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A Time to Fight: Reclaiming a Fair and Just America
A Time to Fight: Reclaiming a Fair and Just America

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Author: Jim Webb
Publisher: Broadway
Category: Book

List Price: $24.95
Buy New: $13.98
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Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 27 reviews
Sales Rank: 368

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 272
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2
Dimensions (in): 9.4 x 6.2 x 1.3

ISBN: 0767928350
Dewey Decimal Number: 320.60973
EAN: 9780767928359
ASIN: 0767928350

Publication Date: May 19, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: NEW AND IN PERFECT CONDITION

Also Available In:

  • Audio CD - A Time to Fight
  • Kindle Edition - A Time to Fight: Reclaiming a Fair and Just America

Similar Items:

  • Born Fighting: How the Scots-Irish Shaped America
  • What Happened: Inside the Bush White House and Washington's Culture of Deception
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  • The Post-American World
  • Counselor: A Life at the Edge of History

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

“I’m the only person in the history of Virginia elected to statewide office with a Union card, two Purple Hearts, and three tattoos."

Jim Webb—the bestselling author and now the celebrated, outspoken U.S. Senator from Virginia—presents a clear-eyed, hard-hitting plan of attack for putting government to work for the people, rather than special interests, and for restoring the country's standing around the world.

Infused with the intelligence, force, and firebrand style that has earned Senator Jim Webb enormous national attention from his earlest days in office, A Time to Fight offers a thorough and provocative assessment of the thorniest issues Americans face today, along with cogent solutions drawn from Webb's lifetime of experience as a much-decorated Marine, a widely traveled, award-winning journalist and novelist, a highly placed member of the Reagan administration, a Senator with a son who fought as a Marine in Iraq and, perhaps most important, a proud scion of America's vast but frequently ignored working class.

Webb exposes how America has entered a dangerous, unprecedented cycle of seemingly unsolvable unknowns. Our economic policies, particularly in this age of globalization, have produced widely divergent results leading to a country calcifying along class lines. Our demographic makeup has been altered dramatically and is set to keep on changing, through both legal and illegal immigration. Our editorialists and politicians talk about the American dream, and some urge us to bring democracy to the rest of the world. But more than two million Americans are now in prison, by far the highest incarceration rate in the so-called advanced world. Our foreign policy is confused, without clear direction; increasingly vulnerable to such largely unexamined long-term threats as China's emerging power while it has become bogged down in the never-ending struggles of the Middle East. As this drift toward societal regression has taken place, America's leadership has largely been paralyzed, unable or unwilling to stop the slide. "Where are the leaders?" Webb asks. "Has our political process become so compromised by powerful interest groups and the threat of character assassination that even the best among us will not dare to speak honestly about the solutions that might bring us back to common sense and fundamental fairness?"

Through vivid personal narratives of the struggles members of his family faced, and citing the courageous actions of presidents ranging from Andrew Jackson to Teddy Roosevelt to Dwight Eisenhower, A Time to Fight provides specific, viable ideas for restoring fairness to our economic system, correcting the direction of national security efforts, ending America's military occupation of Iraq, and developing greater government accountability. Webb brings a fresh perspective to political dynamics that have shaped our country. His stirring, populist manifesto calls upon voters to make the choices that will change America for the better in this election season.




Customer Reviews:   Read 22 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars A man who thinks for himself   May 20, 2008
 99 out of 103 found this review helpful

In his refreshingly good A Time to Fight, Jim Webb, junior senator from Virginia confesses that he once spent a few years as a boxer and that sometimes when he enters the Senate Chamber he thinks, "This is the ring. The American people can see us here, and listen to our arguments. This is where the fights matter." In A Time to Fight, he aims to let us know which battles he thinks are worth fighting.

If you think (as, I confess, I did before reading this book) that you've got Jim Webb pegged down as your typical charismatic, flag-waving warrior, think again. He reveals himself in these pages to be an independent thinker who doesn't parrot the latest partisan mantra but instead is imaginative and courageous enough to take the best from both sides of the aisle. He endorses the Nixon Doctrine, for example, actually calling it the best foreign policy of his lifetime. He's also a deeply patriotic man who admits that he feels humbled whenever he sees the Capitol building and thinks about what it symbolizes. Yet his patriotism and his understanding of the US as a superpower aren't chauvinist or neoconservative. He thinks the current war was a mismanaged and needless affair. He's extremely critical of the growing imbalance of wealth in this country. He calls for a revamping of the criminal justice system, worrying that the country has gone "completely jail happy." He warns that in recent years the executive branch has become disproportionately powerful. And he has a deep and abiding faith in the ability of citizens, when properly informed and responsibly represented, to govern themselves well.

Webb tells us early on that he has an "innate distrust of the ornaments of power," and most of the battles he wants to take on deal with the abuse of power. In all this, his intellectual commitment to democracy as well as his personal dedication and decency come through loud and clear. In a year in which several very good books by American politicans have appeared, A Time to Fight is one that's reflective, insightful, and inspiring. Webb's a guy to watch.



5 out of 5 stars Insightful; Deep   May 22, 2008
 48 out of 50 found this review helpful

This book doesn't always lend itself to partisan ideology, but, rather, is a remedial and a clarion call to those who are tired of a non-solutions based rigidity in Washington. A wake up call, I suppose.

I read this on a whim, having only heard of Webb in passing. I thought he sounded quite impressive when I heard him on c-span, so that made it easier. I enjoyed this book in totality. He is a lot deeper than he occasionally lets on, as his humble attitude tends to shield his incredible intellect at times. Until he actually starts to speak/type, whetever, then it is all very clear: Jim Webb is a true intellect.

