IN
Charles J. Sykes is senior fellow at the Wisconsin Policy Research Institute and a talk show host at WTMJ radio in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He has written for The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and USA Today and is the author of A Nation of Victims, Dumbing Down Our Kids, Profscam, The Hollow Men, The End of Privacy, and 50 Rules Kids Won't Learn in School.
"Mr. Sykes sees the root of the problem...in this witty, wise book." --The Wall Street Journal "Mr. Sykes looks at today's America and finds a nation of people more concerned with justifying their behavior than with finding real solutions to the problems." --Peter Jennings, ABC Radio "It's hard to disagree with Sykes...Sykes makes his case quite well." --Los Angeles Times
In a trenchant and tonic analysis of America's loss of backbone, the author of The Hollow Men alleges that we have become a nation of self-proclaimed victims. ``I am not responsible; it's not my fault'' is the common refrain linking compulsive gamblers, co-dependents in dysfunctional relationships, obese people ``oppressed'' by narrow restaurant seats and others who claim victim status, Sykes charges. He excoriates the psychiatric profession for continually inventing new disease categories and lashes our ``therapeutic culture,'' which turns everyday difficulties into certified psychological problems. He stretches his argument too thin, however, when he attacks '60s activism, and ``victimist explanations'' of inner-city poverty and youth crime that, in his view, have distorted our criminal justice system, schools and urban policy. Even here, though, he scores points, calling upon Americans to dismantle the culture of victimization by recognizing personal responsibility and refusing to reflexively blame others. His sometimes shrill critique of sensitivity workshops, Afrocentric scholars and minorities ``embracing their victim status'' will make this book controversial. (Sept.)
"Mr. Sykes sees the root of the problem...in this witty, wise book." --The Wall Street Journal "Mr. Sykes looks at today's America and finds a nation of people more concerned with justifying their behavior than with finding real solutions to the problems." --Peter Jennings, ABC Radio "It's hard to disagree with Sykes...Sykes makes his case quite well." --Los Angeles Times
Ask a Question About this Product More... |