Mark Levin–Liberty and Tyranny: A Conservative Manifesto–Videos
Rush Limbaugh Interviews Mark Levin Part 1
Rush Limbaugh Interviews Mark Levin Part 2
Rush Limbaugh Interviews Mark Levin Part 3
Rush Limbaugh Interviews Mark Levin Part 4
Liberty and Tyranny by Mark R Levin Audiobook
Liberty and Tyranny by Mark R Levin 02
Liberty and Tyranny by Mark R Levin 03
Liberty and Tyranny by Mark R Levin 04
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Liberty and Tyranny by Mark R Levin 06
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Mark Levin on Sean Hannity Show
Mark Levin Discusses President Obama
Background Articles and Videos
Address by Mark Levin, Pt. 1
Address by Mark Levin, Pt. 2
Address by Mark Levin, Pt. 3
Address by Mark Levin, Pt. 4
Address by Mark Levin, Pt. 5
Address by Mark Levin, Pt. 6
Address by Mark Levin, Pt. 7
Mark Levin Interview on C-SPAN (Part 1)
Mark Levin Interview on C-SPAN (Part 2)
Mark Levin Interview on C-SPAN (Part 3)
Mark Levin Interview on C-SPAN (Part 4)
Mark Levin Interview on C-SPAN (Part 5)
Mark Levin Interview on C-SPAN (Part 6)
Mark Levin – Constitution vs. Obama Redistributio of Wealth
Mark Levin ~ The Time is Now (Part 1 of 3)
Mark Levin ~ The Time is Now (Part 2 of 3)
Mark Levin ~ The Time is Now (Part 2 of 3)
the best of mark levin.
Rush interviews Levin PT1
Rush interviews Levin PT2
Marl levin
“…Mark Reed Levin (born September 21, 1957) is an American radio host, lawyer, author, and political commentator who served in the Reagan administration. He is the host of The Mark Levin Show, a nationally-syndicated talk show that airs throughout the United States, and the President of Landmark Legal Foundation. He is the author of multiple bestselling books and a contributor to various other media outlets.
Mark R. Levin grew up in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and holds a B.A. from Temple University, where he was graduated Phi Beta Kappa and magna cum laude. Levin also earned a JD from the Temple University Beasley School of Law.
Beginning in 1981, Levin served as advisor to several members of President Ronald Reagan’s Cabinet, eventually becoming Associate Director of Presidential Personnel and ultimately Chief of Staff to Attorney General Edwin Meese; Levin also served as Deputy Assistant Secretary for Elementary and Secondary Education at the U.S. Department of Education, and Deputy Solicitor of the U.S. Department of the Interior.
He has practiced law in the private sector, and is president of Landmark Legal Foundation, a conservative public interest law firm founded in 1976 and based in Leesburg, Virginia.
Levin has participated in the Freedom Concerts, an annual benefit concert to aid the families of fallen soldiers, and he uses his radio program to promote the concerts.[1][2] Levin is also involved with Troopathon, a charity which sends care packages to soldiers serving overseas.[3]
In 2001, the American Conservative Union awarded Levin its Ronald Reagan Award.[4][5]
Levin began his broadcast career as a guest on conservative talk radio programs. For many years he was a frequent contributor of legal opinions to The Rush Limbaugh Show, where Limbaugh referred to him on-air as “F. Lee Levin,” a tongue-in-cheek reference to the famous defense attorney F. Lee Bailey. He was also a contributor to The Sean Hannity Show and eventually got a radio slot of his own, on WABC, following Sean Hannity’s program. Hannity has nicknamed Mark Levin “The Great One.” Levin and Hannity remain frequent contributors to each other’s programs, often calling in and facetiously referring to each other as “Doctor Hannity” and “Doctor Levin.”
Levin began his radio hosting career in 2002 as a Sunday afternoon host on WABC. His radio show, a mix of political and social commentary from a conservative point of view, covers legal issues in some detail, including decisions of the U.S. Supreme Court. Levin follows the traditional talk radio model of taking listener calls throughout the show. In the fall of 2003, his show filled the 6-8 p.m. (ET) time slot. As of February 2, 2009, his show was expanded to three hours, namely, 6-9 p.m.[6]
As of 2006, his show is syndicated by Citadel Media (formerly known as ABC Radio Networks) on over 150 stations as well as on the XM America Right and SIRIUS Patriot channels. Levin’s show has been rated number one in its time slot in New York, Chicago, Detroit, Dallas – Fort Worth and Washington, D.C.[6] According to Talkers Magazine, The Mark Levin Show is tied for the fourth most-listened to talk show with The Laura Ingraham Show on commercial radio in the United States, with more than 5.5 million listeners weekly.[7]
Levin occasionally has guests on his show, including Republican politicians, conservative pundits and commentators, and a variety of entertainers such as Jackie Mason, Jon Voight, and Clint Walker.
