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REVIEWS
Rage of the Random Actor, Disarming Catastrophic Acts and Restoring Lives
by Dan Korem
Powerful hope.
Practical Solutions that work. Must reading for every team leader
—
corporate, government, and
education . . . and every citizen in the neighborhood.
Bob VandePol, President, Crisis Care Network,
Nation's largest crisis responder
Dan Korem's strategies save lives. I used
them in Iraq to protect those in my charge and even save the lives of over 50
suicidal-led insurgents who wanted to kill.
Capt. Pedro
Rosario, U.S. Armed Forces, Bronze Star with Valor recipient
Amazon.com Review
Extraordinary, Compelling, Urgently
Applicable to All, October 19, 2005
Amazon Top 100 Reviewer:
Robert D. Steele
I am utterly astonished to not
see this book at the top of the charts and being absorbed by every school
principal, every small town mayor, every police chief, and every
counter-terrorism expert. This book is extraordinary, it is compelling, and it
is utterly and urgently applicable to every single person who wishes to "defuse"
potentially deadly "random actors."
Although it is a thick book packed with details, you do not have the read the
whole thing to extract value. Suffice to say that armed with this book,
communities and organizations will have all they need to know to achieve early
warning of potentially threatening "random actors."
This is not a book full of psycho-babble. If anything, it is solidly grounded in
practical case studies going back twenty years, and I for one, as a 30-year
veteran intelligence professional, including clandestine service with constant
exposure to bad boys and girls, find the book credible, useful, and easy to
understand.
The bottom line, without seeking to simplify the book, is avoid
de-personalization, prevent bullying, open up to individuals and empower them,
and above all, be alert for any sense that they see teachers or other authority
figures as "CONTROLLING" and rules as "INAPPLICABLE."
The author's finding that terrorism is a rich kid's game, and that most US-based
random actors will come from upper middle class families in small towns, are
consistent with my own research and practical experience with revolutionaries.
Sadly, the underlying theme across the book is that of societal collapse. The
major institutions, from school to church to sports to social clubs are all
degenerating and failing to provide the inclusiveness and alternatives to
boredom and alienation that they once represented. The threat of "random actors"
imposing catastrophic fatal acts on their communities is very real.
This book is an important reference work, and one that I would recommend be
bought in bulk, and discussed in a structured manner by every school staff and
every local police department...and of course by parents!
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