The Good Fight

The Good Fight
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Why Liberals--and Only Liberals--Can Win the War on Terror and Make America Great Again

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فرمت کتاب

audiobook

تاریخ انتشار

2006

نویسنده

David Slavin

ناشر

HarperAudio

شابک

9780061205743
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
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نقد و بررسی

AudioFile Magazine
Beinart's title makes some bold claims, but his book is hardly a litany of the Angry Left. The accessible and informative text is ably brought along by narrator David Slavin. This is a case in which the reader's tone and style match the text well. No matter what your political persuasion, Beinart's book deserves a listen because the research is good, the arguments are cogent, and the text is snappy and well put-together. Production is also good, with high audibility in a noisy car. And the CDs are divided into logical chapters, rather than split every 3 minutes, as is usually the case. That convenience gives this audiobook extra merit points. T.F. (c) AudioFile 2006, Portland, Maine

Publisher's Weekly

April 10, 2006
This stimulating manifesto calls for a liberalism that battles Islamist totalitarianism as forthrightly as Cold War liberals opposed Communist totalitarianism. Former New Republic
editor Beinart assails both an anti-imperialist left that rejects the exercise of U.S. power and the Bush administration's assumption of America's moral infallibility. America shouldn't shrink from fighting terrorism, despite civilian casualties and moral compromises, he contends, but its antitotalitarian agenda must be restrained by world opinion, international institutions and liberal self-doubt, while bolstered by economic development aid abroad and economic equality at home. Beinart offers an incisive historical account of the conflicts straining postwar liberalism and of the contradictions, hubris and incompetence of Bush's actions. He's sketchier on what a liberal war on terror entails—perhaps a cross between Clinton's Balkan humanitarian interventions and the Afghanistan operation, with U.S. forces descending on Muslim backwaters to destroy jihadists and build nations. The tragic conundrum of a fighting liberalism that avoids enmeshment in a Vietnam or Iraq (the author now repudiates his early support of the Iraq war) is never adequately addressed. Still, Beinart's provocative analysis could stir much-needed debate on the direction of liberal foreign policy.




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