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The 10 Big Lies About America: Combating Destructive Distortions About Our Nation

The 10 Big Lies About America: Combating Destructive Distortions About Our Nation

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Author: Michael Medved
Publisher: Crown Forum
Category: Book

List Price: $26.95
Buy New: $15.99
You Save: $10.96 (41%)



New (10) Used (1) Collectible (1) from $15.99

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 15 reviews
Sales Rank: 96

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 288
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1
Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.5 x 1.2

ISBN: 0307394069
Dewey Decimal Number: 973
EAN: 9780307394064
ASIN: 0307394069

Publication Date: November 18, 2008  (New: Last 30 Days)
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Kindle Edition - The 10 Big Lies About America: Combating Destructive Distortions About Our Nation
  • Audio CD - The 10 Big Lies About America: Combating Destructive Distortions About Our Nation

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
“It ain’t so much the things we don’t know that get us into trouble,nineteenth-century humorist Josh Billings remarked. “It’s the things we know that just ain’t so.”


In this bold and brilliantly argued book, acclaimed author and talk-radio host Michael Medved zeroes in on ten of the biggest fallacies that millions of Americans believe about our country—in spite of incontrovertible facts to the contrary. In The 10 Big Lies About America, Medved pinpoints the most pernicious pieces of America-bashing disinformation that pollute current debates about the economy, race, religion in politics, the Iraq war, and other contentious issues.

The myths that Medved deftly debunks include:

Myth: The United States is uniquely guilty for the crime of slavery and based its wealth on stolen African labor.

Fact: The colonies that became the United States accounted for, at most, 3 percent of the abominable international slave trade; the persistence of slavery in America slowed economic progress; and the U.S. deserves unique credit for ending slavery.

Myth: The alarming rise of big business hurts the United States and oppresses its people.

Fact: Corporations played an indispensable role in building America, and corporate growth has brought progress that benefits all with cheaper goods and better jobs.

Myth: The Founders intended a secular, not Christian, nation.

Fact: Even after ratifying the Constitution, fully half the state governments endorsed specific Christian denominations. And just a day after approving the First Amendment, forbidding the establishment of religion, Congress called for a national “day of public thanksgiving and prayer” to acknowledge “the many signal favors of Almighty God.”

Myth: A war on the middle class means less comfort and opportunity for the average American.

Fact: Familiar campaign rhetoric about the victimized middle class ignores the overwhelming statistical evidence that the standard of living keeps rising for every segment of the population, as well as the real-life experience of tens of millions of middle-class Americans.

Each of the ten lies—widely believed among elites and taught as truth in universities and public schools—is a grotesque, propagandistic distortion of the historical record. For everyone who is tired of hearing America denigrated by people who don’t know what they’re talking about, The 10 Big Lies About America supplies the ammunition necessary to fire back the next time somebody tries to recycle these baseless beliefs. Medved’s witty, well-documented rebuttal is a refreshing reminder that as Americans we should feel blessed, not burdened, by our heritage.



Customer Reviews:   Read 10 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars More savoir faire from Michael   December 2, 2008
This book is great for anyone interested in the truth about America and it is necessary for those infatuated with the lies mentioned.


2 out of 5 stars On What Planet Are These Well Known Myths?   December 2, 2008
 2 out of 13 found this review helpful

When I think of American "myths" I think of the myth of George Washington chopping down a cherry tree, or Paul Revere, etc. These "myths" that Mr. Medved references are political myths only in the minds of the hyper-partisan and those who believe Christianity is the only religion that matters. Maybe he and John Stossel need to team up for a book.


4 out of 5 stars Effective, mostly accurate, a bit over-the-top.   December 1, 2008
 5 out of 7 found this review helpful

Recently, I was sitting in a pub in Oxford with a friend from India. He seems to find me, an American who did not share in the general "euphoria" in the UK over Obama's election, a rather exotic creature. But he made an interesting suggestion: why not look at the election of Obama, even if you don't welcome it, as a chance to reinvent what it means to be an American Christian, in a way that will connect more deeply with the world at large?

His challenge was still in the back of my mind when I read this book.

The years of American hegemony are now ending, and China and India will soon take positions on the world stage in some proportion to their vast populations. Witnessing how broadly many of the "lies" Medved describes are believed outside the US, I'd love to give Chinese and Indian friends a book like this and say: "See what America has been, at its best, for the world. As your power grows, try to emulate what you can of our successes, or do us one better."

