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The Pity Party

A Mean-Spirited Diatribe Against Liberal Compassion

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

When liberals don't have reason, authority, or the American people on their side, they turn to the one thing they never run out of: Pity.

For decades, conservatives have chafed at being called "heartless" and "uncaring" by liberals who maintain that our essential choice as a nation is between the politics of kindness and the politics of cruelty. In The Pity Party, political scientist William Voegeli turns the tables on this argument, making the case that "compassion" is neither the essence of personal virtue nor the ultimate purpose of government.

Over the years, liberals have built a remarkable edifice of government programs that are justified by appeals to compassion: Head Start, immigration reform, gun control, affirmative action, and entitlements, to name only some. As Voegeli amply demonstrates, the liberals who promote these massive programs are weirdly indifferent as to whether they succeed. Instead, when the problems they are intended to solve fail to disappear, liberals double down, calling for yet more programs and ever greater expenditures in the name of "compassion." Meanwhile, conservatives who challenge the effectiveness of these programs are slandered as "heartless right-wingers."

Yet rather than challenge this tendentious liberal argument, the many conservatives it intimidates feel it necessary to insist that they really do "care." However, liberal compassion's good intentions consistently fail to translate into good results. Voegeli walks the reader through a plethora of programs that have become battlefields between conservatives fighting for more efficiency and liberals fighting for more budget-busting federal programs to address an ever-expanding catalog of social ills. Along the way, he explains the underpinnings of the liberal philosophy that reinforce this misapplied ideal and shows why today's self-described compassionate liberals are ultimately unfit to govern.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 8, 2014
      Claremont Review senior editor Voegeli (Never Enough: America’s Limitless Welfare State) reviews today’s politics of compassion and the ways liberals use its rhetoric. Arguing that it is central to modern American liberalism, he sets out to define the “proper scope of compassion’s ambit.” Voegeli persuasively asserts that denunciations of conservative heartlessness are calculated purely for political appeal, not policy effect. He also eviscerates as phony the “politics of kindness.” Readers otherwise interested in Voegeli’s points about the nature of progressive dreams and promise-making may find that his use of “bullshit” as a leitmotif coarsens this book-length essay. In particular, he is interested in what he calls “sincere bullshit,” the unexamined ideas that people hold in an age when “we can be anything we want to be.” Some of the examples inspected here include dogmatic thinking about gun control, the environment, and diversity. The smattering of vulgar language notwithstanding, Voegeli’s book is scholarly and lucid. Whether it can find an audience is another question. Though the title misleadingly suggests a narrowly focused attack on the Democratic Party, the book’s complexity will not appeal to Tea Party partisans looking for simple solutions and snarkier reads. And Progressives, for their part, will surely not be intrigued by a book that trenchantly critiques their movement as an ideology powered by cant and self-love. Agent: Carol Mann, Carol Mann Agency

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