Hi... I've just been reading book reviews on "Human Events"... in particular Michael Savage's "Liberalism is a mental disorder", Ann Coulter's "How to talk to a liberal (if you must)", and Thomas Wood's "The Politically incorrect guide to American History"
.... Probably some of the most pestiferous bile I've ever sampled.... (although some of Wood's claims might be true... I'm not an expert on American history).
How do these polemics sit in american political culture, are they taken seriously? They sound like the kind of stuff teenagers would be reading. And I thought Michael Moore and John Pilger were bad journalists....
Being an outsider, I find the left/right divide quite interesting.... there really is no serious debate over socialism in the US; the closest the US came to socialism was the New Deal. Welfare statism is not socialism. I think that perhaps the ad hominems, the hyperbole and the enormous clout given to the cultural side of the right/left debate in the states is due in part to the fact that the differences aren't really that great and that there is not a great deal of change at stake. Each side of the debate seems to want to paint the opposition as extremist, despite the incredibly moderate differences that exist in mainstream US Politics. Real left/right divisions are not a problem that the US, or Australia have to deal with, they are in essence European problems... and even there it is not what it used to be.
I'm interested to understand this political culture, because it seems to be on the ascent in Australia as well. The hystericization of politics of which these books are symptomatic seems to me that there is a real danger of extremist politics becoming more of a force in US Politics.
Oh, and please, for the love of god stop calling leftists "Liberals"... it's just plain ridiculous.
For the record, I'm not making a statement against conservative journalists in general... there are reasonable ones out there I'm sure. I watch the Newshour everyday on SBS and I find the Shields and Brooks debates quite informative and balanced. David Brooks is a good pundit, in my opinion, despite his partisanship... I can respect him because he doesn't resort to emotion and actually tries to properly argue a point.
.... Probably some of the most pestiferous bile I've ever sampled.... (although some of Wood's claims might be true... I'm not an expert on American history).
How do these polemics sit in american political culture, are they taken seriously? They sound like the kind of stuff teenagers would be reading. And I thought Michael Moore and John Pilger were bad journalists....
Being an outsider, I find the left/right divide quite interesting.... there really is no serious debate over socialism in the US; the closest the US came to socialism was the New Deal. Welfare statism is not socialism. I think that perhaps the ad hominems, the hyperbole and the enormous clout given to the cultural side of the right/left debate in the states is due in part to the fact that the differences aren't really that great and that there is not a great deal of change at stake. Each side of the debate seems to want to paint the opposition as extremist, despite the incredibly moderate differences that exist in mainstream US Politics. Real left/right divisions are not a problem that the US, or Australia have to deal with, they are in essence European problems... and even there it is not what it used to be.
I'm interested to understand this political culture, because it seems to be on the ascent in Australia as well. The hystericization of politics of which these books are symptomatic seems to me that there is a real danger of extremist politics becoming more of a force in US Politics.
Oh, and please, for the love of god stop calling leftists "Liberals"... it's just plain ridiculous.
For the record, I'm not making a statement against conservative journalists in general... there are reasonable ones out there I'm sure. I watch the Newshour everyday on SBS and I find the Shields and Brooks debates quite informative and balanced. David Brooks is a good pundit, in my opinion, despite his partisanship... I can respect him because he doesn't resort to emotion and actually tries to properly argue a point.
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