John, I find it extremely difficult to believe that such a campaign could get the book used in class. There is little chance that the book is even on an academic par with a book by Al Franken or John Stewart. You are right to be concerned about our rightward turn here in the US but we still have teachers who insist on using accurate and diverse text books in their classrooms. (And parents, and school boards etc.)
Talk radio can talk all it wants and they can show their power in getting an agendized book on the best seller list, but neither Al Franken nor this guy are going to emerge as accepted authorities for our history cirricula.
QUOTE
The civil rights chapter discusses the key cases that transformed American society with regard to race, including Brown, Green, Swann, Griggs, Bakke, and Weber, and the fundamental lawlessness that characterized the process. It doesn’t take the line that the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was a wonderful, visionary piece of legislation that was mysteriously replaced by affirmative action quotas years later. It shows, first, that the act had far less impact on black employment than people typically suppose, and second, that the logic of the act (in spite of all its disclaimers) in fact led directly to affirmative action.
http://www.lewrockwell.com/woods/woods30.htmledited to add a blurb about civil rights by Woods.
This is also a good blog post about some of the views under the skin of the League of the South.
http://www.acsblog.org/guest-bloggers-839-...rn-comfort.htmlAnd a book review by Woods
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/068...8936902-6714452