A collection of George W. Bush–era observations and interviews from a former priest turned activist for peace—a Thomas Paine for modern times.
Much of our current media makes us feel powerless and unconscious. These commentaries are designed to make us conscious and aware of the power we must build humane national and international polities.
“Blase Bonpane is a true guerilla for peace, an exception to the rulers. From the occupation of Iraq to the war at home; from the coup in Haiti to the prisons of the U.S., Bonpane cuts through the lies to tell it like it is. For years, his commentaries have been broadcast over the airwaves of Pacifica station KPFK in Los Angeles. Today, in a world dominated by occupation, war and a crackdown on civil liberties and human rights, these commentaries become an essential counterbalance to the lies. Common Sense for the Twenty-First Century is evidence that the voices of the silenced majority can and must be heard.” —Amy Goodman, broadcast journalist, host of Democracy Now!
“Tom Paine was a pamphleteer who proclaimed the need for revolution in 1776. Common Sense for the Twenty-First Century is based on the need for a moral revolution in our own time. This was the call made by Dr. Martin Luther King. This is the call today made by Blase Bonpane, who rejects the ancient tools of clubs, spears, guns and bombs, while promoting the non-violent tools of dialogue together with militant grass roots action. Blase believes firmly that we can have a future of international participatory democracy directed toward distributive justice.” —Martin Sheen, actor and activist
Blase Bonpane, Ph.D., served as a Maryknoll priest and superior. He was assigned to and expelled from Central America. In addition to being a UCLA and California State University Northridge professor, contributor to Los Angeles Times and the New York Times and former commentator on Pacifica radio station KPFK 90.7fm (Los Angeles, California), Blase is the author of many publications. As a U.S. citizen, he is especially concerned about the role of his own country in fostering conditions of injustice. In 1989 he was named "the most underrated humanist of the past decade" by the Los Angeles Weekly. He is currently Director of the Office of the Americas, a non-profit educational corporation dedicated to peace and justice in the western hemisphere. The Blase Bonpane Collection 1950-2000 has been established by the Department of Special Collections of the U.C.L.A. Research Library. This is a compilation of his published and unpublished writings together with tapes of lectures and a complete file of the "Focus on the Americas" programs which were uplinked to the National Public Radio satellite.