Jim seems to be a gifted writer, as well. I don't know his methodology, but he is a fantastic story teller. Prose is readable, yet eloquent. Lots of historical references that help; many personal stories, too. Webb lays out a slue of new ideas, new ways of thinking about politics, and shares a sentiment that all parties can get down with. As with any book like this, I want to be glowing to a certain extent afterwards. I want to feel patriotic and like there is hope for American politics. This book achieves that.

Jim Webb is far more than an effective legislator; he is an honest character.

Check it out.




4 out of 5 stars Interesting Book By An Interesting Man   May 31, 2008
 29 out of 31 found this review helpful

I've read all of Jim Webb's novels and his history book, "Born Fighting." You can find pieces of Webb's soul, character and thinking in each work.

"A Time to Fight" brings all these pieces together beautifully. The book is part biography, part history lesson, part policy paper and part political manifesto. More than any other of his books, "A Time to Fight" lets Webb declare, "This is where I came from. This is who I am. This is what I stand for."

Webb writes really, really well whether it's fiction or non-fiction. He covers history, government policy and politics in a plain-English style that satisfies policy wonks, history buffs and general readers. That's not easy to do and Webb pulls it off handsomely.

If I have any problem with the book, it's a minor one: If you're a fan of Webb's work, you will find that some parts of "A Time to Fight," particularly his family history, cover a lot of the same ground as his last non-fiction work, "Born Fighting."

As someone who read "BF" a week before starting this book, I found many passages about his Uncle Tommy, his grandparents, his father etc. to be familiar. But fortunately, the ground that Webb covers again is interesting terrain.

At this point, I must offer full disclosure: I crossed party lines in November 2006 to vote for Webb for the U.S. Senate. I did it for several reasons, including this: Our nation's political discourse would be more interesting and thoughtful with Jim Webb in the Senate than with him out of it.

"A Time to Fight" proves to me that I was right. I'm sure it will do the same for others as well.




5 out of 5 stars Another True Virginia Statesman in the Making   May 29, 2008
 26 out of 30 found this review helpful

Senator Webb is one of only a few true intellectual heavyweight in our government: a writer, a Senator from Virginia (whom I am proud to say I voted for), who is also a war hero (and has a son in Iraq) from the white working class, a father of three, whose patriotism is neither worn on his sleeve, nor born of the normal ideological narrow-mindedness often cloaked in closeted racism. He lives and breathes a refreshing new kind of Americanism that sees this two-hundred year old experiment being sucked up into the Washington grinding machine of privilege, greed, narrow-mindedness and excess.

Webb worries, as so many of us do that the wheels are finally coming off this grand old 200-plus-year experiment. As he so aptly notes in this manifesto of his political philosophy and his concerns for our nation: At the same time that vast changes have begun to call into question every aspect of our national identity and even the foundation upon which our society was built, our politicians are engaged in false debates shaped by emotional side issues that only serve as detours and deflections around, or smoke screens hiding, the real ills that beset the nation. While China and India are rapidly moving ahead, "our political process has become so compromised by powerful interest groups and the threat of the petty politics of character assassination that even the best among us will not dare to speak honestly about the solutions that might bring us back to common sense and fundamental fairness."

While our politicians are busy raising millions for their next election run, and our corporate elite laugh all the way to the bank with their obscene profits, our inner cities are in full melt-down mode: In the single-mother run neighborhoods, of inadequate schools, no healthcare, out-of-control illegitimacy, drugs, and AIDS, its no wonder that prison, which is now filled with 2 million of our fellow citizens, has become an alternative life style. And to make matters even worse, "those at the top now tend to view their inordinate success as simply a function of their innate talent in a brave new world of socio-economic Darwinian, and have become openly consumed by their own self-justifying greed." This is occurring at the same time that inner city youths are trapped in crime-infested neighborhoods, lacking any possible pathways to success. To say that we are at risk of developing a permanent underclass is but a monument to understatements: it would not be an exaggeration to say that the U.S. inner city ghettoes are just time bombs waiting to be ignited.

These are just some of the concerns that Jim Webb expresses in this, his seventh book. But more than that he has solutions. One hopes that he is just the tip of an emerging iceberg of a new generation of political leaders. Five stars



3 out of 5 stars Man For the People   June 10, 2008
 21 out of 23 found this review helpful

I don't usually pick up contemporary political books, but decided to read Senator Webb's new book after hearing him speak on an NPR segment. As a probable McCain voter and moderate Republican, I also hoped to challenge my own political opinions.

Webb's discussion of the military was moving and pragmatic. He advocates a more influential and independent military, with long-term strategies and strong leaders, like MacArthur, who are not afraid to disagree with the President. With a very political, but nonetheless heartfelt tone, he speaks to the diversity of the military and how his experiences with other soldiers from very different walks of life ultimately forged his political views.

In much of the remainder of the book, the Senator provides a discourse against the class struggle that he believes to be destroying America. He attacks globalization, lucrative executives and special interests and portrays himself as a man of the people in contrast to many of the "elites" in the Senate. While I believe Webb supports many of the interests of the underprivileged, he is at times overly self-righteous. Especially considering that the Senator - a direct descendent of an officer who served with George Washington, son of a decorated military veteran, Naval Academy graduate and Former Secretary of the Navy - had a perfect pedigree for the Senate and many more advantages than most. In fact, he is more like his admired Tolstoy, the Russian literary giant and famed anarchist who was deeply grieved by his fellow aristocrats, than Truman, (of more humble origins) whom he also refers to.

There are further sections supporting a weaker executive branch that distinguish Jim Webb from other Democrats.

I doubt I will be fighting for Jim Webb in November should he make the VP ticket. However, his new book raises important issues - many of which are not new. Some of these issues receive insightful and innovative analysis, while others are addressed with an increasingly tedious party line.


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