Jesse Walker

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Jesse Walker



Average rating: 3.58 · 1,053 ratings · 149 reviews · 30 distinct worksSimilar authors
The United States of Parano...

3.56 avg rating — 977 ratings — published 2012 — 6 editions
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Rebels on the Air: An Alter...

3.84 avg rating — 55 ratings — published 2001 — 6 editions
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Network and System Security...

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 1 rating
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Rebels on the Air: An Alter...

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 1 rating4 editions
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Tribute to Elvis

liked it 3.00 avg rating — 1 rating
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Fit Beyond Forty: The Busy ...

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Deep Black Elements

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Poems, written during his e...

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Queenston a tale of the Nia...

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Fort Niagara : a tale of th...

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More books by Jesse Walker…
Quotes by Jesse Walker  (?)
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“This is a book about America’s demons. Many of those demons are imaginary, but all of them have truths to tell us. A conspiracy story that catches on becomes a form of folklore. It says something true about the anxieties and experiences of the people who believe and repeat it, even if it says nothing true about the objects of the theory itself.”
Jesse Walker, The United States of Paranoia: A Conspiracy Theory

“When the Mattachine Society of Washington’s founder, Frank Kameny, testified to a congressional committee in 1962, he informed his interrogators that the group’s mailing list had only about a hundred names on it. That was inconceivable to congressmen such as John Dowdy, a Texas Democrat who had assumed that the society was an arm of a “national and international organization” with “up in the millions” of members.79 The committee was puzzled further by the fact that Kameny believed that there were a quarter-million homosexuals in the city—not because they doubted that there were so many, but because he didn’t have each one’s contact information. The investigators assumed, Johnson wrote, “that homosexuals were inherently drawn to the same clique and would somehow all be on the same mailing list.”
Jesse Walker, The United States of Paranoia: A Conspiracy Theory

“Pundits tend to write off political paranoia as a feature of the fringe, a disorder that occasionally flares up until the sober center can put out the flames. They’re wrong. The fear of conspiracies has been a potent force across the political spectrum, from the colonial era to the present, in the establishment as well as at the extremes. Conspiracy theories played major roles in conflicts from the Indian wars of the seventeenth century to the labor battles of the Gilded Age, from the Civil War to the Cold War, from the American Revolution to the War on Terror. They have flourished not just in times of great division but in eras of relative comity. They have been popular not just with dissenters and nonconformists but with individuals and institutions at the center of power. They are not simply a colorful historical byway. They are at the country’s core.”
Jesse Walker, The United States of Paranoia: A Conspiracy Theory

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