None
Dare Call it Stolen
Ohio, The Election and America's Servile Press
by Mark Crispin Miller The story the media was afraid to
touch. The story of how the "Right" stole the
2004 election and how they'll steal the next one too (unless
we stop them).
$9.95
Unabridged Download / Single User
ISBN: 0-9778965-4-4
Read by Mark Crispin Miller
Includes an interview with the author.
Media critic and political commentator
Mark Crispin Miller reveals the evidence of widespread corruption
in the 2004 presidential election in Ohio. This corruption--consisting
of thousands of little frauds--appears to be the future
Republican electoral strategy. The undeniable conclusion
is that Bush and the Republicans stole the election--and
if we don't expose this theft, it will happen again. This
audio is an unabridged reading of the Harper article, "None
Dare Call It Stolen," which was excerpted from
the book, Fooled Again, published by Basic Books
in the Fall of 2005.
AUTHOR BIO
Mark
Crispin Miller is a professor of media studies at New York
University and the author of Fooled Again, The Bush Dyslexicon and
Cruel and Unusual: Bush/Cheney's New World Order.
He has appeared on Frontline, The PBS Newshour,
The O'Reilly Factor, Washington Journal,
and Bill Moyers' The Public Mind, and is a regular
commentator on Air America, appearing often
on
"Morning Sedition" and "The Al Franken Show."
REVIEWS
"There was indeed something
rotten in the state of Ohio in 2004. Whether by intent or
negligence, authorities took actions that prevented many
thousands of citizens from casting votes and having them
counted. The irregularities were sufficiently widespread
to call into question Bush's margin of victory. This was
not a fair election, and it deserves the scrutiny skeptics
have brought to it." --Mother Jones
"Mark Crispin Miller's Fooled Again is a jeremiad
aimed at the heart of the national Republican machine. But
it's also a work of original reporting that in the end amounts
to a solid case for Republican theft of the 2004 presidential
election... Fooled Again may well describe the
endgame that lead to single-party dominance through the
next generation." --Chicago Reader
"Miller is right. The electoral system is not a criminal
case, and you don't have to prove that Bush stole the election
beyond a shadow of a doubt in order to eradicate all doubts
you may have about the race. And he's right too, that we
should have had a serious investigation into the flaws in
the last election, and that those flaws--and the flaws we
see every year--should prompt politicians to fix the entire
electoral system before the next big race." --Salon.com