MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
Who knew there were still thoughtful conservatives? Or at least one of them?
Comments
"Thoughtful" is a funny word to use. There are a number of brilliant (if misguided) conservatives who came up with politico-economic theories (that people once called "neo-liberal"). Think Milton Friedman. There are also a number of cunning conservatives who figured out a strategy for selling these ideas to the masses. Think Karl Rove.
Samuel Goldman just seems a bit naive--a theorist who drank the kool-aid that the strategists were selling. And now he suddenly woke and realized that it was all just a dream.
by Michael Wolraich on Mon, 09/26/2016 - 11:13am
Well here is the link you wished to cite:
http://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2016/9/22/12892682/donald-trump-samuel-goldman
Again, as I have warned others, double link it!
A good link by the by.
Oh and canuck, there are no thoughtful conservatives anymore.
hahahaha
Just kidding
by Richard Day on Mon, 09/26/2016 - 3:18pm
Thanks for the link fix, Richard. It has amazed me for at least a decade how the atomized ghost of the Republican Party continues to succeed electorally, especially at the state level, while lacking a philosophic core. (I know, pandering, gerrymandering and vote suppression.) The Donald Trump fiasco has to be the final straw, right? Liberals keep pointing out the obvious -- that the GOP needs to reinvent itself, coalesce around some vaguely positive vision -- but no one seems able to grab the dangling reins. That an aggressively ignorant, totally unfit, near-incoherent moron should be the one to come closest is truly frightening. So even baby steps out of denial are welcome.
by acanuck on Thu, 09/29/2016 - 12:32pm