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         Paine Tom:     more books (100)
  1. The selected work of Tom Paine by Thomas Paine, 1948
  2. Tom Paine: A Political Life by John Keane, 1996-04-18
  3. From Tom Paine to Guantanamo (The Spokesman)
  4. Tom Paine (H Books) by Harry Harmer, 2006-06-30
  5. The living thoughts of Tom Paine by Thomas Paine, John Dos Passos, 1963
  6. The Common Sense of Tom Paine by richard oconnor, 1969-01-01
  7. Tom Paine, Reg?ny. Translated By Kery Laszlo by Howard Fast, 1954-01-01
  8. The Trouble with Tom: The Strange Afterlife and Times of Thomas Paine by Paul Collins, 2005-10-19
  9. Thomas Paine: Common Sense (Volume 1) by Thomas Paine, 2009-07-22
  10. Scar Vegas by Tom Paine, 2000
  11. The Rights of Man and Other Writings (Books That Have Changed Man's Thinking) by Tom Paine, 1970
  12. The Pearl of Kuwait by Tom Paine, 2003-03-03
  13. Political Writings: Including the Debate Between Sieyes and Tom Paine in 1791 by Emmanuel Joseph Sieyes, Michael Sonenscher, 2003-09
  14. The Boys' Life Of Mark Twain - Albert Bigelow Paine by Albert Bigelow Paine, 2010-02-18

41. Tom Paine's Revolution
tom paine's Revolution. J. Brian Phillips. Advocates of freedom often despairat the political inertia that must be overcome to achieve their goals.
http://www.libertyhaven.com/theoreticalorphilosophicalissues/conservatism/tompai
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Tom Paine's Revolution
J. Brian Phillips
Advocates of freedom often despair at the political inertia that must be overcome to achieve their goals. At times, it seems as if the freedom movement is progressing too slowly to reverse current political trends. In this regard, the American Revolution provides an important lesson. Even after the Revolutionary War had begun, most Americans, including many colonial leaders, favored reconciliation with England. Most Americans still considered themselves to be loyal British subjects, and were willing to continue to do so, if only the King would correct his most grievous transgressions. In early 1776-more than eight months after the Battle of Lexington - colonists suddenly began to support the idea of American independence. This dramatic change can be largely attributed to the work of one man: Thomas Paine. Paine was an undistinguished Englishman when he arrived in Philadelphia in November 1774 armed with several letters of introduction from Benjamin Franklin. Aided by Franklin's letters, Paine quickly found work as an editor and chief writer for Pennsylvania Magazine. Sharing Franklin's interest in science, Paine wrote about the newest inventions of the day, as well as political issues, but he remained relatively obscure.

42. Tom Paine's Bones
tom paine's Bones. Chorus. Old tom paine, there he lies nobody laughs and nobodycries Where he's gone or how he fares nobody knows – and nobody cares.
http://www.lecairde.de/Lieder/Tom_Paine's_Bones.htm
Tom Paine's Bones
D A h G
As I roved out one evening by a river of discontent
D f# A G
I bumped straight into old Tom Paine as running down the road he went
D A h G
He said, "I can't stop right now child, King George is after me
D f# A G
He'd have a rope around my throat and hang me on the Liberty Tree." Chorus:
D A h G
I will dance to Tom Paine's bones dance to Tom Paine's bones
D f# A G(D) Dance in the oldest boots I own to the rhythm of Tom Paine's bones.

