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    1. The Argument for Lieberman
      John Podhoretz
    2. Sullivan's Travels
      Peter Wehner
    3. Why Iraq Was Inevitable
      Arthur Herman
      July/August 2008
    4. What to Do about Georgia
      Max Boot
    5. Who Really Wants Two States?
      Shmuel Rosner

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March 2008

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"Liberal Fascism by Jonah Goldberg"

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  1. The Argument for Lieberman
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  3. Sullivan's Travels
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  5. The “Open-Minded” Critics of Israel

Abstract –

People on the Left who have not yet been rhetorically housebroken, or who have simply forgotten their manners, have a habit of referring to conservatives as fascists. The insult is at once so over the top and yet so devoid of meaning that most of its targets tend to shrug it off as unworthy of notice. As long ago as 1946, George Orwell concluded that the epithet was an item of political juvenilia, with no substantive reference beyond “something not desirable.” But to the columnist Jonah Goldberg, a contributing editor of National Review, the term deserves to be taken very seriously indeed. In this book he not only repudiates its identification with conservatism but, as his title indicates, enthusiastically turns the accusation back on those who make it. It is modern American liberalism, he argues, both in its early-20th-century origins and in its subsequent manifestations, that actually betrays close family resemblances to European fascism.


About the Author

James Nuechterlein, a former professor of American studies and political thought at Valparaiso University, is a senior fellow of the Institute on Religion and Public Life.

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