The Enemy at Home
The Cultural Left and its Responsibility for 9/11
In The Enemy at Home, bestselling author Dinesh D'Souza makes the startling claim that the 9/11 attacks and other terrorist acts around the world can be directly traced to the ideas and attitudes perpetrated by America's cultural left.
D'Souza shows that liberals—people like Hillary Clinton, Ted Kennedy, Barney Frank, Bill Moyers, and Michael Moore—are responsible for fostering a culture that angers and repulses not just Muslim countries but also traditional and religious societies around the world. Their outspoken opposition to American foreign policy-including the way the Bush administration is conducting the war on terror-contributes to the growing hostility, encouraging people both at home and abroad to blame America for the problems of the world. He argues that it is not our exercise of freedom that enrages our enemies but rather our abuse of that freedom—from the sexual liberty or women to the support of gay marriage, birth control, and no-fault divorce, to the aggressive exploitation of our vulgar, licentious popular culture.
The cultural wars at home and the global war on terror are usually viewed as separate problems. In this groundbreaking book, D'Souza shows that they are one and the same. It is only by curtailing the left's attack on religion, family, and traditional values that we can persuade moderate Muslims and others around the world to cooperate with us and to begin to shun the extremists in their own countries.
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
January 30, 2007 -
Formats
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OverDrive Listen audiobook
- ISBN: 9781400123667
- File size: 317801 KB
- Duration: 11:02:05
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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AudioFile Magazine
Since the terrible events of 9/11, the question on the lips of Americans, along with most of the Western world, is WHY? Political writer Dinesh D'Souza attempts to pin the blame on American liberals. This audio presentation has the perfect narrator in Michael Kramer, who manages to achieve an almost sublime objectivity in delivery. He takes D'Souza's politically charged, often controversial material and drives it at full speed with a taut, businesslike approach. There is no slackening of pace, or even an intake of breath, for complicated pronunciations, lengthy lists of names, accounts of shocking atrocities, heavyweight facts, or tales of religious-inspired warfare. This is a production that requires two or three listening sessions--or, alternatively, an intuitive use of the rewind button. B.D.J. (c) AudioFile 2007, Portland, Maine -
Publisher's Weekly
November 27, 2006
Conservative pundit D'Souza (Illiberal Education
) roots the blame for the 9/11 attacks in the left wing's "aggressive global campaign to undermine the traditional patriarchal family" in this mostly lucid but unconvincing argument. Pointing to Hillary Clinton, Britney Spears and Noam Chomsky, he decries those who have teamed up with Hollywood and the U.N. to foist an irreligious, sexually licentious, antifamily liberal culture—epitomized by Eve Ensler's play The Vagina Monologues
and gay marriage initiatives—on a Muslim world that rightly reviles it. By deliberately attacking Islamic values, the left tacitly allies itself with al- Qaeda in its effort to defeat Bush's war on terror and thus discredit conservatism at home, he asserts. But D'Souza's claim that Islamic extremists are inflamed solely by America's music videos and feminists—not its U.S. bases in Saudi Arabia, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict or American support for Muslim dictators—is too single-minded. For example, he paints Abu Ghraib poster-girl Lynndie England as the personification of liberal sexual depravity, without acknowledging that the U.S. Army sent her to Iraq, not the left. Charging that liberals aid terrorists while sympathizing with the terrorists' culturally conservative worldview, D'Souza's critique of American cultural excess trips over its own inconsistencies.
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