LizzieMaine
Bartender
- Messages
- 33,734
- Location
- Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
Making a vast array of literature and knowledge available to hundreds of millions people, many who otherwise couldn't have afforded it, is his legacy.
Whether there was some bunk among the books or the question whether Haldeman did or didn't evade taxes, pales in comparison to this colossal feat.
That's pretty much the size of it. In an America where the majority of the public hadn't gone beyond the eighth grade, his publications were of immeasurable value. The political and the sexuality-oriented material may have aroused the most controversy, but the breadth of his list was extraordinary -- and even more so, he made a point of publishing and distributing material with which he himself disagreed, feeling that all ideas and all beliefs were worthy of discussion.
Those who have a picture of Golden Era America in which only a narrow range of narrow ideas were ever discussed should look up a "Little Blue Books" ad, and see for themselves the range of information that was available to anyone with a dollar and a coupon from a copy of "Popular Mechanics."
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