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The Total State: How Liberal Democracies Become Tyrannies Hardcover – May 7, 2024
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The modern United States is a nation full of censorship, lockdowns, riots, and political persecution. How did the land of the free become a surveillance state terrified of COVID and ruled by unaccountable bureaucrats? As a journalist, Auron MacIntyre witnessed firsthand the manipulation of news events, the bias of the press, and the relentless assault on truth during the Donald Trump presidency. Yet, it wasn't until the arrival of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 that his worldview was irrevocably shaken. The emergency measures and unchecked power wielded by authorities revealed a dark underbelly that defied the constitutional safeguards he had always believed in.
The Total State delves into the core of MacIntyre's ideological crisis, exploring the erosion of individual liberties in the name of public health and the new brand of American authoritarianism that revealed itself under a state of emergency.
Drawing inspiration from a diverse array of thinkers outside the mainstream, MacIntyre questions the narrative that has been ingrained in our political discourse. What if democracy doesn’t limit government but instead helps it to expand? What if the Constitution failed to restrain power as intended?
The Total State doesn't offer easy answers, but it poses essential questions about the trajectory of our nation. MacIntyre meticulously examines the forces that have shaped our current reality, urging readers to confront uncomfortable truths about the state of our democracy and individual freedom. This thought-provoking exploration is a call to action, encouraging readers to understand the roots of our present predicament and contemplate the challenging path forward.
- Print length208 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherRegnery
- Publication dateMay 7, 2024
- Dimensions6 x 1 x 9 inches
- ISBN-101684515580
- ISBN-13978-1684515585
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“The Total State is a detailed analysis of modern political power that is still accessible to the average guy.”—Jesse Kelly, host of "I'm Right" and author of The Anti-Communist Manifesto
“The Total State is a brutally honest dissection of how the middling minions of the ruling class seized enough power to slowly strangle our republic. MacIntyre cuts through the propaganda and exposes how this tyrannical system really works."--Buck Sexton, co-host of The Clay Travis and the Buck Sexton Show
“Auron MacIntyre belongs to a younger set of serious, intellectually independent thinkers on the right, who are destined to have a profound impact on American political culture.”—Paul Gottfried, Editor-in-Chief of Chronicles and author of After Liberalism: Mass Democracy in the Managerial State
“Bold, lucid, and chilling, The Total State takes a flamethrower to every comforting belief conservatives hold about how our political order really works.”—Mary Harrington, author of Feminism Against Progress
“The Total State is a tour de force! MacIntyre exposes the lies of liberalism and socialism alike, and allows us to see how the pseudo-religious myths of individual liberty and collectivism have blinded us to the tyranny which misrules us...Essential reading.”— C.C. Pecknold, Professor at The Catholic University of America
“I can't give Auron a greater compliment than he's the cultural commentator that has emerged these last few years. May his house increase, and may yours as well by reading this book and seriously considering what he has to say.—Steve Deace, BlazeTV host and author of Rise of the Fourth Reich
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Regnery
- Publication date : May 7, 2024
- Language : English
- Print length : 208 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1684515580
- ISBN-13 : 978-1684515585
- Item Weight : 14.4 ounces
- Dimensions : 6 x 1 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #63,294 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #110 in Political Commentary & Opinion
- #122 in Censorship & Politics
- #161 in Political Conservatism & Liberalism
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Auron MacIntyre is a columnist, lecturer, and author focusing on the application of political theory. He is the host of the Auron MacIntyre Show podcast on The Blaze. MacIntyre lives with his wife and son in Florida.
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Customers find the book helpful as a summary and appreciate its readability, with one describing it as the most important read of the year. Moreover, the book receives positive feedback for its accuracy, with one customer noting its evidence-based approach. Additionally, customers value its narrative quality and pacing, with one describing it as a chilling read, while another highlights its historical evidence of power politics.
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Customers appreciate the book's comprehensibility, finding it helpful and concise, with one customer noting its scholarly tone and another mentioning its approachable prose.
"...The author gets this entirely correct, and I’m thrilled for it because so few authors do...." Read more
"I was surprised at the depth of this book and it is one you read, put aside, then read again later." Read more
"...The ideas are fantastic but sometimes run on too long. I’d also critique the format...." Read more
"...This book has a fairly compelling explanation." Read more
Customers find the book readable and helpful, with one customer noting its concise yet potent style, while another appreciates its scholarly tone.
"...It’s still a great book." Read more
"A nice, compact summary of how political power truly works (particularly in the US)...." Read more
"...It is an invitation to read more. Very enjoyable" Read more
"This is a must read to anyone wanting to understand the situation that we find ourselves in right now" Read more
Customers appreciate the book's accuracy, with reviews noting its careful assessment of sources and realistic approach to the subject matter.
"Combines accurate, thoughtful and keen analysis with a clear overall picture of current trends and realities and concludes with practical..." Read more
"...It seems to be a pretty accurate summation of how the managerial state and the "experts" that serve it create a ubiquitous and totalizing government..." Read more
"Macintyre quite accurately asses the sources and symptoms of the modern ills of our rapacious, Liberal society while never forgetting that "right-..." Read more
"...thesis with historical fact and research, and comes to a conclusion that could ACTUALLY be accurate. Scary, educational, and hopeful." Read more
Customers find the book hopeful, with one mentioning it offers a new perspective on the future.