43. The Books: Tom Paine By John Keane
NonFiction/ Life Stories Non-Fiction/History ISBN 0316484199 Hardcover$27.00/US LITTLE, BROWN. tom paine A Political Life by John Keane.
http://www.twbookmark.com/books/0/0316484199/
Non-Fiction/ Life Stories
Non-Fiction/History
ISBN: 0316484199
Hardcover $27.00/U.S.
LITTLE, BROWN
Tom Paine: A Political Life
by John Keane
he definitive biography of one of democracy's greatest champions hero of the American and French revolutions and author of Common Sense and The Rights of Man. Tom Paine was the greatest political figure of his generation a soldier, a diplomat, and a key pamphleteer in the American Revolution who later helped draft the French constitution during that country's revolution and only narrowly escaped the guillotine during the Terror. This meticulously researched biography relies on newly available material to reevaluate Paine's pivotal importance in the development of democracy and reveals a life riddled with tensions, discoveries, dramatic surprises, and spectacular achievements and failures.
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44. Tom Paine Index
Thomas paine. January 29, 1737, Thetford, Norfolk, England — June8, 1809, New York, NY, USA. Life and Writings of Thomas paine.
http://www.socsci.mcmaster.ca/~econ/ugcm/3ll3/paine/
Thomas Paine
Life and Writings of Thomas Paine. Edited and annotated by Daniel Edwin Wheeler
(contributed by Gary Edwards)
Volume One: ( ZIP
  • Title Page and Contents (RTF)
  • Introduction (RTF)
  • Life of Thomas Paine By Thomas Clio Rickman (RTF)
  • Erkine's Defense of Paine (RTF)
  • Thomas Paine: Father of Republics by Paul Desjardins (RTF)
  • Paine in the American Revolution By Leslie Stephen (RTF)
  • Thomas Paine. By Robert Green Ingersoll ( RTF
  • A Little Journey To The Home of Thomas Paine By Elbert Hubbard ( RTF
  • A Square Deal By Marilla M. Ricker ( RTF
Volume Two: ( Zip
  • Title Page and Contents ( RTF
  • Explanatory Preface (RTF)
  • Introduction ( RTF
Common Sense
  • Of the Origin and Design of Government in General, etc. ( RTF
  • Of Monarchy and Hereditary Succession. ( RTF
  • Thoughts on the present State of American Affairs. ( RTF
  • Of the Present Ability of America, with Some Miscellaneous Reflections. ( RTF
  • Appendix ( RTF
  • Epistle to Quakers ( RTF
Miscellaneous Essays
  • African Slavery in America ( RTF
  • A Dialogue Between General Wolfe and General Gage in a Wood near Boston ( RTF
  • The Magazine in America ( RTF
  • Useful and Entertaining Hints ( RTF
  • New Anecdotes of Alexander the Great ( RTF
  • Reflections on the Death on Lord Clive. (

45. Doesn't Anyone Remember Tom Paine?
Doesn't Anyone Remember tom paine? By Robert L. Williams. Many Whattom paine did hate, and passionately, was Big Government. He
http://www.banned-books.com/truth-seeker/1993archive/120_1/ts201d.html

46. J. W. Skelton / Tom Paine: The Founding Father America Disowned
. . tom paine The Founding Father America Disowned. JW Skelton,Ph.D. What follows below are the Preface and Introduction to JW
http://www.cooperativeindividualism.org/skelton_tom_paine_intro.html
Tom Paine: The Founding Father America Disowned J. W. Skelton, Ph.D. What follows below are the Preface and Introduction to J.W. Skelton's book on Thomas Paine, published in 1992. Prof. Skelton provides an important addition to the academic literature dealing with the treatment Paine received by his contemporaries. The book was printed by Professional Press, Chapel Hill, NC.
PREFACE TO THIS EDITION
How ironic that a tyrant like Napoleon should have said of Paine: "A statue of gold ought to be erected to you in every city of the universe," whereas Paine's whilom friend, George Washington, not only remained silent but failed to lift a finger when Paine, not only an American citizen but a veritable catalyst in America's quest for independence, sought his assistance when languishing in the shadow of Robespierre's guillotine.
The reason for Washington's, and other Founding Fathers', silence is hardly a mystery: after achieving independence from the British, Paine assumed that conditions would be transformed in the newly independent states. That is to say, he assumed that there would he an actual revolution: a transformation of American society. Indeed, there was a basic, extensive fear among the new landowners, slaveholders, and assorted oligarchs that Paine's genuine advocacy of true democracy freedom and respect for each person regardless of gender, ethnicity, religion or social status would greatly endanger the

