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March 2012

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The Books

We Meant Well: How I Helped Lose the Battle for the Hearts and Minds of the Iraqi People by Peter Van Buren
We Meant Well

How I Helped Lose the Battle for the Hearts and Minds of the Iraqi People
by Peter Van Buren

Washington Rules: America's Path to Permanent War by Andrew BacevichWashington Rules
America's Path to Permanent War
by Andrew Bacevich


Dismantling The Empire: America's Last Best Hope by Chalmers JohnsonDismantling The Empire
America's Last Best Hope
by Chalmers Johnson


The Limits Of Power: The End of American Exceptionalism by Andrew Bacevich
The Limits Of Power

The End of American Exceptionalism
by Andrew Bacevich


Imperial Ambitions: Conversations on the Post-9/11 World by Noam Chomsky
Imperial Ambitions

Conversations on the Post-9/11 World
by Noam Chomsky


Empire's Workshop: Latin America, the United States, and the Rise of the New Imperialism by Greg Grandin
Empire's Workshop

Latin America, the United States, and the Rise of the New Imperialism
by Greg Grandin

A Question Of Torture: CIA Interrogation, from the Cold War to the War on Terror by Alfred McCoy
A Question of Torture

CIA Interrogation, from the Cold War to the War on Terror
by Alfred McCoy

Blood and Oil: The Dangers and Consequences of America's Growing Petroleum Dependency by Michael Klare
Blood and Oil

The Dangers and Consequences of America's Growing Petroleum Dependency
by Michael T. Klare

« Energy Is Ugly | Main | Not Why, But How »

April 11, 2011

Comments

I am sorry for your loss and deeply grateful for your husband's work. His books are a fantastic primer on the unsaid history of the United States. We can no longer be surprised when our foreign policy blows up in our face time after time. Also: I loved that his author photos was with his cat on the back of his books. Thanks for supporting him, his work and his legacy.

Thank you, Mrs. Johnson, for your touching tribute and excellent review of your husband's work in which you surely must have been a vital partner. He will live brightly in the memory of millions of us, as in yours! Peace be unto you.

What a beautiful story. What a productive life.

I as a undergrad and grad student at the univ of wisconsin 1966-1971 first encountered Chalmers Johnson in my major, east asian studies.Then as now he inspired me to think and know and act. He was and is a voice for all americans worried about the decline of the republic.Dear Chalmers thanks so much for your insights and research. les grinnell english teacher in Changsha China

Thank you, Sheila, for a wonderful look at a man whom I got to know from his books and articles. All were collected and read and then re-read. He had a brilliant mind and from your writing, my observation is that you made a great team. Chalmers' research inspired me to know more about the world and branch our from the "mainline press." I'm still at it, and while it can be very depressing, I find that those at the edges of the empire are fully in the know about what the empire really is. So I know that this empire is truly headed the same way as the empires before it. Galtung gives us 10 more years. He may be right. The lines are forming to contest the world and at present the United States is on the wrong side.

I read "The Sorrows of the Empire" in January 2004, as soon as it came out. Fantastic book

Mauro Suttora
Italy

Mrs. Johnson,
I can not tell you how pleased I was to read your cogent and insightful article, it reflects a loving partnership and requites both the tone and substance of your husband's extraordinary life and work.
Thank You!
The appended comment(quoted below) is one I made a few moments ago upon replying to a friend regarding an article she posted by Professor David Michael Green, titled "And Now, for the Kill". If you are interested in reading the article, it can be found at www.CommonDreams.org or at Dr. Green's website www.regressiveantidote.net.
Your husband's prescient and determined scholarship is as important today as it was when I first made acquaintance with it as a student/veteran in the mid-sixties; It is in that context that I commend Professor Green's opinions to your consideration. He seems a tad strident in some of his criticisms, but his grasp of our current socio-political realities seem very much on point none-the-less.
"Excellent article lin - Professor Green's synopsis and conclusions are in almost complete agreement with those of many of our most prescient and respectable scholars, teachers, writers, and progressive political activists; many of whom have been trying to awaken the political consciousness of our slumbering citizenry for several decades. Indeed, if we continue to show complete disdain for an honest telling of our own history, as well as the resulting capture of our society/nation by Oligarchical Conservative extremists, we will undoubtedly be rewarded for such ignorant indifference and stupid complacency by being the willing victims of our own empire.
As you may recall, I have mentioned the late Dr. Chalmers Johnson in several discussions we have both been involved in over the past few years; most recently regarding his last book, Dismantling the Empire: America's Last Best Hope. Well, just prior to reading your post I had read a piece written by Dr. Johnson's widow Sheila; in which she discusses their life together as well as some excellent insight into his work. I commend it to your attention, both because it truly 'puts a human face' on this otherwise sad and disappointing period in our history, and she expresses herself clearly and honestly in every respect."

Professor Johnson was my PhD supervisor at UCSD’s School of International Relations and Pacific Studies. Like him, I was disillusioned with the intellectual monoculture that had taken hold there, to the point that I switched schools after my first year. “Chal” was an entertaining lecturer and a thoughtful advisor, but also an advocate for academic freedom and diversity of approaches to social science, and went out of his way to shield me from an often hostile faculty.

Over the past two decades I checked in with him every few years as I was posted in Embassies around Asia and he always had provocative questions and interesting insights to offer. He is missed.

Mark McDowell
Beijing

thank you, Sheila, for sharing so much valuable information!

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