Are conservative policies the best way to achieve liberal
ideals? Former Bush Administration official (and former liberal)
David B. Cohen answers that provocative question in the affirmative
in a thought-provoking book that is certain to spark debate.
"Left-Hearted, Right-Minded" arrives just in time for the 2012
Presidential election season. And while the book is a great guide
to help voters of all political persuasions think about the great
issues that will be debated during the campaign, its relevance will
last years into the future.
The book starts out as a political memoir with two protagonists:
Liberal Dave, the person that the author was in his youth, and
ConservaDave, the person the author ultimately became. Liberal Dave
was a typical American kid--if by "typical" you mean a Jewish
Samoan being raised by a single mother in an extended working class
family.
The author takes us on an often amusing journey in which Liberal
Dave, a staunch progressive with little tolerance for
conservatives, eventually becomes a conservative himself--without
abandoning the concerns and ideals he held as a liberal. We even
get to listen in on an extended and sometimes heated debate between
Liberal Dave and ConservaDave on a wide range of issues, including
capitalism, Occupy Wall Street, Steve Jobs, taxing the rich, and
much more.
The book then moves into an issue-by-issue demonstration of its
central thesis: that conservative policies are indeed the best way
to achieve liberal ideals. With chapters on education, health care,
immigration, the environment, and foreign policy, Cohen outlines
how conservative policies are the best way to protect the
vulnerable, the disadvantaged, the oppressed--and the rest of us as
well. In so doing, Cohen fleshes out a hopeful, youthful,
idealistic and optimistic brand of conservatism that can appeal to
open-minded people from all parts of the political spectrum.
"Left-Hearted, Right-Minded" has something for people of all
political stripes:
"For conservatives, " the book demonstrates how to effectively
communicate their ideas to those who do not yet share their
beliefs--how to preach to the persuadable, and not just to the
converted. More importantly, the book is a celebration of the
idealism of conservatism--an idealism that the mainstream media and
the purveyors of our popular culture seem oblivious to.
"For independents, " the book explains conservative principles
in a way that they are most likely to respond to--free from the
anger that sometimes creeps into books that conservatives write for
other conservatives (or liberals write for other liberals).
"For liberals, " the book's civil yet passionate tone is an
invitation to a respectful and rational dialogue on the most
important issues of our time.
"I'm not trying to argue with liberals, who are well represented
among my dear friends and family," said Cohen. "I'm trying to start
a conversation. In the book, I try to support conservative policy
positions using arguments that would have resonated with me when I
was a liberal. I'm interested to see if these arguments resonate
with today's liberals. We're about to make choices that will
determine the course of our nation's history in ways that may be
virtually unalterable. It is essential that we have this
conversation."
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