Friday, Mark discussed the antics of one Michael “Savage” Weiner.
Here’s a compilation of Michael “Savage” Weiner’s published books. Tell me, how does one make a transformation from writing the first type of book to the other?
Books as Michael Weiner
* Plant a Tree, New York : Collier Books, 1975
* Bugs in Peanut Butter, Boston : Little, Brown, 1976.
* Man’s Useful Plants, New York: Macmillan. 1976.
* Earth Medicine, Earth Food, New York : Macmillan Pub. Co., 1980.
* The way of the skeptical nutritionist, New York : Macmillan, 1981.
* Nutrition Against Aging, Bantam books, 1983.
* Secrets of Fijian Medicine, Quantum Books, 1983.
* “Vital Signs(the book)”, Avant Books, 1983
* Getting Off Cocaine, Avon Books, 1984.
* Maximum Immunity, Boston : Houghton Mifflin, 1986.
* Reducing the risk of Alzheimer’s, New York : Stein and Day, 1987.
* The Complete Book of Homeopathy, Garden City Park, N.Y. : Avery Pub., 1989.
* The Herbal Bible, San Rafael, San Rafael, CA : Quantum Books, 1992.
* Healing children naturally, San Rafael, CA : Quantum Books, 1993.
* Herbs that heal : prescription for herbal healing, Mill Valley, CA : Quantum Books, 1994.
* The Antioxidant Cookbook, Mill Valley, CA : Quantum Books, 1995.
Books as Michael Savage
* The Savage Nation, WND Books, 2003.
* The Enemy Within, Nelson Current, 2004.
* Liberalism is a Mental Disorder, Nelson Current, 2005.
* The Political Zoo, Nelson Current, 2006.












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Please note that “Plant a Tree” and “Bugs in Peanut Butter” were written before “Getting Off Cocaine.”
I had said to my brother a couple of years ago, that I don’t know where this schmuck sits are far as conservatism stands. I truly think that Weiner has found a niche that he can exploit for monetary gain. His earlier lifestyle reads like a whose who of how to live a liberal life. Any true conservative, I feel would not subject themselves to living in San Fransicko, the mecca of liberalism. I think Weiner came to the realization that he can make a damn good buck doing what he does now, and can hide his true liberal ideology.
Weiner is a used car salesman. He sounds great when you first hear him, but after a while, you get the feeling something isn’t right. I’m not going to knock a guy for becoming a born again conservative, but I get the impression he hasn’t truly given in to the power of the right.
Mark is right for calling him out.
I am glad that Mark Levin came out and blasted Weiner- I disliked Weiner from the first moment I heard his bullying blowhard’s voice.
Can anyone tell me if I am going too far when I take it that Weiner went skinny-dipping in Fiji with Allen Ginsberg? Or was the befriending of Ginsberg and the skinny dipping a seperate pair of issues?
I did not know that Weiner was so inconsistent on his political stances- alternately loving and hating the President and Republicans in general. And the “kissy-face” interview with Schmuckie Schumer- now I really regard him as a menace!
Back in my college days I went to go see Allen Ginsberg speak- and after the performance (which included his other hit, “America”- in which he improvised a few kind words for the political prisoners du jour)- after the performance he stood in front of Graham Chapel and signed autographs- for anyone who would pick up the Communist tabloid that his buddies were handing out!
I was an English major, and I was intrigued by the autograph of a famous poet like this, but I didn’t want to touch the red rag upon which the autograph would have been.
I just walked on by, and I have never regretted it. And I had gone in as a genuinely interested and generally sympathetic listener!
I hope that the rest of America will get the truth about Weiner, and be as “turned off” by him as I was by Ginsberg.
I think that his 1984 book may really have been titled “Getting Off On Cocaine”, he certainly exhibits most of the behavior of a drug addict. I also see that he’s moved from “Bugs in peanut butter” to “Bugs in Head”.
Savage definately has lost it.
Savage is the rude guest at a party. If he’s being ignored, he just increases his volume.
If he’s still being ignored, he says something so outrageous that no one can help but pay attention.
Afterwards, the guests ask, “Who WAS that guy?”
Thoughful hosts wouldn’t invite him back.