back equality, practices "progress through war," and thumbs its nose at human rights.

The ex-President and devout Christian has a long list of the new anti-American evils being committed in the name of permanently welding God and country into a single potent unit despite that doing so would violate the very Constitution these pseudo-patriots and crypto-religionists profess to love and uphold.

That all true patriots are now beginning to see the outlines of their dirty work and have begun to sing from the same sheet of music should worry not just President Carter, but us all.

Five Stars.



3 out of 5 stars Right Idea - Wrong Title   June 23, 2008
Former President Carter has written down his thoughts about our current administration. Essentially, America has become a global bully. The big, muscular high school jock who beats up on others or threatens to do so, and then, like President Bush, says, "Bring it on."

Perhaps the current administration is somewhat justified in breaking any treaty or agreement in hunting down an enemy that can never be reasoned with, that can never be negotiated with and that usually does not wear a uniform. Perhaps the current administration and its supporters believe that some "evil empires" need to be annihilated, so the question needs to be asked: "Why not just annihilate them?" The answer is simple: greed.

Mr. Carter rightly points to the preemptive war doctrine currently in place as unheard of in our country's history. But the formula is simple: defense contractors need to move inventory. Find a target, move some inventory in the way of bombs, bullets and vehicles and hold the area. Then you contact your other friends and bring them in to rebuild infrastructure that had just been blown up. A win-win situation. For added security, you also bring in "contractors," the new word for mercenaries.

What Mr. Carter does not mention is the greed and it's all about me attitude of too many people in America. The Enron and Global Crossing mentality where there's no such thing as too much money, even if retirees have to pay with their 401Ks.

Mr. Carter deserves praise for his work toward peace, notably the Camp David agreement. His Carter Center has been helping people around the world in the area of health. He does show what one man can do and he gives impressive examples.

He is inconsistent and perhaps a bit confused about adding his religious beliefs to the mix. During his Presidential campaign, he refers to his making a mistake by mixing politics and religion. It wasn't his fault that reporters asked him a question about his faith to which he truthfully replied. They were the ones who blew it out of proportion to discredit him.

I think Mr. Carter would have had a better book if he connected American values in government with American values among the average American population. He rightly points out that the rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer, but what can people honestly do? When a run for President is clearly about how much money you have and/or how many special interest groups line up behind you, what can or should the average person do?

The moral crisis in this book, according to Mr. Carter, is that America's government has dropped negotiation in favor of bombs and bullets, that it does not do enough to help the poor, that it is alienating current and potential allies by running around and shooting first and, on occasion, asking questions afterward (What do you mean you found no WMD's?), and that by not honoring certain agreements, it is helping nuclear proliferation and increasing the threat to the environment.

Our values are endangered, but they are endangered at all levels of American society. Everyone wants to live like a king. But Americans as individuals can and have been generous.

It may be that enough people in government will rise up and say, "Kill them all is not the answer." But as long as enough people in government believe that is the answer, little will change. Meanwhile, the American people will only have varying degrees of bad to vote for in the next election. But, as a fellow Christian, I join Mr. Carter in prayer that a better way can be found. That American government finds a way to address its legitimate defense interests in a way that is consistent with long-held principles.



5 out of 5 stars Not What You Think   April 18, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

A frequent comment made in many reviews (all excellent, it seems to me) is, "It's not what you think." I have great regard for Jimmy Carter, but the book's title "put me off." Finally, however, with the frequency with which the reviews praised it, I thought that I must give it a try. And surprise: "It's Not What You Think." Do read it; you'll be pleasantly surprised.


5 out of 5 stars Timely Observations   April 5, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Thoughts of a deeply religious man, who was a former Naval Officer and who also bore the burdens of our nation's highest office. Simple truths, well spoken.

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