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Scarlet Letters: The Ever-Increasing Intolerance of the Cult of Liberalism Hardcover – August 4, 2015
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Like its namesake, Scarlet Letters addresses the hard truths of life in an increasingly “progressive” America where the irrational prejudices of a group can crush the soul of the individual. In both the old and new puritanism, worshippers achieve a sense of moral worth simply by designating themselves among “the elect”―no good works required. To validate that uncertain status, they feel compelled to heap abuse upon the sinner lest they too be thought guilty of the sin. Rather than simply cataloging the neo-puritan assaults on reason and liberty, Scarlet Letters illustrates how the progressive movement came to mimic a religion in its structure but not at all in its spirit while profiling those brave individuals who dared to take a stand against this inquisition.
In the neo-puritan world, all conservatives are an awkwardly worded tweet away from being branded a homophobe, a racist, a sexist, an Islamophobe or worse. Progressives force assumptions upon anyone who disagrees with their political and social agenda. Those who dare suggest a violent attack was committed by someone of Islamic faith is an Islamophobe. Those who identify the race of even a wanted criminal is a racist. Those who don’t support gay marriage are homophobes with a capitol “H.” In the eyes of the progressive neo-puritan, that word – that letter – becomes all that a person is.
With real-life examples from sexist Clarence Thomas to Islamophobe Ayaan Hirsi Ali to racist Paula Deen to homophobe Phil Robertson, author Jack Cashill explains how a person’s identity is reduced to the cruelest of stereotypes. Falsified narratives and manufactured outrage perpetuate the neo-puritan goals, whether they be affecting a presidential election, or simply undermining an individual’s personal opinion in order to drag them down.
Discover how progressive forces have eroded traditional American values and how the movement became inquisitional and vengeful. Find out how individuals and organization have found the courage to resist this movement and what you can do to fight back successfully.
- Print length272 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherWND Books
- Publication dateAugust 4, 2015
- Dimensions6.01 x 1 x 9.29 inches
- ISBN-101935071920
- ISBN-13978-1935071921
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Editorial Reviews
About the Author
Jack Cashill is an independent writer and producer who has written for Fortune, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Weekly Standard. Cashill writes weekly for WND and has authored nine books of nonfiction under his own name, five of which have been featured on Book-TV, and collaborated quietly on six others. Cashill also has produced a score of documentaries for regional PBS and national cable channels. He holds a Ph.D. from Purdue.
Product details
- Publisher : WND Books (August 4, 2015)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 272 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1935071920
- ISBN-13 : 978-1935071921
- Item Weight : 1.11 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.01 x 1 x 9.29 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #3,076,749 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #402 in Cultural Policy
- #1,058 in Radical Political Thought
- #1,468 in Fascism (Books)
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Share this book with all your elders, children, family and friends and non-neo-puritan types that have still open minds. Cashill, with this book, contributes well to that understanding.
Therefore, I highly recommend 'The Scarlet Letters' especially for those who need a PRIMER which in some 250 pages , including excellent notes and appendix, helps and encourages to take a stand in this culture war we are engaged in. If it's not us - who?
Jack Cashill can always give you the truth and stir the water.
In fable "The King's New Clothes", everyone refuses to acknowledge what they plainly see until a child blurts it out. Nowadays, the child would be taken aside and whipped.
Let’s look at the first paragraph of Chapter 1.
In those heady first years after the Russian Revolution, tremors from the east tripped the internal Richter scales of sensitive souls from Mitte to Montmarte to Greenwich Village. One Villager who felt the shock was crusading birth control advocate Margaret Sanger. Although she did not think Marxism the solution to her issue – “the sexual and racial chaos” then vexing liberal America – she knew many an aspiring bohemian who bought the whole package.
Cashill seems to be enthralled with seeing how many cutesy modifiers he can put in one sentence. Every paragraph seems to more of the same. Granted, I just may not be smart enough to read someone with such deep thoughts.
I should have known just by reading the subtitle of this book “The Ever Increasing Intolerance of The Cult of Liberalism Exposed”. In the great grand scheme of things, this doesn’t rank very high with me.
He found someone by the name of Herbert Meyer to state “The best investigative journalist of our time” to grace the rear cover. In this book and his last book “You Lie”, Cashill’s investigative techniques seems to be doing a Google search for his facts. In this book, he constantly quotes little bits and pieces from other authors. For example, he brings up Peter Hitchens and writes “The “old morality”, as he saw it lacked the conviction to withstand “the sneering assault of our modern age.” I assume the whole book is like this as the first two chapters are peppered with writing like this
Best Investigative Journalist? I think not. He’s not in the same category with someone like Sharyl Attkisson.
I’m giving this book 2 stars, only because at least he is participating in the Free Enterprise system. Save your money.
