During the 1960s Sidney Lens, trade unionist, writer and dissident, avidly protested against the trial of the Chicago Eight as part of the 'Committee to Defend the Conspiracy' with, amongst others, Noam Chomsky, Susan Sontag and Norman Mailer. He also contributed significantly to the organisation of Anti-War marches held in Washington DC and San Francisco in 1969, protesting against the Vietnam War. Sidney Lens has written thirteen books. The Forging of the American Empire was originally published by Apollo Editions in 1974.
"In early 2003, Michael Ignatieff, a Harvard professor, wrote in
the New York Times:
America's empire is not like empires of times past, built on
colonies, conquest an the white man's burden. We are no longer in
the era of the United Fruit Company, when American corporations
needed the Marines to secure their investments overseas. The 21st
century imperium is a new invention in the annals of political
science, an empire lite, a global hegemony whose grace notes are
free markets, human rights and democracy.
Only someone blind to the history of the United States, its
obsessive drive for control of oil, its endless expansion of
military bases around the world, its domination of other countries
through its enormous economic power, its violations of the human
rights of millions of people, whether directly or through proxy
governments, could make that statement.
What Sidney Lens wrote around 1970 about 'the myth of morality'
encircling American imperialism was clearly still in evidence in
2003. His history of American empire is essential for understanding
what still goes on in our time." --From the foreword by Howard
Zinn
"The observations Sidney Lens made of American imperialism in the
1970s are still valid today. You could say they were prophetic. I'm
so glad this book is being republished. It couldn't be timelier."
--Studs Terkel
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