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20 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Faithful are the wounds of a friend . . .,
By
This review is from: Dead Right (Paperback)
David Frum is a conservative not afraid to give blunt, constructive criticism to his fellows. In "Dead Right", he questions whether the Republican coalition has actually made any progress toward reducing the size and scope of the federal government. In spite of good intentions, he determines very little progress has been made because the GOP is unwilling to incur the pain of telling people what they don't want to hear, which is that moving from a self-reliant nation to a welfare state has damaged our national character. The contrast between self-reliance and welfarism is the key insight of the book. Frum points out that negative behaviors like divorce, single parenthood, promiscuity, drug abuse, and chronic unemployment are now subsidized by the state and therefore have ballooned to nearly unmanageable proportions. He realizes that actual budget and program cuts carry a heavy political price. Regardless, he believes conservatives should pay the price of unpopularity and speak the truth in hopes of someday winning a real victory, rather than a pyrrhic one where office is held, but nothing can be done. In an interesting sideline, Frum takes time to survey the thinking of isolationist "paleoconservatives" who resent the current influence of the liberal-turned-conservative internationist "neo-cons" who changed allegiance during the Cold War. The intramural dispute is very interesting and extremely current with today's events. Frum is one of the few writers who combines statistical analysis with insider history of the movement to create a dazzling policy book. This is one analysis that doesn't read like a stale pamphlet full of bullet points you've heard a million times. Besides that, Frum is probably the most talented conservative writing today. Pick up "Dead Right" and "How We Got Here: The Seventies" to see for yourself.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Did I Take A Wrong Turn?,
By
This review is from: Dead Right (Paperback)
There were two reasons I read this book. The first is that if you read a lot of political books covering the last 20 years then there is a good chance this book as come up in the text. It always gets good reviews and is held out as the book that will tell you exactly how the far right thinks. The second reason was that I heard the author speak recently and found him interesting and oddly engaging. To offer full disclosure I lean a bit left of the moderate political line so my reading of the book was not to reaffirm my beliefs but to explore the views of the author. Even though I disagree with a number of the authors stances on items I have to give him credit, he is up front about all his views. In reading the book you really get a sense of the man, maybe even more so then the conservative movement he is describing.
So the topic of the book is looking at how the Reagan and Bush 1 administrations, although based in conservative thought, moved to a moderate governing style. The bench mark he primarily bases this theory on is that the size of the federal government has increased over the 12 year Reagan / Bush terms. The author basically tells us what we know. And that is it is very difficult to obtain political popularity if you are dishing out harsh medicine. Of course the Reagan / Bush administrations kept the pork barrel and program growth going, hey it pays the popularity bills. What I found so stark about this section was just how up front the author was. Most politicians talk about curbing growth or eliminating waste, key words to do nothing, but Frum goes out there and lays out all the items he would get rid of. Out with any education assistance, student loans, homeless help, aid to handicapped kids and more, he out did himself with eye opening and very harsh sounding reductions. Basically his view of the Federal government is that it needs to provide a military, a big one at that, and not much more. The author not only opines about budgetary issues, but also about the great right wing moral crusade. I will let you judge the validity of his arguments, but basically everything wrong with society is due to FDR, LBJ and any and all Democrats. Somehow a reduction in taxes and government services will help reduce teen pregnancy, drug use and just about anything objectionable. Overall I found the book interesting and eye opening. I did find the authors writing style a bit odd at times, the choice of language was unique. As far as conservative manifestos, I will probably stick with Pat Buchanan going forward as he is a better writer, in my opinion. If you are a died in the wool GOP'er then this is a nice back to basics type book.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Bad print copy,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Dead Right (Paperback)
This book was not available in Kindle so I ordered a soft-cover edition.
In all cases, the "i" was not dotted and many periods were missing. It became such a chore to read that I stopped. What portions I did read were interesting in that Frum predicted Jack Kemp was going to win the GOP nomination for president in 1996. Of course, it was Bob Dole (and what a splendid campaign he ran). Frum also touted conservative ideas that were popular at that time, but which have proven to be disastrous after eight years of the Bush administration. Also funny to read were the tributes on the cover praising the book as a classic by the very people who would stab Frum in the back in 2010 as a turncoat Republican.
20 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
"Dead Right" Tells Conservatives What They Need to Know,
By A Customer
This review is from: Dead Right (Paperback)
"Dead Right," by David Frum, lays it all on the line, telling conservatives not necessarily what they want to hear, but definitely what they need to know. Mr. Frum points out the problems of the conservative movement, and discusses where conservatives have went wrong in pushing their agenda, and what they must do to truly save the nation from the liberal muck in which it currently rests.
Mr. Frum puts conservatives into three distince categories: optomists, moralists, and nationalists. In discussing the three categoreis, Frum points out the major problems of each camp. He shows, by example, exactly where each camp has strayed from pushing the true objective of the conservative movement; getting government off the people's backs.
