By E.J. Dionne, Jr. Find This Book
"
The days of political camaraderie are over, writes Washington Post
columnist Dionne (Foundations of Democracy and Culture/Georgetown Univ.;
Souled Out: Reclaiming Faith and Politics after the Religious Right,
2008, etc.), who nonetheless offers some possible correctives to the
current poisonous political climate. The clash between Republicans and
Democrats, writes the author, has devolved into the struggle of
individualism versus community, local versus national and the Right
versus the Middle. Philosophical boundaries are tilted, and moderates
are now often painted as left wing. Rampant historical revisionism
divides us. Dionne decries interpretations of the Founding Fathers'
intentions by the courts as well as politicians; originalists have
little basis to claim definite knowledge of the intentions of the
framers of the Constitution. Knowing that the Constitution was a work in
progress that would grow and adapt to the times, they continued to
argue, balance and compromise. Hamilton, Clay, Lincoln and Theodore
Roosevelt used republican nationalism to better the American community.
The communitarian reforms of the New Deal established the idealistic
American Century. Now the resurgence of radical individualism threatens
to dissolve those reforms. Populist methods are the favored tool to
promote individualistic objectives and attack the elites, especially
Wall Street. However, it is not so much that the wealthy have too much;
it's that they have failed in their stewardship of our economy. The men
who founded our country were elites and elitist. The difference is that
those founders knew that they also had a social obligation to provide
for the common good. Dionne condemns the current partisanship as
destructive and demands the return to moderation, balance and
compromise. The author's extensive knowledge of Washington allows him to
ably illustrate our remarkable political history, and he renews our
hope that cooler heads can prevail with a renewed balance of individual
rights and the needs of the community" (Kirkus Reviews)
Current Affairs
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