Levin is supportive of the military and civilian first responders, and ends nearly every radio show saying “We salute the men and women of the armed forces, policemen, firefighters, and emergency personnel.” He regularly plays the themes for the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines, Coast Guard, and Merchant Marines. He plays “America the Beautiful” as performed by Ray Charles every Friday.
Levin’s show has garnered criticism from moderate conservatives. New York Times columnist David Brooks labeled Levin as one of a number of “people I consider loons and harmful for America”.[8][9] Former George W. Bush speechwriter David Frum has emerged as a leading critic of Levin[10][11] and repeatedly criticized Levin’s approach as an example of right-wing broadcasters who have adopted an angry tone and posed a negative influence on both conservative politics and civil discourse.[12][13] Mark McKinnon, former advisor to George W. Bush and John McCain, has condemned Levin’s “jaw-dropping hate language about the President” and accused him of “reveling in the President’s failures”.[14]
For his part, Levin dismisses Frum, Brooks and others as “phony conservatives”[15] and “ineffective lightweights who shoot spitballs at conservatives[16]. Levin believes that Frum, Brooks, et al. are used by liberal pundits and organizations[17] who try to portray them as the real face of conservatism[18] in order to make Levin and others look like extremists.[19]
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Levin
Mark Levin’s Liberty and Tyranny: A Conservative Manifesto
http://www.americanthinker.com/2009/03/mark_levins_liberty_and_tyrann.html
Book Review: Liberty and Tyranny A Conservative Manifesto
“…In his New York Times best selling book, Levin provides two key weapons for anybody who considers himself a conservative. Firstly, he outlines this history of what he identifies as a shift towards Statism. While some might read Levin and claim that he is a bit of a conspiracy theorist or that he is blowing things out of proportion (for example when, in Chapter 8, he seems to make the case that the EPA’s banning of DDT wasn’t about ‘protecting the environment’ but was, instead, about controlling the world, even if it meant allowing folks in Africa to die), I read it as being a terrifyingly honest and accurate look at the realities of the world as we know it.
The history of ’statism’ that he provides is unbelievably eye opening. BUT, the two most important chapters in the book are on the Constitution and on Federalism. In his chapter on the Constitution, Levin reminds all of us of the importance of our Constitution. He provides a short explanation of the biggest lie that Liberals and Statists use: that the Constitution is a ‘living breathing’ document. It is not, as Levin and others have pointed out, living and breathing; it is undying and never changing. It is the bedrock for our Nation.
Levin uses the Constitution chapter to lead into his discussion of Federalism and it’s importance. The obvious argument in favor of Federalism always has been the “experiment” function–the idea that a state can examine and put into practice various ideas in order to find the best and most effective strategy before implementing that idea at the National level. But Levin also introduces readers to a less discussed function of the Federal system: mobility. This is not something that is taught in school or in college, nor is it something I had considered before, but Liberty and Tyranny makes an excellent case for this function. Simply, Federalism allows the citizen to move from state to state to avoid or to find state-level governmental functions that best suit each individual. The most obvious example is the exodus from New York City of such leading New Yorkers as Rush Limbaugh in response to the ever-rising tax-rates the city imposes. …”
Mark Levin’s new book ‘Liberty & Tyranny’ is a timely bestseller
“…Instead, Levin is channeling the old fashioned language of conservative icons like Burke and Kirk, Buckley and Chambers, and the stirring, majestic cadences of the Founders and The Federalist.
Liberty & Tyranny is actually a stylistically more challenging read than Conscience of a Conservative (1960), the last book widely touted as a popular (but note: not necessarily populist) conservative manifesto.
This passage early on in Liberty & Tyranny is a typical example of Levin’s style throughout:
“The Statist veils his pursuits in moral indignation, intoning in high dudgeon the injustices and inequities of liberty and life itself, for which only he can provide justice and bring a righteous resolution. And when the resolution proves elusive, as it undoubtedly does (…) the Statist demands even more authority to wring out the imperfections of mankind’s existence. Unconstrained by constitutional prohibitions, what is left to limit the Statist’s ambitions but his own moral compass, which has already led him astray?”
Ninety-nine times out of a hundred, a man (and it is invariably a man) who tries to write like that is a geek and a crank who isn’t as smart as he thinks he is, for whom “a little knowledge is a dangerous thing”, and the results are cringe worthy. But incredibly, Levin pulls it off.
And Levin’s apparent confidence that “dumbing down” his message for our supposedly “stupider” times has paid off. Folks have lined up for hours at Levin’s book signings. It doesn’t hurt that Liberty & Tyranny was released just before the Tea Party movement took off; those activists are Levin’s readers and listeners, as became apparent during that disastrous CNN reporter’s encounter with one Tea Party attendee, who, it’s safe to guess, got his Lincoln stuff from pages 93-94 of Levin’s book. …”
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