Parables from (a not quite) Paradise, NV 89154
V. 1 The Nevada Public Radio Commentaries
by
Book Details
About the Book
Parables from (a not quite) Paradise include 30 essays, most of which were first presented on KNPR, Nevada Public Radio. The essays allow Paradise resident (mailing address Las Vegas) Bill Thompson to beat his heart with praise for nation as well as the Running Rebels Basketball team, and to lift his brow of scorn for politicians who refuse to wrestle with fiscal problems and social maladies while hiding behind false concerns over bogeymen such as the nuclear waste issue. He raises the loveable sloth of the Amazon jungle to a pedestal where it can serve as a model for world peace. He decries casinos and unions for sitting silent as workers were laid off after the 9-11 tragedy, while he gives kudos to entrepreneurs Steve Wynn and George Maloof who kept building for the future. Thompson lauds the advantages of capitalism but advocates a government take-over of a local electric utility. He criticizes state officials and casino executives for neglecting compulsive gamblers, but he supports a limited lottery for Nevada. He saves his most cutting criticism for his "pet peeve," The Nevada grocery store casinos. The Parables from (a not quite) Paradise end where he began--in an autobiographical description of his family’s arrival as new residents of Paradise Valley in 1980.
About the Author
William N. Thompson, a native of Ann Arbor, Michigan, is a Professor of Public Administration at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV). He joined the faculty of UNLV in 1980, after serving on faculties of Southeast Missouri State and Western Michigan Universities. While on a sabbatical leave in 1986-1987 he studied casino gambling throughout Europe and also taught with the Troy State University European Division. His Bachelors and Masters degrees in Political Science were awarded by Michigan State University, and he earned his Ph.D., also in Political Science, from the University of Missouri in Columbia. He held a Public Administration fellowship and worked with the Pension Administration in the United States Department of Labor, and he also was a candidate for the Michigan legislature, and he held the elective post of Supervisor (chief administrator) of Kalamazoo Charter Township in Michigan. His areas of study have included state constitutional reform, and public policy with emphasis on the environment, public pension reform, and gambling. He served as a research associate with the National Association of Attorneys General and wrote his doctoral dissertation on the political ambitions of state attorneys general. He lives in Las Vegas with Kay, his wife of 38 years. They have a daughter and two sons.