47. KUED: Tom Paine
Lake City radio personality Hans Petersen brings to life a celebrated figure fromAmerica's revolutionary period in KUEDChannel 7's production of tom paine.
http://www.kued.org/ourproductions/tompaine.html
In an intimate hour-long performance, Salt Lake City radio personality Hans Petersen brings to life a celebrated figure from America's revolutionary period in KUED-Channel 7's production of Tom Paine Produced by KUED's Elizabeth Searles and directed by Ann Gallenson, the program is a dramatic exploration of English-born pamphleteer Thomas Paine, who was instrumental in the success of the American Revolution. His pamphlet, "Common Sense," published on January 10, 1776 approximately a year after his arrival in America, called upon the colonies to break with Great Britain. The pamphlet went through 25 editions and reached hundreds of thousands of people at a time when the typical pamphlet only reached several thousand. Paine's vision and broad appeal, however, unnerved some American officials. His "The Age of Reason" published in 1794 after his participation in the French Revolution, destroyed his standing in America. Paine died in New York in 1809, impoverished and reviled as an atheist. Petersen has been fascinated with Paine for over 20 years. "He's been a hero and an inspiration to me," he said. "I'm doing this show because I'd like him to get credit for the job he did for America during the Revolution, which, due to various circumstances, has been withheld. He has been discredited and shuttled into obscurity."

48. OUP USA: Tom Paine And Revolutionary America
Basket 1977 In Stock S H Standard Higher Education Examination Copy Request OnlineHigher Education Comment Card, tom paine and Revolutionary America ERIC FONER
http://www.oup-usa.org/isbn/0195021827.html

History, American

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In Stock

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Online Higher Education Comment Card

Tom Paine and Revolutionary America
ERIC FONER, Columbia University
"Dr. Foner has been extraordinarily successful in recognizing Tom Paine for the complex person that he was....The book not only treats Paine as a participant in two revolutions from a fresh point of view, but it relates the man and his ideas to mass movements and the aspirations of the laboring classes. [It] is sure to be recognized as an authoritative account of the shaping of Anglo-American radical ideology."Richard B. Morris, Columbia University "The best book on Paine that I have read....Enlightening, interesting, and learned."Carl Bridenbaugh
348 pp.; figs.; 0-19-502182-7 Publication dates and prices are subject to change without notice. Prices are stated in US Dollars and valid only for sales transacted through the US website. Please note: some publications for sale at this website may not be available for purchase outside of the US. This page last updated Monday, 24-Mar-2003 04:36:51 EST

49. Tom Paine.com, A Public Interest Journal
choose license weblog. press. press releases. tom paine.com, A PublicInterest Journal. Monday, August 5, 2002. Fighting The Mickey
http://creativecommons.org/press/entry/3335
weblog press press releases

Tom Paine.com, A Public Interest Journal
Monday, August 5, 2002 ," by Michael May. posted by Neeru Paharia home news faq learn more ... policies
Except where otherwise noted , this site is
licensed under a Creative Commons License

50. Tom Paine
Photos of tom paine from Playboy Magazine November 1968 Caption reads Another O'Horgan hit, tom paine portrays its gero not only
http://www.orlok.com/hair/holding/prepost/tom/tompainePB.html
Photos of Tom Paine
from Playboy Magazine
November 1968
Caption reads: "Another O'Horgan hit, Tom Paine portrays its gero not only as a revolutionary pamphleteer but also as a wretched alcoholic finally destroyed by the Americans he helped free. The most memorable scene shows Paine (Rob Thirlield), drunk in a tavern, hallucinating a group of diaphinously draped tormentors who swirl about him in what O'Horgan calls "a Blake-like vision of innocence." Surrounding Paine, clockwise from bottom, are Monica Haufrecht, Gary Britton, Adriana Hines, Spalding Gray, Lucy Silvay and barbara Press. "I think of my work," says O'Horgan, "as kinetic sculpture. The stage needs to be expanded - rigid conceptions broken, a little blood allowed to flow through." That makes Common Sense.
To return to the Tom O'Horgan Pre Post Index click here
Or use you Back button to return to where you were.

