Compare prices and save on cheap textbooks at CheapestTextbooks.com
Compare prices and save on cheap textbooks at CheapestTextbooks.com HACKER SAFE certified sites prevent over 99.9% of hacker crime.
CheapestCDPrice.comCheapestDVDPrice.comCheapestTextbooks.comGo to CheapestTextbooks USA!Go to CheapestTextbooks UK!
Multi-Store Textbook Search
  
(What's this?)
Selected Product:

no
picture
available
The CHAIRMAN: JOHN J MCCLOY & THE MAKING OF THE AMERICAN ESTABLISHMENT

Hardcover
Author: Kai Bird
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Release Date: 1992-04-30
ISBN-10: 0671454153
ISBN-13: 9780671454159
List Price: $30.00
Average Customer Rating:
Score = 3.5 Score = 3.5 Score = 3.5 Score = 3.5 Score = 3.5
Similar Products

The Age of Turbulence: Adventures in a New World
The Age of Turbulence: Adventures in a New World
ISBN-10: 0143114166
ISBN-13: 9780143114161
List Price:$17.00


The Wise Men: Six Friends and the World They Made
The Wise Men: Six Friends and the World They Made
ISBN-10: 0684837714
ISBN-13: 9780684837710
List Price:$22.00


American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer
American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer
ISBN-10: 0375726268
ISBN-13: 9780375726262
List Price:$18.95


Memoirs
Memoirs
ISBN-10: 0812969731
ISBN-13: 9780812969733
List Price:$17.95


The Color of Truth: McGeorge Bundy and William Bundy: Brothers in Arms
The Color of Truth: McGeorge Bundy and William Bundy: Brothers in Arms
ISBN-10: 0684856441
ISBN-13: 9780684856445
List Price:$31.95


Our Review: To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for The CHAIRMAN: JOHN J MCCLOY & THE MAKING OF THE AMERICAN ESTABLISHMENT by Kai Bird (ISBN-10: 0671454153, ISBN-13: 9780671454159).

At this time we have not yet written a review for The CHAIRMAN: JOHN J MCCLOY & THE MAKING OF THE AMERICAN ESTABLISHMENT by Kai Bird (ISBN-10: 0671454153, ISBN-13: 9780671454159). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews.

Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com

Summary:
The biography of an ultimate self-made aristocrat tells how a poor kid from Philadelphia climbed to the highest rungs of the world's legal, corporate, diplomatic, and political ladders. 12,500 first printing.

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Rating: Score = 3.5 Score = 3.5 Score = 3.5 Score = 3.5 Score = 3.5

Missed A Lot, Too!
Customer Rating:  Score = 1 Score = 1 Score = 1 Score = 1 Score = 1
While Bird outlines how McCloy gained his proficiency at manipulating the law to further the criminal aims of his wealthy patrons, Bird also avoids telling us just how involved McCloy was in the multifarious treasons (both plotted and committed) by the Harrimans, the Rockefellers, the Bushes, the Dullesses and others before and during WWII.

Nor does Bird suggest how deeply involved McCloy was in the paranoid spasms of (especially) Allen Dulles - in the destruction of Eastern Europe, in the anti-democracy coup in Iran, etc.

In short, this is a great volume if you idolize treason and felony committed to enhance personal wealth and power at the expense of the national security of this country.

Great book for history buffs!
Customer Rating:  Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4
Ever wonder who was the chair of the "establishment" for a good part of the 20th Century. It was clearly John McCloy. Here's a short bio: grew up poor; graduated from Harvard Law School; became a partner at Cravath; was Under-Secretary of Defense (under Stimson) for FDR -- basically the number two guy (and the go-to-guy) in the War Department in WWII; was behind many good and bad decisions like internment of the Japanese (supported) and dropping of the atom bomb (opposed); became the allied ruler of Germany after the war (and was responsible for the democratization of the country); Chairman of the World Bank; Chairman of the Council on Foreign Relations; Chairman and CEO of Chase; Chair of President's Disarmament Committee; helped negotiate the Cuban Missile Crisis; served on the Warren Commission; knew every President personally from FDR to Bush. He is a complicated person who made many good and bad decisions -- Read this book.

