
The Corrosion of Conservatism
Why I Left the Right
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Narrated by:
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Max Boot
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By:
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Max Boot
Warning that the Trump presidency presages America’s decline, the political commentator recounts his extraordinary journey from lifelong Republican to vehement Trump opponent. As nativism, xenophobia, vile racism, and assaults on the rule of law threaten the very fabric of our nation, The Corrosion of Conservatism presents an urgent defense of American democracy.
Pronouncing Mexican immigrants to be “rapists”, Donald Trump announced his 2015 presidential bid, causing Max Boot to think he was watching a dystopian science-fiction movie. The respected conservative historian couldn’t fathom that the party of Lincoln, Roosevelt, and Reagan could endorse such an unqualified reality-TV star. Yet, the Twilight Zone episode that Boot believed he was watching created an ideological dislocation so shattering that Boot’s transformation from Republican foreign policy adviser to celebrated anti-Trump columnist becomes the dramatic story of The Corrosion of Conservatism.
No longer a Republican, but also not a Democrat, Boot here records his ideological journey from a “movement” conservative to a man without a party, beginning with his political coming-of-age as a young émigré from the Soviet Union, enthralled with the National Review and the conservative intellectual tradition of Russell Kirk and F. A. Hayek. Against this personal odyssey, Boot simultaneously traces the evolution of modern American conservatism, jump-started by Barry Goldwater’s canonical The Conscience of a Conservative, to the rise of Trumpism and its gradual corrosion of what was once the Republican Party.
While 90 percent of his fellow Republicans became political “toadies” in the aftermath of the 2016 election, Boot stood his ground, enduring the vitriol of his erstwhile conservative colleagues, trolled on Twitter by a white supremacist who depicted his “execution” in a gas chamber by a smiling, Nazi-clad Trump. And yet, Boot nevertheless remains a villain to some partisan circles for his enduring commitment to conservative fiscal and national security principles. It is from this isolated position, then, that Boot launches this bold declaration of dissent and its urgent plea for true, bipartisan cooperation.
With uncompromising insights, The Corrosion of Conservatism evokes both a president who has traduced every norm and the rise of a nascent centrist movement to counter Trump’s assault on democracy.
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I felt he was masterfully telling my story.
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Title says it all
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But Boot's reading is sometimes painful to listen to, as he sounds bored himself. I wonder if he read it himself to save money rather than hire a better-sounding reader?
Good book, weak performance
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Very much worth reading
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Glad he switched.
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Excellent
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Should be required reading for HS Civics
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Thanks, Max for your ideas.
Good stuff
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Having labeled them selves for years as real Republicans they have no real political home in the current Trump party which is the logical outcome of the direction set by Reagan himself. I am not surprised. I taught for a school year in an upper midwest University which drew most of its students from rural towns and farming communities. It was the year when Ronald Reagan was running for his second term. I was exposed to the Republican dirty tricks that dominate the Republican party today.
I was not able to find any liberal leaning faculty member who was or wanted to be politically active. I found out why. Politically active liberal thinking faculty were not welcome.
Boot has found out thd truth about the truth about the Republican party. I saw it back then. Did he ever ask himself why he and his friends were not just conservatives. Why they needed the term neo and since they did they were back then had no home in the Republican party. Did he not see how the war in Iraq was built on lies; and if not why not.
We all learn from our mistakes.
For me it took years for me to learn how politics is mostly built on lies. I am no longer an active Democrat and I definitely have no place in the GOP. Join the crowd Max.
Another foolish "neo-conservative " !
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So what this turns out to be is a good, maybe even a great one, for those who have only a cursory understanding of the history of the Rise of Trump. But for someone who is well versed in that sad saga this is a not-very-deep dive into that history.
I wish all sorts of things would have been different about this book. But then, it would have been a different book. I can see where this one stands, and why it needed to be writ just this way. I hope there are better treatises later.
The first few chapters on his personal bio are interesting if your interested in those details. But it wasn’t why I got the book.
Why I did buy the book was on the reputation of M. Boot as being a central character in the 'conservative' movement. I was hoping for a detailed explanation of what that meant. Even better, if there might be a distinction made between what it means to be a conservative and the very separate thing of being a Republican.
But these two notions got conflated just as easily as they always are, and so nothing was learned there.
It’s a good book for what it is.
Its just not what I needed - I know the Trump history all to well.
A fine retelling of the Trump story
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