Reading this book I feel like one of Mr Codevilla's students: "We have read the published version of this event. Please tell us the real story." To me this book was a revelation, as much for the data inside as for the author, whom I would describe as another Thomas Sowell, for the clarity and immediacy of his speech. After reading this I am more than ever convinced that the love that elite America has always felt for Europe is one of the main causes of the political and social divides inside American society today: Like an extra-marital affair with a high class prostitute. A fatal attraction.
I would recommend to the reader that he combine the reading of this book with Dick Morris's Catastrophe, for a more detailed analysis of how insiders to the regime play their lucrative parts in Obama's America. Thus you get to understand the big picture as well as the day to day money-dealings inside the US regime.
Here's all you want to know about the world, socially and politically. There is no better book to travel all over the world with and understand how the common folks in those places must feel.
The nature of our western regimes:
"The most economically profitable thing you can do, whether in Europe or in Argentina, or China or Chicago, is to worry less about producing than about building a profitable relationship with the regime. Because exchanging economic privilege for political support is the essence of modern government."
"Regimes have added a new twist ... that government must depend on science, which dictates that people must surrender to their betters plenary powers over where and how they live, how much and what kind of energy or even food they consume, in order to 'save the planet' from human habitation's effects."
Our military:
"The change began in the 1950's, as the social groups that make of the regime began to look down on their fellow citizens' revulsion to communism ... our regime, scornful of the traditional military goal of victory, became accustomed to using the armed forces in ventures from the Balkans to Iraq that were neither war nor peace, that were more obviously related to regime goals than to American interests -but that got a lot of people killed nevertheless.
Russia
"Mafia oligarchies such as post-Communist Russia, where the rulers regard others' property as a threat to their own and where friendship is restricted to families."
Singapore
"defenseless free ports, like Singapore, where the rulers thrive within systems of law and low taxes that encourage large numbers of people to think of nothing but making money."
China
"Business in China consists effectively of granting and using the privilege to hire labor for next to nothing. The system runs ... on the expectation that various officials will be content with the bribes they have received."
Europe
"All Europeans accept their roles as subjects -as entitled consumers of government services. The real citizens of Europe, from whom power and to whom privilege flow, are society's corporations, whether big business, unions, political parties, or the complex of bureaucrats and the interest groups they finance."
"It is difficult to imagine Europeans nowadays offering their lives for their country. Contemporary Europe's way of life has been possible only because it was protected by the United States." And here's where the US could have had the upper hand in its dealings with Europe, but dismissed it.
Analyses of other countries like Switzerland, Sweden, Japan, Mexico, Italy, etc. are all here, and every one of them is a travelogue to be relished, never boring and always enlightening.
How come the demise of Catholic Europe since WWII, and so fast?
"In Catholic Europe, the Christian Democratic movement, the principal reaction to militant liberalism, gave up advocacy of Christian causes, refused to take clear stands on the major issues of the day, immersed itself in day-to-day administration, and died. Throughout the European continent, then, politics has trained people to forget the soul." Sound like the story of Republicanism since... Lincoln?
Germany in a few slides:
"In their most vigorous years, these people lived by Nazi standards. They spent their middle age trying to approach the ideals of the Adenauer republic -bourgeois respectability ... their old age has been passed in a country characterized by sex shops, welfare and environmentalism, where the ways of the Adenauer republic are ridiculed. Their last impressions must be of Muslim neighbors whom it is dangerous to displease."
How the regime works"
Scientific management, its success depending on maintaining a pretense of neutrality on the issues, but there is "massive evidence that those who hawk certain kinds of social or environmental policies in the name of science are partisans of those policies."
"Today's tycoons have more power over ordinary people than the trusts of a century ago, because while the old robber barons had to do the robbing themselves, today's CEOs can count on the government to do it for them by manufacturing markets for them, by tailoring rules that stifle competition, and by bailing out their blunders."
"The regimes rule more by fashion ... than by statute. It defines itself by its icons and taboos." Sounds like paganism and superstition are here again.
The way to get rich:
"The new path to riches is knowing what the government wants ... though lawyers produce nothing, they are paid more than engineers because government makes their services really more valuable ... such high salaries are passed on to the public through higher prices."
Affirmative action:
"is about neither race nor sex. It is about politics ... it is about patrons and clients ... about adding to the power of those who already have power and obliging those under them to build the personal political relationships that override objective criteria and immunize against New Age accusations."
You get a lot of information here, from almost every corner of the world and every facet of society. If a businessman came from outer space, this would be the book he should need. And that seems also as far as we -rather serfs than citizens- are from the ruling bureaucrats in the West.
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The Character of Nations: How Politics Makes and Breaks Prosperity, Family, and Civility Paperback – March 24, 2009
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Angelo Codevilla
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Angelo Codevilla
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Print length400 pages
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LanguageEnglish
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PublisherBasic Books
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Publication dateMarch 24, 2009
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Dimensions6.1 x 0.91 x 9.3 inches
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ISBN-100465028004
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ISBN-13978-0465028009
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Editorial Reviews
About the Author
Angelo M. Codevilla has taught political theory and international relations at Stanford, Princeton, and Georgetown University and is presently a professor of international relations at Boston University. He is the author of nine books, including The Character of Nations, The Arms Control Delusion, and a new translation of Machiavelli's The Prince. He lives in Boston, Massachusetts.