Modern Europe Decoded
Customer Rating:  Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5
As a lawyer, it's gratifying to see that a fellow lawyer, John McCloy, had such a key role in putting together post-WW II Europe, and it challenges my anti-FDR leanings to read this book, since McCloy was mainly a tool of FDR. Even though he was a Republican. Mr. Bird chronicles McCloy's life starting from humble New York beginnings, and establishes that you must understand the New York investment houses, the law firms they fed and controlled, and the European investments of those New Yorkers, to understand Mc Cloy. By the end of the book, we do.

Bird has the gift of not saying too much, but telling you a lot. McCloy's dad dies, then his mom (hairdresser to the rich) keeps him in contact with Rockefellers and the like, and thru lots of hard work and sacrifice, she sees that John makes it into the exclusive schools with the same upper-crust people. He then becomes a lawyer, and does the dirty work for the unscrupulous bond salesmen who use the public's unsecured money to pay back the priority lenders to doomed projects, mainly railroads, before those same creditors send in the lawyers to repo the assets, and sell them to contolled companies which sell them again. This is all pre-New Deal, pre-SEC. Mc Cloy gets good at it and his skill at tennis leads him to play hard-ball on the tennis courts, as well as in the law courts, with big money NY types, which makes McCloy attractive to the law firms feeding off of the investment houses. At this point, a useful companion book to read would be Robert Sobel's history of the Dillon, Read investment house, which goes into more detail.

McCloy ends up being detailed to the federal gov't during WW I and becomes an intelligence expert, and then has a key part in forming what becomes the CIA. He stays connected with the CIA for the rest of his life, while pinging and ponging out of the gov't, mainly on "commissions" and "panels" and he also gets tied up with the Council on Foreign Relations, which Bird convincingly describes as very powerful in its day.

McCloy's career peaks when FDR appoints him to be high commissioner for post-WW II Germany, with plenary, Caesar-like powers, which McCloy exercises tactfully and with restraint. While also playing lots of tennis. This section of the book is very gripping, as Bird unwinds the CIA's role in funding anti-Soviet left-wing intellectuals to counter Soviet propaganda, and to make sure Germany does not intrepidly rush to unify too soon--before the die-hard old Nazi's of Germany's industrial establishment are neutralized by the passage of a generation.

The European Community is also convincingly penetrated, below the acronyms and meetings which symbolize it for most contemporary students. Bird details how McCloy dealt with the treaties forming the EC, and how insuring Germany's non-reunification fit with putting other countries intot he coal and steel industries which Germany would need to becomea credible threat again.

In this reading, the awfulness of Germany, and the threat of revanchement, is what drove the cold war, not just anti-Soviet inexorabilities of history. In leading the effort at such a key time, McCloy's sportsmanship, learning, connections, and toughness were all needed. Bird suggests where and how McCloy developed each of these qualities, and how the old "Establishment" in America operated through these high quality servants of the amassed wealth of the Eastern types who then utilized WW II to launch America as the ruler of the economic world for the next 50 years. Quite an achievement, considering they could have just sat around Bar Harbor instead, wasting the talents of the acolyte class of McCloys on sailboat lessons and hair-do's for their wives and children.

Leaving us with the issue of what type of Americans will be called on to get us through whatever convulsions are left, now that George H.W. Bush and James Baker III steered us through the definitive collapse of Russian Communism. In this light, should we be glad or sad that the Arkansas contingent looks like they will miss the coming convulsion of Chinese communism?


























Suggestions | Textbook Store Reviews | Site Map | Textbook Reviews | Contact Us
Cheap Textbooks | Used Textbooks | Discount Textbooks | Buy College Textbooks
© 2008 . All rights reserved. Privacy Statement and Disclaimer
web site design and support by Crystal Solutions