51. Tom Paine Maru, By L. Neil Smith
tom paine Maru. by L. Neil Smith. The North American Confederacy reachesthe stars at last, its Prime Directive search out governments
http://www.lneilsmith.com/lns_tpm.html
Tom Paine Maru
by L. Neil Smith New York: A Del Rey Book Published by Ballantine Books, 1984 273 pages, mass-market paperback Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 84-90870 ISBN 0-345-29243-X First Edition: August 1984 Cover art by Rick Sternbach

52. Tom Paine's Revolution
tom paine's Revolution. by J. Brian Phillips. Advocates of freedom often despairat the political inertia that must be overcome to achieve our goals.
http://www.theadvocates.org/freeman/8904phil.html

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Tom Paine's Revolution
by J. Brian Phillips Advocates of freedom often despair at the political inertia that must be overcome to achieve our goals. At times, it seems as if the freedom movement is progressing too slowly to reverse current political trends. In this regard, the American Revolution provides an important lesson. Even after the Revolutionary War had begun, most Americans, including many colonial leaders, favored reconciliation with England. Most Americans still considered themselves to be loyal British subjects, and were willing to continue to do so, if only the King would correct his most grievous transgressions. In early 1776 more than eight months after the Battle of Lexington colonists suddenly began to support the idea of American independence. This dramatic change can be largely attributed to the work of one man: Thomas Paine. Paine was an undistinguished Englishman when he arrived in Philadelphia in November 1774 armed with several letters of introduction from Benjamin Franklin. Aided by Franklin's letters, Paine quickly found work as an editor and chief writer for Pennsylvania Magazine. Sharing Franklin's interest in science, Paine wrote about the newest inventions of the day, as well as political issues, but he remained a relatively obscure addition to the American melting pot. However, in January 1776 that began to change, when Paine anonymously published a pamphlet titled Common Sense. While the ideas expressed in the pamphlet weren't new, the approach and comprehensive treatment were.

53. Tom Paine Slough Thumbnail Index
tom paine Slough Thumbnail Index. tom paine Slough Egeria Coverage Estimates. tompaine Slough Egeria Coverage Estimates, Egeria Acreage, % Egeria Coverage.
http://romberg.sfsu.edu/~egeria/Tom_Paine_Slough/tom_paine_slough.htm
Tom Paine Slough Thumbnail Index September 1997 Images (partial) August 1999 Images August 2000 Images Tom Paine Slough ... Coverage Estimates September 1997 Images - 2 meter resolution Tom Paine Slough H10 Tom Paine Slough H11 Tom Paine Slough I11 August 1999 Images - 2 meter resolution Tom Paine Slough H10 Tom Paine Slough H11 Tom Paine Slough I11 Tom Paine Slough J11 ... Tom Paine Slough J12 August 2000 Images - 2 meter resolution Tom Paine Slough H10 Tom Paine Slough H11 Tom Paine Slough I11 Tom Paine Slough J11 ... Tom Paine Slough J12 Tom Paine Slough Egeria Coverage Estimates Egeria Acreage Egeria Coverage

54. Dear Tom Paine

http://ccwf.cc.utexas.edu/~govind/stories/tompaine.html
dear tom paine
April 21, 1999 Dear Tom Paine: I am a member of a 20th-century writing club in Austin, Texas (when you died, Texas was owned by Spain. It's now part of the United States.). I am writing this letter to you for a writing project. A reply is not expected, but it certainly would be a treat! I was wondering, if you saw what has happened to the United States and to democracy in the 300 years since your death, what you would think of all this. Do you ever regret that you started the revolution that led to the creation of the United States of America? Do you think that it might have been better just to leave things the way they werekings instead of presidents, earls instead of senators, lords instead of representatives? Probably not, but it sometimes seems like an attractive alternative, doesn't it? When you wrote your pamphlet on independence, Common Sense , did you think that things would become like this, or that people would keep things simple? After all, you said that "Government, even in its best state, is but a necessary evil." Did you think that people would still remember your little pamphlet and what you said more than 300 years afterward? I think that you're one of the most interesting people who took part in the Revolutionary War. You weren't a dashing soldier like George Washington or the Marquis de Lafayette, or a great statesman like Benjamin Franklin or Thomas Jefferson, but you knew how to talk to the common people. Your pamphlet was every bit as important to the Revolutionary War as the Declaration of Independenceor, for that matter, George Washington's famous crossing of the Delaware river. In fact, by writing

