Description |
214 pages |
Contents |
Introduction: The Political Argument Revived -- 1. The Left after Communism -- 2. The Fate of the Marxist Idea -- 3. The Religious Roots of Radicalism -- 4. The Meaning of Left and Right -- 5. A Radical Holocaust -- 6. A Conservative Hope |
Summary |
The Politics of Bad Faith brings into the open the refusal of the political Left - including those who describe themselves as liberals - to learn from the past, specifically from the checkered history of progressive movements for social justice and equal outcomes. This refusal shapes agendas that Horowitz describes as part of a new "cold war" against America - a culture war that pits "progressives" and "multi-culturalists" against America's founding principles and ideas. Horowitz traces the radical project from its origins in nineteenth-century socialism to the disastrous excesses of such current "progressive" causes as political correctness, radical feminism, racial preferences, and what he describes as the nihilistic campaign to "deconstruct" the American idea itself |
Notes |
Includes index |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 189-200) and index |
Subject |
Conservatism -- United States.
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Radicalism -- United States.
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SUBJECT |
United States -- Politics and government -- 1945-1989. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85140467
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LC no. |
98021614 |
ISBN |
0684850230 |
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