Most of Medved's arguments are solid. He cites leading experts as well as opponents to make his case, and I think generally gets his facts right. (Notice that critics so far generally depend on vague complaints, unable it seems to point to specific errors.) Among other things, he argues that: America has seldom been as nasty to the Indians as is often claimed. The Founding Fathers were less secularist than supposed. (I wish he'd given both sides here, though -- as Steven Waldmon does in Founding Faith.) Big Business does help the country. America has seldom been truly imperialist, and has done the world a lot of good. And morality rises and falls; "a dizzying roller coaster of steep ups and downs, zigzags, climbs and reverses, and even loop-the-loops."

Medved carefully limits his claims, then backs them up with copious relevant facts. Many of his facts and anecdotes are quite interesting -- McKinley's prayer for the Phillipines, the story of how "America the Beautiful" was written, the size of houses in the 1950s compared to our "supersized" homes of today.

In the end, though, Medved is a bit too triumphalist to wish his book into the hands of Indian or Chinese friends. Sometimes he simply protests too much. Granted there was no official American policy of genocide. Granted that most Indians deaths came from disease, that others married out rather than being murdered, even that Indian cultures were "savage" in some sense. Still, the fact is, we wound up with the land (just as China ended up with Tibet, and India with Nagaland), and they wound up with treaties for half of almost extinct salmon runs. Is self-justification really the right tone to take? Having heard the same tone, and some of the same arguments, from Chinese about Tibet, I feel a bit uncomfortable with them. I would also have liked to have seen a more positive statement from Medved on the role native peoples were to play in America, culturally as well as in terms of territory.

To some extent, Medved's "American exceptionalism" cuts us off from others -- from our European roots, from human tradition as a whole. (Sociologist Rodney Stark gives a much more nuanced reading of what went into American success -- most of which is not unique to America.)

I believe America has done a great deal of good in the world. But pride comes before a fall, for countries as well as individuals. One thing that typifies nations at their greatest periods of growth -- Japan in the late 19th Century, China during the Tang and today, America at the revolution -- is a combination of confidence, and openness to outside ideas.

The challenge for conservatives, and for Christians, is to find a way of affirming our ideals, to seek reform on the model of Burke, Jefferson, Reagan, or St Paul, yet to do so in a way that helps us develop a fuller appreciate of the God-given beauties and truths in other traditions as well. Medved does seem to appreciate good in other cultures to some extent, but is unable to articulate his patriotism, and how it relates to the riches humanity shares in common, in what I found to be a fully satisfying manner. This is a generally excellent book, full of useful information, and an important answer to unfair attacks on the American heritage; but infused with a less than fully satisfying philosophy of patriotism. Maybe Medved should read G. K. Chesterton.

author, The Truth Behind the New Atheism



1 out of 5 stars the great distorter   December 1, 2008
 13 out of 33 found this review helpful

Given Medved's decidedly harsh right-wing stance on pretty much everything, perhaps he should have titled his book less deceitfully: "10 Big Lies--the View From the Extreme Right Wing."

The best liars are those able to artfully mix in enough truth to fool most of the people most of the time. Judging by Medved's radio audience and history of best-sellers, it seems he's quite the artiste.

Just take one: "The alarming rise of big business hurts the United States and oppresses its people." It takes a lot of nerve to make that argument in today's economic catastrophe, but set that aside. Democrats and Republicans alike have steadily grown the power of the American corporation until, as Eisenhower warned, the country is now irrevocably controlled by a military-industrial (and media) complex so pervasive that it can't be killed without slicing the country's throat.

Medved defends the corporatist mindset that takes money from the pockets of the lower and middle classes to guarantee multi-million dollar severance packages to talentless, morally bankrupt corporate managers by criticizing "the elite" and "universities," long established right-wing euphemisms designed to denigrate liberals without any thought to the cynical mendacity at work.

Brave new thinker or bankrupt ideologue--you decide what America needs.



5 out of 5 stars Great book of knowledge for the patriot   November 30, 2008
 5 out of 10 found this review helpful

I love this book, its indespensible for the Patriot that desires to defend this country against left wing liberals who hate this country and think its patrotic to bash it. I like the book so much I'm going to buy another one for a friend.

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