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Pinochet and Me: A Chilean Anti-Memoir | 
enlarge | Author: Marc Cooper Publisher: Verso Category: Book
List Price: $22.00 Buy Used: $2.79 You Save: $19.21 (87%)
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Rating: 11 reviews Sales Rank: 969948
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 144 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.4 x 0.8
ISBN: 1859847854 Dewey Decimal Number: 983.065 EAN: 9781859847855 ASIN: 1859847854
Publication Date: December 2000 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description The news of October 1998 that General Pinochet had been arrested in Britain presaged two years of international interest in the case and its ramifications for travelling tyrants the world over. Marc Cooper went to Chile and became translator to Salvadore Allende, the first democratically elected Marxist head of state. With an office in the Moneda Palace, the author had to flee as the US sponsored bombing on September 11, 1973 sent the palace up in flames. Twenty five years after escaping Chile, Marc Cooper returns and recounts on a country that is a democracy in name only and on a society that has been transformed by one of the most radical revolutions of our time. This book tells the story of how the dictator's detention has lifted a stranglehold that suffocated Chile's moral sensibility for a generation. "Pinochet and Me" is part memoir and part street-level reporting and it looks at the decisive moments of the Allende government, the terror of the Pinochet coup, the disillusion with a consumer-driven pseudo-democracy and the recent days of Pinochet's arrest.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 6 more reviews...
READ ABOUT THE REAL 9/11 in 1973: HOW NIXON KILLED A DEMOCRACY July 7, 2006 4 out of 8 found this review helpful
this book is essential reading for us as we reflect upon our own global piracy which now continues under a new illegitimate administration. Marc Cooper is an excellent author and reporter of truth, courageous in speaking truth to power. THis book should be required reading in any social studies and history class. This is our history of terror and domination. The bombing of the Presidential mansion in Chile 9/11/73 and our destruction of a society and the torture and assassination of thousands of innocent people and exile of thousands more through the brutal fascist military dictator Pinochet, and our continuance of such policy, must chill the blood and mind of any American concerned for truth justice and social progress of all people, which is the true American and Christian way.
UPDATE 2007: Pinochet is dead and now people go around claiming, well, he only killed a couple of thousand people after all. It was only a couple of thousand on OUR 9/11, too, right?
Please get the truth. Get this book by Marc Cooper. We need to study this very readable and informative and TRUE account now, more than ever.
Cooper Vs Ignorance November 12, 2004 15 out of 27 found this review helpful
Many of the reviewers below me point out that Pinochet strengthened the economy in Chile to the level where it became one of the more prosperous states on the subcontinent. He sure did. What's more, Mussolini made the trains run on time, Stalin ran a tight security service and Hitler sure did make some good roads.
Please.
Allende was elected by a narrow margin, so he deserved to be overthrown? Fair enough - let's kill old Bushy boy too, since he was elected by a very narrow margin. What Cooper takes aim at primarily in this book is this notion that Pinochet's brand of "fascism" was good fascism - that it's OK to, say, train alsatians to rape prisoners if they were a bit leftist and their candidate had screwed up the economy.
No economy is so important that mass murder is an acceptable way to rectify it. The fact that so many people on the right refuse to accept this simple moral fact makes me worry for the free West, and how much longer it's going to be free for if we can't acknowledge a simple thing like mass murder being morally wrong.
Bravo, Cooper, you've upset the pinheads.
Leftist trash talk about Pinochet and Chile. January 3, 2004 25 out of 60 found this review helpful
This book purports to give a true view of Chile and the Pinochet regime. The author is a sixties radical who at one time worked as a translator on Allende's presidential staff. Warren Beatty endorsed this book as saying it cleared the distortions about Chile.Where to begin? I have never given a one star review of any book. Cooper's book deserves no star, because it is a distortion of any truth. I don't think the book is at all balanced with what I know about Chile. I know Chile as well as Cooper. My wife is Chilean and happens to be a socialist. I also have visited Chile many times and love the people and the country. First, Allende won a very narrow mandate in the election of 1970. He sought to radically change his country but introduced chaos into his country. He alienated many people including most of the middle and upper classes along with the conservative population of the countryside. My wife is from Curico, in the central agricultural region. Allende also antongonized some powerful patrons such as the United States and ITT (which owned the copper mines in the north of the country). The United States contributed much of the foreign aid Chile received. What did Allende do? Nationalize the copper mines and invite Castro for a month long visit. Smart move--make enemies of those who contributed most to the Chilean economy. When the economy tanked, chaos was the result. Workers demands became even more aggressive. Nationalization of smaller companies and agricultural estates were the result. Strikes and work stoppages were common. Economic decline was the result. Copper states that this was the finest hour for Chile. WOW--what a distortion. Economic decline and political chaos and he believes that it was Chile's finest hour. If one wants a modern day example of Chile in the seventies, look at Chavez's Venezuela. Cooper is right in saying the Nixon administration helped in throwing Allende out of office. However Allende was going down a road which would have resulted in his overthrow. The military sickened by the economic decline and political chaos overthrew the Allende regime. Pinochet was a reluctant leader of the coup. However, once the die was set, he embraced the coup and brutal crackdown. Over 3100 people died in the coup and the seventeen year dictatorship. Chile was not the worst dictatorship as Cooper would have you believe. In fact, Castro's dictatorship has been far more harsh in this hemisphere. Cooper does not want you to know that. That would distort his story. Most Chileans believe Allende was an inept leader. Both Allende and Pinochet are divisive issues in Chile today. People don't like to argue the issues involving these two people. That is why Pinochet is not on trial in Chile. Perhaps in the future this may happen, but probably after Pinochet's death. But Cooper wants to rip open the scars of the past to try the crimes of the dictatorship. One thing the dictatorship did do was set Chile as an economic powerhouse of South America. Where most of the other countries are failing presently, Chile has a thriving economy. Cooper does not want to credit the dictatorship with this. This would destroy his distortion. So he lies and lies and lies. If I had to summarize the essentials of Cooper's book, it is leftist trash talk about Pinochet and Chile. I wish this book was more objective. It is not. Reader beware.
First hand account October 21, 2002 7 out of 14 found this review helpful
Cooper provides chilling details concerning the Allende overthrow that otherwise would lost to history. This is an excellent first-hand account of one persons experience during that tumultuous time. Although Cooper provides a biased account of the political environment in Chile during this time, it nontheless is a true account, whether we Americans like to look at our complicity in these events or not. Bravo to Cooper, the truth shall set you free!
Cooper and Me: A Chilean Anti-Review August 20, 2002 13 out of 52 found this review helpful
One can't help but wonder if Cooper would've preferred that Chile had ended up like, say, an Argentina or a Venezuela rather than the stable and prosperous (relatively speaking) country that it is today. There's a sense of profound resentment ... that permeates the entire book, revealed by the ... attempts to discredit the (yes, material) advances Chile has made in the past decade. It seems that Pinochet's main crime is not the horrific human rights abuses that occured under his regime, but rather the meteoric rise of Chile's economy and standard of living. For these successes, and the embarrassment they engender on the rest of the continent and in dinosaurs on the Left, Pinochet and the "Chicago Boys" can never be forgiven.
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