Dismantling America

and other controversial essays

341 pages

English language

Published Jan. 1, 2010 by Basic Books.

ISBN:
978-0-465-02251-9
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OCLC Number:
613423200

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4 stars (1 review)

"These wide-ranging essays--on many individual political, economic, cultural and legal issues--have as a recurring underlying theme the decline of the values and institutions that have sustained and advanced American society for more than two centuries...Whether these essays (originally published as syndicated newspaper columns) are individually about financial bailouts, illegal immigrants, gay marriage, national security, or the Duke University rape case, the underlying concern is about what these very different kinds of things say about the general direction of American society..."--Dust jacket flap.

1 edition

Review of 'Dismantling America' on 'Storygraph'

4 stars

I wish I could write like Sowell. His prose is so incisive, exact, and deceptively simple. Of course I do not agree with him on all points—yet that’s really the purpose of his essays. You’re not expected to agree, you’re expected to think critically and question what preemptive conclusions you bring into any sociopolitical discussion.

Here’s the spoiler that many readers trip over: Thomas Sowell is a Black American. Left-leaning readers who know no better often accuse him of racism and “White Privilege” only to be caught embarrassingly tongue tied by this simple phenotypical fact. And because (1) Sowell is so damn smart and (2) solidly conservative/libertarian, Sowell tends to hide his racial identity with the apparent intention of catching his ideological opponents in a rhetorical trap. On this point, I think he’s right. Read his comments about being a child during the Harlem Renaissance and how all that changed …

Subjects

  • Politics and government
  • Political culture
  • Conservatism
  • Economic policy
  • Social problems
  • Liberalism

Places

  • United States