Proposing that our leaders are creating a world that offers nothing but endless war, fear and insecurity, On the Public Agenda reviews popularly held beliefs on religion, education, healthcare, revolution and war. Topics include the Abu Ghraib Prison scandal, making Iraq democratic by waging war, a market-driven healthcare, AIDS research the cost of higher education. John Spritzler holds a Doctor of Science degree in biostatistics from the Harvard School of Public Health, where he is engaged in AIDS clinical trials. He is the author of The People As Enemy: The Leaders’ Hidden Agenda in World War II. David Stratman, former Washington director of the National Parent/Teachers Association, is author of We CAN Change the World: The Real Meaning of Everyday Life.
John Spritzler Livres


In The People as Enemy: The Leaders' Hidden Agenda in WWII John Spritzler considers World War II not as the "good war," but, essentially, as the "class war." More than forty-six million soldiers and civilians perished in World War II, not counting more than five million Jews killed in the Holocaust. Whole cities were bombed for the express purpose of killing civilians by the hundreds of thousands. And yet this war is known as "the good war" on the grounds that the aim of the Allied nations of Great Britain, the United States, the Soviet Union and China, and the outcome of the war, was to save the world from being enslaved by the Axis (Fascist) nations of Germany, Italy and Japan who intended to establish a "master race" tyranny worse than anything the world had ever seen. That is the official view of the war--the one we have all been taught--but presented here in The People As Enemy, is a very different, and disturbing view. This alternative view argues that the aims of the national leaders were not to defend democracy and self-determination, but to suppress class rebellion--to intimidate working people everywhere from rising up against elite power.