Why I Turned Right: Leading Baby Boom Conservatives Chronicle Their Political JourneysMary Eberstadt Simon and Schuster, 2007 M02 13 - 304 pages Political vicissitudes aside, with or without a conservative administration, whether or not America is engaged in war, or regardless of who next holds the majority either in Congress or the Court, the United States as a whole (as the infamous red and blue map made unforgettably clear) has boldly, unabashedly moved Right. But the question remains: Why? How did a movement that appeared so sidelined and embattled only a generation ago emerge as such a strong, influential, and enduring united front? In Why I Turned Right, eminent and rising conservatives -- at odds themselves on a number of issues from religion, family, sex, to stem cell research, abortion, and war -- answer the question. And they answer it not through polemic, reactionary preaching, or rage, but in the most practical and sensible way possible: via the sharp, critical, and unfiltered voices and canny observations of uniquely positioned authors, editors, humorists, and political refugees inadvertently born of the sexual revolution and the PC movement, who ultimately landed on the conservative side of America's red-blue divide -- in some cases, much to their own surprise. A fascinating intellectual journey, this "family of opinions," as contributor Peter Berkowitz terms it, represents the extraordinarily varied paths that have led these authors from the championed liberalism of their youth to eventually fuel the world of conservative think tanks, magazines, blogs, and book publishing. Whether you are for the Right or against, guarded supporter or puzzled progressive, Why I Turned Right proves an entertaining, enlightening, and edifying read for anyone with an open mind -- both the red and the blue, and everyone in between. |
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Page 17
... abortion , and how the two political parties differ in viewing that sub- ject . For though not all conservatives ( including the con- tributors to this book ) are pro - life , many are , and they are passionately so ; and what is more ...
... abortion , and how the two political parties differ in viewing that sub- ject . For though not all conservatives ( including the con- tributors to this book ) are pro - life , many are , and they are passionately so ; and what is more ...
Page 18
... abortion is broken once and for all. s. To peruse these stories as editor is to hear any number of echoes of my own political journey, the same one that first led me to this book. Like most contributors, I headed off for elite education ...
... abortion is broken once and for all. s. To peruse these stories as editor is to hear any number of echoes of my own political journey, the same one that first led me to this book. Like most contributors, I headed off for elite education ...
Page 19
... abortion. “Real conservatism,” writes Bottum here, “usually begins when you find in yourself a limit, a place beyond which you will not go, and always for me it comes back to this touchstone.” And always for me, too. Though a ...
... abortion. “Real conservatism,” writes Bottum here, “usually begins when you find in yourself a limit, a place beyond which you will not go, and always for me it comes back to this touchstone.” And always for me, too. Though a ...
Page 20
... abortion thing just can't be right . This can't be right : an intuitionist phrase does not a po- litical philosophy make . But what started for me and , I be- lieve , many other people weighing the real legacy of Roe went on to become ...
... abortion thing just can't be right . This can't be right : an intuitionist phrase does not a po- litical philosophy make . But what started for me and , I be- lieve , many other people weighing the real legacy of Roe went on to become ...
Page 60
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