In "Dead Right," Frum objectively shows conservatives where they have went wrong, and he tells them how to fix things before it is too late. This is a must read for anyone who strives to change the way our government works, and bring the function of government back to a situation of which the founding fathers could be proud. We, as conservatives, need a guidance as to meet our goals. "Dead Right" provides that guidance in a conscice and objective manner.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Resurrecting Right?,
By
This review is from: Dead Right (Paperback)
I purchased a copy of "Dead Right" back in 1997 but the recent fights over the size and scope of government brought the book to mind.
The book discusses the different factions that made up the Right in the 1990s and the failure of the Reagan Administration to cut government spending as much as it should have. We have been warned about the consequences of debt for years, but the failure of our political class to cut government spending may soon have even more serious consequences, with our AAA debt rating at risk if we do not get serious in the coming years. High taxes and big government are nothing but a transfer of wealth from the productive to the unproductive, and the book discusses how an overbloated welfare state can allow people to make irresponsible choices--as Dennis Prager likes to say, "the bigger the government, the smaller the citizen". High tax rates also hurt the economy in that they discourage achievement. For example, if doctors become mere "health care providers" who are salaried government workers liable to criminal charges for honest mistakes, who on earth could blame young people if they decide to go Atlas Shrugged and not go through the arduous process necessary to enter the profession? There are plenty of other ways to make a living that do not involve those types of sacrifices for not near enough reward. And who can blame those wealthy Americans who flee high-tax jurisdictions such as New York City or Maryland for low-tax states such as Texas? And those familiar with American history recall the famed "capital strike" of the 1930s. A large part of the liberal flight from reality is the fiction that you can just push people, and push people, and push people, and push people, and they will continue to strive with all their might in the teeth of such onerous disincentives. The Left is delusional enough to see productive Americans as beasts of burden who will keep on producing even when their only reward is the satisfaction of knowing that they have produced. All of these disincentives discourage work, risk-taking, and productive activity and condemn us all--rich, middle class, and poor--to slower economic growth and a lower standard of living. "Dead Right" is even more relevant today than it was in the mid-1990s. The choice between small government and big government is the difference between dynamism and decadence, and with Congress forcing citizens to purchase a product they might not want to buy (viz. a tax on living) and even discussing the tactic of "deeming" major pieces of social legislation to have passed instead of actually passing them, we are already a long way down the slide from democracy to tyranny described in Plato's Republic. It is past time for Americans to back away from that abyss, have the fortitude to rally, and once again demonstrate our exceptionalism by electing politicians who will drastically cut government spending on, at absolute bare minimum, the scale that Rudy Giuliani and Margaret Thatcher did in New York City and Great Britain. If not, and the majority of Americans vote for social democracy, they will get what they deserve...trouble is, the rest of us will get what they deserve as well.
3.0 out of 5 stars
good context but too many printing errors.,
By AT "the optimist" (Coeur d'Alene, ID United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Dead Right (Paperback)
a fair and good insight into conservative movement. however, i had a very hard time to continue reading because the missing "."s above letters and at the end of sentences were too distracting. i am not sure if this edition was printed by a legitimate printing company.
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
mildly dated, but still useful,
This review is from: Dead Right (Paperback)
Written in the "dark" years between the defeat of George H. W. Bush in 1992 and the Republican "revolution" of 1994, David Frum's book takes stock of the conservative movement, with a particular eye toward the successes and failures of the Reagan administration. On that score, Frum is somewhat negative but, for the most part, accurate: "the great temptation of the Reagan years: to attempt to use government for conservative purposes rather than to push it back within its proper limits." It is a temptation -- indeed, an unfortunate reality -- with which conservatives still struggle.
The book occasionally feels somewhat dated. The issues of 1993 and 1994 are not the issues of today, and the conservative movement has evolved since then. Still, Frum's division of the movement, roughly, into "optimists" (Jack Kemp) "moralists" (Bill Bennett), and "nationalists" (Pat Buchanan) succeeds in capturing the flavor of the moment -- and in bringing home to the modern reader just how much things have changed, even as remnants of those divisions remain.
35 of 77 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Right-wing propaganda,
By A Customer
This review is from: Dead Right (Paperback)
This book gives a disturbing look at the agenda of the far right. Frum shows courage is his ability not to sugar coat the far right's message but state it as it is. He often smacks of racism using such terms as "black" and "underclass" virtually interchangably. Frum advocates stopping immigration because he believes America is risking "cultural suicide." More disturbing is his vision of a good society. Frum endorses reinstating social stigmas against homosexuality, children born out of wedlock, single unmarried women and premarital sex. He openly admits that would like to see a more religious society for the secular reason that it would be a better behaved society. Frum himself does not come off as a religious man himself but as one who promotes Christianity for the purpose of controlling people. Frum's vision of society is disturbing but at the same time refreshing. He proves that the far right is guilty of elitist politics liberals have been accusing them of for years.
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Dead Right by David Frum (Paperback - April 7, 1995)
$15.00
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