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"Find Hope with a New Lens!..." Read more
Customers appreciate the narrative quality of the book.
"...Auron’s analysis of the Total State is narrative-like in the build-up and possible resolution of a disturbing problem. And the problem is disturbing!..." Read more
"...He is well read and writes in a very concise and interesting way that is easy to digest...." Read more
"...out what happened to their country, this is a clear, concise, credible narrative that will cause all sorts of common-sense observations to snap into..." Read more
Customers appreciate the pacing of the book, with one describing it as a chilling read.
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"Masterful Overview of the current Transhumanist, Anti-Human Threat that is looming...." Read more
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Customers appreciate the book's exploration of power politics, with one customer highlighting its historically-evidenced approach and another noting how democracy can invite totalitarianism.
"...taking for granted, instead highlighting realistic and historically-evidenced power politics that most modern political commentators neglect today...." Read more
"...to how politics operates in the western world and the nature of power of western governments and how they might differ from countries like Russia or..." Read more
"...Then it presents an interesting argument that democracy invites totalitarianism: give the people power to change the government, and the government..." Read more
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- Reviewed in the United States on May 22, 2024Format: KindleVerified PurchaseI’m absolutely thrilled by Auron MacIntyre’s new book The Total State. The author fully understands the essential dynamics of our time, including the calamitous failure of the great war on the virus. It’s not a book of epidemiology, thank goodness, but of sociology, history, and political theory. Therefore, he doesn’t miss the essential class element behind the disaster.
As he clearly states, the COVID experience was all about the rights and privileges of the professional managerial class in government, media, and large corporations. They rigged the response to the virus in a way that maximized their safety and income, while exploiting those without power to serve their every need.
The slogan was “we are all in this together” but the reality was of the working class stepping up to deliver goods and services to the elite classes until the vaccine could arrive. Then the new shot was forced on all those who had bravely faced the pathogen in order to get them biologically clean before being integrated back into society.
The author gets this entirely correct, and I’m thrilled for it because so few authors do. But it is just a piece of his larger analysis, which is quite challenging. The essence of the thesis is in the subtitle: “How Liberal Democracies Become Tyrannies.” His view is not that they might, or can, or are in danger of becoming so with the wrong policies decisions. The thesis here is more bold than that. He says that they will and they must.
Wow. Intrigued? I certainly was when I began the journey of this book.
I read as someone with a classical liberal heart, a person with warm feelings for all the great enlightenment thinkers of the 17th and 18th centuries, a partisan fan of Thomas Paine and Thomas Jefferson, a person with tremendous affection for the achievements of the freedom project of the last several centuries but also a person deeply saddened by what’s become of it.
MacIntyre does not hold that view. Not at all. He believes that the liberal project of the 17th and 18th centuries were the product of rationalistic arrogance, the belief that whole societies and cultures could be cajoled into a single model of organization by virtue of pieces of parchment, governmental architectures, slogans about human rights, and strict models of what defines the very notion of freedom and progress.
He attempts to map out how the freedom of past centuries gradually mutated into the total state of today, a political order in which the entrenched and global bureaucratic elite face no limits to their power and ambition. He is not even slightly shocked that the center of the empire is the US simply because the US was the most successful deployment of the liberal democracy in history, and hence the one most vulnerable to the trajectory of arrogance, corruption, decadence, bloat, and hegemonic imposition without limit.
Still intrigued? Read on.
The journey begins with the neglected genius of Bertrand de Jouvenel, who traces the origins of freedom not with big declarations of human rights and democracy for all but with the insistence on the part of cultural centers for independence from state power. In European history, it was the minor royals, the landed gentry, the multigenerational centers of wealth and enterprise, and the keepers of faith that formed the real resistance to state power.
De Jouvenel further argues that it is precisely these robust institutions of cultural and social power that keep state power at bay in a way that individuals on their own never could. When they die out, everyone becomes vulnerable to pillaging but higher powers. In his view, the sloganizing around individual rights and infinite choice and progress is but a masquerade that hides a power grab. When these mediating institutions are weakened, state power only grows.
You might recognize this outlook at conventional old-world Tory theory, one that is anti-liberal at its core. That seems true in some respects but the journey has only begun as our author takes us through a highly competent tour of thinkers I doubt most students have encountered in generations, simply because they have been smeared as reflexively right wing: Joseph de Maistre, Gaetano Mosca, Carl Schmitt, Vilfredo Pareto, James Burnham, and Samuel Francis.
I will just say plainly that these thinkers are not my cup of tea. I’ve been severely critical of all of them for reasons I don’t need to explain here. That said, we must admit the following. Together they have provided the single most powerful attack on liberalism classically understood that has ever been marshaled. It’s not even obvious to me that it has been sufficiently answered by anyone, unless I’m missing something.