55. Common Sense #615: God Save The Queen?
tom paine, 1776 Paul Jacob. Subscribe to Common Sense! This radio program is entitledCommon Sense, a title I borrowed from my longdeceased friend tom paine.
http://www.termlimits.org/Press/Common_Sense/cs615.html
To comment on
this installment of

Common Sense,

visit our
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God Save the Queen?
U.S. Term Limits Daily Radio Commentary #615
Release Date: June 24, 2002
Listen to Paul Jacob
read this commentary
Quite a hubbub about what's-her-name. The Queen of England is celebrating her 50th year on the throne. But I can't get very excited about this jubilee event trumpeting the British monarchy. Oh, sure, Elizabeth seems like a nice enough lady and all that, but I can't abide kings and queens, royalty of any kind, the very idea of it. This radio program is entitled Common Sense, a title I borrowed from my long-deceased friend Tom Paine. Tom Paine's pamphlets "Common Sense" and "The Crisis" were widely circulated throughout the colonies during the American Revolutionary War and kept the public's morale high. Many historians say he did as much as any man could with paper and ink to win America's freedom. Paine hated all monarchy everywhere in the world. Especially King George III. He once called King George a "stupid, stubborn, worthless, brutish man." And Paine wrote that "Even brutes do not devour their young, nor savages make war upon their families." Paine agreed with the sentiment from the French Revolution, "Kings are in the moral order what monsters are in the physical." is monstrous.

56. MyRSS: Tom Paine: Take On The News Channel Information
tom paine Take On The News Channel Information. Basic Information. Page URL,http//www.tompaine.com/take_on_the_news/. Status, Waiting for next update.
http://myrss.com/f/t/o/tompaine7epmv81.html
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Tom Paine: Take On The News Channel Information
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57. The Onion A.V. Club | Scar Vegas | Tom Paine
The 10 stories collected in tom paine's Scar Vegas may not be as political as hisfortuitous namesake might imply, but a theme of imperialism—one of the most
http://www.theonionavclub.com/reviews/words/words_s/scarvegas01.html
features cinema music video ... justify Volume Issue words Tom Paine
Scar Vegas
(Harcourt)

Whether directly or indirectly, much of modern literature deals with notions of the mysterious and exotic "other." Sometimes it exists simply as a red herring, sometimes as just a necessity of any narrative-driving conflict. But as cultural awareness increases, so do the number of stories chronicling the intersection of two cultures, each the "other" to the other. The 10 stories collected in Tom Paine's Scar Vegas Media Kit Contact Us

58. Selected Work Of Tom Paine And Citizen Tom Paine, The : Ward And Massey Librarie
paine, Thomas and Howard Fast. Title Selected Work of tom paine andCitizen tom paine, The. Publisher New York, Random House, 1945.
http://www.mises.org/wardlibrary_detail.asp?control=340

59. Edmund Burke, Tom Paine, And Generational Rights.
A. A Pervasive concern for future generations Edmund Burke, Thomas paine. Thomaspaine penned his highly popular Rights of Man as a response to Burke.
http://www.conlaw.org/Intergenerational-II-2.htm
Intergenerational Justice in the United States Constitution,
The Stewardship Doctrine:
II. The Intergenerational Philosophy of the Founders and Their Contemporaries
A. A Pervasive concern for future generations - Edmund Burke, Thomas Paine
One interesting way to gauge the prevalence of the intergenerational mindset during the late 18th century is to study the arguments put forth by commentators of the day on a prominent issue such as the French Revolution. Both the proponents and the detractors of that revolution chose to frame their arguments in terms of generational rights. In his popular Reflections on the Revolution in France , Edmund Burke decried France's departure from monarchy on generational entitlement grounds. In a famously eloquent passage, he describes society as a sacred partnership: ". . . a partnership not only between those who are living, but between those who are living, those who are dead, and those who are to be born. Each contract of each particular state is but a clause in the great primeval contract of eternal society." Later in the same piece, Burke would phrase his concerns in the language of estate preservation, a language with surprisingly modern environmental overtones:

60. Tom Paine, November 29, 2000
Closing the Lights on the Statue of Liberty The Latest Attempt to Stop ImmigrationEdward T. O'Donnell is an assistant professor of history at Hunter College
http://www.projectusa.org/press/nov99/tompaine.com-11-29-99.html

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