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Richard Butler

    Father Richard Butler was known for his profound work with youth and his academic exploration of philosophy. His writing career included insightful examinations of the thought of George Santayana, whom he knew personally. Butler's books delved into the existential questions of his era, and his final work offered a critical analysis of societal and ecclesiastical shifts. His writing often stemmed from theological reflection, aiming to explore the spiritual condition of modern individuals.

    Saddam Defiant
    Towns on the Wild Atlantic Way
    Building the Irish Courthouse and Prison
    Fatal Choice
    • Fatal Choice

      • 200 pages
      • 7 hours of reading

      We continue to face a choice with respect to nuclear weapons – either to move safely towards their elimination or to remain their victim. A forty-year effort to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons is breaking down, and the likely acquisition of these weapons by terrorist groups is growing. In Fatal Choice, Richard Butler, a well-known and respected voice on the subject of nuclear weapons, argues that we are poised on the verge of a second and much more threatening nuclear arms race than the one experienced throughout the Cold War. This threat is clearly reflected in nuclear weapons development by India, Pakistan, Iraq, and North Korea. The revival by the Bush administration of missile defense will not deal with the problem but worsen it. Butler outlines the steps that can be taken to give effect to the right choice on nuclear weapons.

      Fatal Choice
    • Building the Irish Courthouse and Prison

      • 652 pages
      • 23 hours of reading

      This book is the first national history of the building of some of Ireland's most important historic public buildings. Focusing on the former assize courthouses and county gaols, it tells a political history of how they were built, who paid for them, and the effects they had on urban development in Ireland.

      Building the Irish Courthouse and Prison
    • A fully illustrated guidebook to the many beautiful towns and places of interest to visit along the Wild Atlantic Way.

      Towns on the Wild Atlantic Way
    • Saddam Defiant

      • 288 pages
      • 11 hours of reading

      Richard Butler, the retiring head of UNSCOM, the organisation set up by the UN after the Gulf War to monitor and isolate Saddam Hussein's military capacity, on how he tried to deal forcefully with Saddam while never certain that he had a fully committed UN behind him. Although Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in 1990 had been the only instance since the founding of the UN of a member state seeking to absorb another member state, the UN was never united in how to deal with the aggressor. Butler tells how his staff's efforts to carry out inspections were met by force. He tells of his meetings with Saddam's leading lieutenant, Tariq Aziz, who lied even in the face of incontrovertible evidence over biological testing and other weaponry. Butler also gives his views of the UN, in particular the activities of secretary-General Annan, with whom Butler was increasingly at odds.

      Saddam Defiant