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John Dean, author of The New York Times bestseller Worse Than Watergate, takes a sobering look at how radical elements are destroying the Republican Party along with the very foundations of American democracy.
Unabridged CDs - 8 CDs, 9 hours
In his seventh book, Dean, the former Nixon legal counsel whom the FBI has called the "master manipulator" of the Watergate coverup, weighs in with a rebuke to Christian fundamentalists and other right-wing hard-liners. A self-described Goldwater conservative (indeed, Goldwater had planned to collaborate on this book before his death), he rails against the influence of social conservatives and neoconservatives within his party. Suffused with bitterness stemming from the controversies in which he has been embroiled, Dean's book paints a thin social science veneer over a litany of mostly ad hominem complaints. Purporting to show that social conservatives and neoconservatives are, on the whole, demonstrably authoritarian, bigoted, irrational and amoral, Conservatives Without Conscience offers helpful hints such as "Conservatives without conscience do not have horns and tails," and evinces a telling fascination with politicians' shady book deals. Though there is clearly much to condemn in the policies and tactics Dean deplores, assailing everyone from French political theorist Joseph de Maistre to Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist to the chairman of Yale University's conservative association as "Double High" social- dominance-oriented authoritarians undermines his journalistic credibility. Dean's lurid accusations may be entertaining, but they add little to the reasoned debate that Washington so sorely lacks today. (July 11) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.
More Reviews and RecommendationsJohn Dean was White House legal counsel to President Nixon for a thousand days. Dean also served as chief minority counsel for the House Judiciary Committee and as an associate deputy attorney general in the U.S. Department of Justice.
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June 22, 2009: He reinforced my late father's support and liking for Barry Goldwater and the Republican Party Senator Goldwater represented. This book helped me clarify my feelings that todays Republican Party is no longer the party of my father.
His in depth writing and research explains what has happened, and what kind of mentality is now running away with the GOP. It tells why this has turned so many moderate conservatives away from this party.Reader Rating:
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October 27, 2006: It would seem that they are on their way. Dean paints a scary picture of what has happened so far and how it could get worse. With a House of Representatives already an effective dictatorship, with a Supreme Court a heart beat away from a similar take over, it takes little imagination to visualize what might happen then. Conservatism itself, Dean says, can be good, bad or evil. He devotes his entire book to the bad and evil. It is vital reading for any who care about the future of democracy and the United States in particular. He explains how conservatives think, and how the Neocons differ markedly from the conservatism of Barry Goldwater, who was not just an ordinary politician, but a human being and statesman as well. Dean writes of the alarming extent to which the Neocons and pals with their '...authoritarian personalities, which tolerate no dissent, use dissembling as their standard modus operandi, and have pushed their governing authority beyond the law and Constitution.' '... The motive of the GOP leaders was simply to please the party's 'base' the wishes of the base was their command. That base was composed primarily of Christian conservatives, in particular evangelicals.' This book could be required reading for citizenship, for the Authoritarian personality permeates all societies and is in ascendance in our times of terror. It is also highly dangerous in its polarizing viewpoint. Dean's book is well researched and is in fact backed up by the works of many social scientists, including Adorno, Milgram, Zimbardo and Altemeyer, each of whom illustrated the authoritarian personality scientifically. Dean is much much more than just a disgruntled politician. He is an astute observer and intrerpreter of how authoritarians built their bases of power at the state level to ensure success nationally.