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The Strange Death of Republican America
by Sidney Blumenthal
2 Reviews
Publisher: Union Square Press
Publish Date:Apr 1, 2008
Hardcover, 352 pages
List Price:$24.95
Member Price:$10.00
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Summary |
A superbly drawn portrait of a political machine in inexorable decline.
Sidney Blumenthal — trenchant analyst, best-selling author and senior adviser to former President Bill Clinton (and more recently, to Hillary) — offers a penetrating journalistic and historical examination of the ongoing collapse of Republicanism. Closely charting the Party’s imploding reputation in America and the world, as well as the potential consequences of George W. Bush’s radical presidency for the 2008 election, The Strange Death of Republican America will be required reading for anyone interested in politics and concerned about the fate of the nation. In these essays and opinion columns written by Blumenthal over the past few years for The Guardian of London and salon.com, along with a new and stimulating introduction, Blumenthal provides a unifying and overarching perspective on the Bush years.
Blumenthal scrutinizes the past and present state of the Republican Party, which he believes portends the incipient demise of their vaunted political machine and the Republican era since the Nixon administration. The issues on the table range from the legacy of Nixon’s imperial presidency and its influence on Dick Cheney to Karl Rove’s failed strategy for political realignment, as well as conflicts within the military and intelligence communities over Bush’s policies and the underlying political shifts that are demonstrably weakening the once-strong foundations of Republican philosophy and governance.
These essays have the cumulative effect of an irresistible factual and historical tide — a portrait of a party in self-destructive decline that will grab the attention of anyone fascinated by the world of politics.
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Progressive Putdown: American Grit It is possible I’ve read books worse than Tony Blankley’s American Grit: What It Will Take To Survive And Win In The 21st Century, but it is hard to recall any of them right now. This slim volume – 188 pages of actual argument, large type on every page, ample white space between every line – would make for a very nice present to a very dim conservative who you wanted to play a practical joke on. Blankley is a syndicated columnist who served as press secretary to Newt Gingrich and speechwriter to Ronald Reagan. He is a man who knows quite a bit more about launching political insurrections than I do. Even so, I’ve rarely heard of ideological renewal – much less a strategy for 21st century survival -- emerging quite so haphazardly. Blankley’s vision for the future is the sort of thing that would hardly withstand the rigors of a shoutfest on the McLaughlin Report. Which is fitting, in a sense, because that’s where it comes from. “It never occurred to me precisely where my political philosophy was moving until an appearance on the McLaughlin Group television show a few years ago,” writes Blankley. He goes on to relate a particularly illuminating exchange he had in which McLaughlin demanded to know the agenda of “neo-cons” like Blankley. “I’m not a neo-con,” Blankley replied. “Well, what are you?” asked McLaughlin. What comes next is a direct quote from the book: “With the red light of the television camera focused on me, I paused and thought for a second or two, and then more or less blurted out, ‘I’m a nationalist!’” ![]() “That ended the conversation,” recalls Blankley, “but only started me thinking more about ... continue reading > |



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Sidney Blumenthal is senior adviser to Senator Hillary Clinton and served as assistant and senior adviser to President Bill Clinton. He has recently been a regular columnist for The Guardian of London and Salon.com, and was earlier a staff writer for The New Yorker, The Washington Post, and The New Republic. He is executive producer of Taxi to the Dark Side, a film on the Bush administration's torture policy that won the 2008 Academy Award for the Best Documentary Feature, and was awarded the prize for best documentary at the 2007 Tribeca Film Festival. Blumenthal is the author of many books, including The Rise of the Counterestablishment: The Conservative Ascent to Political Power, The Clinton Wars, and How Bush Rules: Chronicles of a Radical Regime. He is a Senior Fellow at the New York University Center on Law and Security.