The critique is this. Liberalism is a form of rationalism, one born of intellectuals rather than real human experience, a construct involving definitive propositions about how life should be conducted that is necessarily imperial in that it overrides the aims, ethos, and operations of all other organic institutions in society. It says, in essence, you must think this way or hit the highway. In so doing, it tramples on religious traditions, familial aspirations, local folkways, tacit knowledge born of long experience, norms and manners of local communities, and diminishes the role mediating structures in the social order.
Liberalism, in this view, is a managerial project – like an architectural blueprint draw up by someone who has only studied but never built anything – one requiring expertise to administer and hence experts and bureaucrats at all levels of society. But the people who inhabit these positions are relatively detached from the social order they presume to manage and hence their decision making and interests are necessarily less knowledgeable and humane than they otherwise would be if people were truly left to their own devices.
The critique is deepened by the observation that liberalism as a philosophy is necessarily devoid of genuine meaning of the sort that traditional religion seeks to provide. It extols the inherent glory of material achievement and progress but offers no real solace when it turns out – as it always does – that success alone does not fulfill deep human longings.
In that sense, his view is that democratic liberalism is a false god that always fails. Having robbed people of a moral and faith-based center, liberalism is well positioned to invade lives and communities with bureaucratic management while promoting dependency and arbitrary power.
The author uses all the modern crises to illustrate his point: the Covid disaster, the US proxy war with Russia, the imperialism of world bureaucracies, the hegemony of the administrative state and the impotence of the judiciary to control it, and so on.
If all of this sounds dreadful – and it does indeed – there is some light on the other side: he predicts that the total state of the 21st century is destined to fail.
“Liberal democracy made assumptions about human nature that were false. It outran the consequences for a long time because it was able to amass an unprecedented amount of wealth and power, but eventually the bill always comes due. Constitutions are not eternal guardians of the political will and states do not become objective and self-governing machines simply because rules get written down on a piece of paper. Man has not moved beyond either religion or politics. Questions of faith and sovereignty will continue to sit at the core of the human experience, just as they always have. Matters of meaning, identity, and existential conflict cannot be removed by the promise of cold objective reason and credentialed experts.”
In this prediction, I sense that he is correct. The world state cannot work. The total state cannot work. The resistance of administrative totalitarianism is growing, as the population grows ever more impoverished, subjected, and inflamed in fury against the overlords who are not in hiding any longer. We know who they are. They are parading on TV every night, like a scene from District One in Hunger Games. This is truly unsustainable.
MacIntyre ends his book with some speculations about how all of this will unfold. His speculations are well thought out.
Having mapped all of this out, I feel the need to register fundamental disagreement. I simply cannot accept his big theory. In fact, I see the whole apparatus as an unnecessary overreach. Liberalism is wholly defensible, not as an imperial and rationalistic product of intellectuals but as a simple aspiration for a society that can managing itself complete with mediating institutions, traditions, familial dynasties, and a state that is nearly invisible to daily life, something like what the US experienced under the Articles of Confederation.
I’m not nearly as pessimistic as he is about the whole liberal project. As an answer, I might propose the writings of Benjamin Constant, Adam Smith, and Lord Acton, while admitting that I do long for a longer and more pointed refutation of the tradition of thought that has so heavily informed this book. That said, I truly hope everyone will read this, and ironically hope you can learn from it while rejecting the darker features of the work.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 7, 2025Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseExcellent service and book as described.Thank you.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 17, 2025Format: KindleVerified PurchaseI was surprised at the depth of this book and it is one you read, put aside, then read again later.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 12, 2025Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseI would, and have recommend this book to any political/theological/philosophical junkie. The ideas are fantastic but sometimes run on too long.
I’d also critique the format. There are no simple breaks between major ideas in chapters which would make transitions much easier to identify.
The font is also quite big (I suspect to make the format easier as this is more an essay than a book) and this results in sometimes as few as 7-8 words in a single line which can make it hard to ready smoothly as you are always having to move to the next line. These are editing issues that should have been addressed. It’s still a great book.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 21, 2024Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseIt has been quite some time since I've read a book that rises to the level of a must-read (note: I've got a shelf/tag on Goodreads for those that make this list...), but this one fits squarely in that mold.
MacIntyre first rightly diagnoses our current crisis: the suffocation of all competing institutions by the sterile, all-encompassing, managerial bureaucracy he calls the Total State. Not the brutal, murderous, totalitarian dictatorships that manage to monopolize our conception of such a regime, but what Dreher rightly termed "soft totalitarianism" or the "pink police state."
The author further traces the inevitable rise of the total state, dipping into traditional conservative thinkers like Burnham and de Jouvenal but relying heavily also on lesser know reactionaries like Curtis Yarvin, from whom MacIntyre seems to have been influenced heavily.
Along the way he avoids the common pitfalls of most mainstream conservative thinking that our solution lies in a "return to the Constitution" or some other idyllic past (1950s, anyone?), but recognizes that the seeds of the total state were sown in the founding itself... that "liberal democracy made assumptions about human nature that were false."
He offers no simplistic solutions, merely observing in the final chapters that there is hope because the total state is 'doomed,' but that "the only way out is through." Like all true conservatives, he understands that pollyannish solutions are unhelpful and that the seeds of a new world must be sown with hard work, sacrifice, and patience.








