Paul Edward Gottfried
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Fascism: The Career of a Concept
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published
2015
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9 editions
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Multiculturalism and the Politics of Guilt: Towards a Secular Theocracy
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published
2002
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10 editions
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After Liberalism: Mass Democracy in the Managerial State
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published
1999
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10 editions
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The Strange Death of Marxism: The European Left in the New Millennium (Volume 1)
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published
2005
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4 editions
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Antifascism: The Course of a Crusade
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published
2021
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4 editions
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Conservatism in America: Making Sense of the American Right
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published
2007
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8 editions
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Leo Strauss and the Conservative Movement in America
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published
2011
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9 editions
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The Vanishing Tradition: Perspectives on American Conservatism
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published
2020
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4 editions
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The Conservative Movement
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published
1988
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7 editions
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Encounters: My Life with Nixon, Marcuse, and Other Friends and Teachers
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published
2009
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2 editions
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“The appeal by twentieth-century pluralists to scientific method was also ideologically—and even messianically—driven. It ignored scientific data that interfered with environmentalist assumptions and misrepresented socialist faith as “scientific planning.”
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“The political class has adopted inclusiveness and diversity as a political instrument, as a means of controlling a society it has set about reshaping. The “diversity machine” is a mechanism of state power that operates without anyone being permitted to notice its coercive nature. Therapeutic regimes are packaged in a way that disguises their resort to force; both the Left and establishment Right in the United States, which misrepresent political life, have helped to make this concealment possible.”
― Multiculturalism and the Politics of Guilt: Towards a Secular Theocracy
― Multiculturalism and the Politics of Guilt: Towards a Secular Theocracy
“...obscurantist feature in social scientists trying to combine pluralism with environmentalism. They are so preoccupied with the role of prejudice in creating hostile environments that they perpetually deny the obvious, that stereotypes are rough generalizations about groups derived from long-term observation. Such generalizations are usually correct in describing group tendencies and in predicting certain collective actions, even if they do not adequately account for differences among individuals. Nonetheless, as Goldberg explains, the self-described pluralist and prominent psychologist Gordon Allport went out of his way in The Nature of Prejudice (1954) to reject stereotypes as factually inaccurate as well as socially harmful. For Allport and a great many other social Scientists, nothing is intuitively correct unless it is politically so.”
― After Liberalism: Mass Democracy in the Managerial State
― After Liberalism: Mass Democracy in the Managerial State
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