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Product details
- Publisher : Basic Books; Reprint edition (March 24, 2009)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 400 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0465028004
- ISBN-13 : 978-0465028009
- Item Weight : 1.06 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.1 x 0.91 x 9.3 inches
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- #6,235 in History & Theory of Politics
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5.0 out of 5 stars
The world is up for grabs. The best book in years, and the most necessary one today.
Reviewed in the United States on August 5, 2009Verified Purchase
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Reviewed in the United States on September 19, 2017
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I have to issue a trigger warning for weak-minded liberals who will need to retreat to their safe spaces with puppies and teddybears. This is an extraordinary book, Codevilla's learning is immense and he makes his case with factual detail, statistics and case studies. His command of Western philosophy, literature and history is dazzling. If you like interdisciplinary studies, or what I prefer to call "big picture" studies, you will love this book. He is right up there with Fukuyama. Read this book. And to his detractors, of COURSE he has a point of view, all such books do-- you just don't like his.
Reviewed in the United States on September 21, 2011
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If you're looking for a book about politics, Mr. Codevilla's book is not the right place to go. Instead, what you will find here is a treatise on the intersection of faith and politics, and how faith marks out the character of a nation. The author argues that America was originally founded on a Christian worldview, and that this specific worldview suffused itself throughout the Republic in the form of caring for others, honesty, respect for property, respect for people, and other "good habits." The modern rendition of America, however, is counterpoised between two equally wrong sides.
On the one side, you have the conservative movement, which places its faith in a system of government that ultimately assumes everyone is greedy, and attempts to pit greed against greed. On the other side, you have the liberal movement, the regime and worldview in charge. To wit:
==
Whereas biblical religion requires believers to restrain their appetites and attune themselves to God's commandments, the American regime's religion demands that government--so long as it is in the proper hands, of course--manipulate society to whatever extent necessary to achieve good results. In short, the Establishment's secular humanism celebrates the indulgence of one's own desires and the control of others'. It subsidizes its priesthood with tax monies, requires reverence of its own icons (feminism, abortion, homosexuality, and so on), and punishes questions about the character of its saints... -page 311</em>
==
The entire concept underlying the modern worldview is that people are not people, to be treated as equals, but rather as objects to be shaped and produce. This spiritual malaise underlies the entire downfall of American politics, and no amount of political jiggering is going to fix it.
Mr. Codevilla's argument start out strong, and then proceed to the caustic towards the end of the book; the book would probably be better received had the tone remained more even throughout. His take on science and evolution will disturb those completely convinced that Science is the measure of all things, but his comments about evolution are generally spot-on.
Generally, this is a book Christians should read, even if you don't appreciate the tone towards the end. The relationship between religion and the character of our nation is too important to ignore.
On the one side, you have the conservative movement, which places its faith in a system of government that ultimately assumes everyone is greedy, and attempts to pit greed against greed. On the other side, you have the liberal movement, the regime and worldview in charge. To wit:
==
Whereas biblical religion requires believers to restrain their appetites and attune themselves to God's commandments, the American regime's religion demands that government--so long as it is in the proper hands, of course--manipulate society to whatever extent necessary to achieve good results. In short, the Establishment's secular humanism celebrates the indulgence of one's own desires and the control of others'. It subsidizes its priesthood with tax monies, requires reverence of its own icons (feminism, abortion, homosexuality, and so on), and punishes questions about the character of its saints... -page 311</em>
==
The entire concept underlying the modern worldview is that people are not people, to be treated as equals, but rather as objects to be shaped and produce. This spiritual malaise underlies the entire downfall of American politics, and no amount of political jiggering is going to fix it.
Mr. Codevilla's argument start out strong, and then proceed to the caustic towards the end of the book; the book would probably be better received had the tone remained more even throughout. His take on science and evolution will disturb those completely convinced that Science is the measure of all things, but his comments about evolution are generally spot-on.
Generally, this is a book Christians should read, even if you don't appreciate the tone towards the end. The relationship between religion and the character of our nation is too important to ignore.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 28, 2016
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As a Codevilla fan, I expected to enjoy this book, but thought it would be inferior to his books on foreign relations, his main area of expertise. I was wrong, and this book was just as great at his others. Codevilla has such an amazing grasp of an incredibly wide range of topics, a huge trove of historical facts that that you will not hear elsewhere, and an unsurpassed skill in clear and brilliant writing. It puts the last 50 years of political and social developments in America and the West into a coherent framework that I found very helpful and illuminating. Also provides a great introduction to understanding modern regimes in Japan, the USSR, Israel, Chile, and elsewhere. A great book that I plan to periodically revisit.
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Karl Skid Marks The First.
5.0 out of 5 stars
What makes an essential intelligent read? This does.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 21, 2017Verified Purchase
What an epic work. Pretty much every angle is covered in this book. It works its way to the decline of the west, although, most regimes of note from history are examined in their effect on society. I have never read a book as detailed and considered as Mr Codevilla's that picks apart the stitching of our culture mores with such efficiency. It took me a month to read as I was frightened of missing something.
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