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Should be an interesting book and stir up some talk since he's from Harvard

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sar

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Who Are We : The Challenges to America's National Identity
by Samuel P. Huntington


In his seminal The Clash of Civilizations, Huntington anticipated the United States' battle with militant Islam. Here he turns his laser on America-or, rather, America as he thinks it ought to be. Despite its clinical tone, this book is an aggressive polemic whose central argument-that America, at heart, has been and in many ways should remain a Christian, Anglocentric country-wouldn't be out of place on many a conservative radio station. The author seeks at length to prove that the American Creed, which he defines as a Protestant-influenced ideology modeled on the British system, was the founders' original intent and remains America's best course. He then turns to many of the usual subjects-the imperiled primacy of English, the dangers of immigration and multiculturalism-to make his case. He argues that a growing divide between the patriotic working class and "denationalized elites" will lead to internal fissures. Where those findings can lead is another question. For instance, he predicts a movement of white nativism that "does not advocate white racial supremacy" yet believes that "mixing of races and hence culture is the road to national degeneration."
 
He argues that a growing divide between the patriotic working class and "denationalized elites" will lead to internal fissures.
Been that way since Geo. Washington, John Adams and Thos. Jefferson were making changes in the status quo. They just denationalized from the Brits. Talk about internal fissures.

Most of the rest just wanted to grow their crops, pay their bills and take a week off (yeah right) now and then.

But, it'll give those east and west coast intellectual types something to blather on about... while the rest of us just go to work to pay our bills and take a week off (yeah right) now and then.

Life is good.
 
If you want a free nation stock it with freedom-loving people. You need a culture of freedom, and that isn't limited to any one group.

On the other hand, to think you can de-couple political freedom from all aspects of religion and culture is, in my view, naive. The Enlightenment emanated from specific ideas, cultivated in specific places.
 
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