I gave this book a lower rating because it was hard to read! I did not finish it though I'm glad to have tried tackling it! Things I learned that were fascinating: Conservatism seems to have been first defined during the French Revolution. Edmund Burke allowed that men had a great many rights - to the fruits of their labor, their inheritance, education and more, but the one right he refused to concede was "...the share of power and authority ...in the management of the state." He believed that equality ultimately meant a rotation in the seat of power - not a replacement of those in power. Victimhood was a talking point of the right ever since Burke decried the mob's treatment of Marie Antoinette - conservatism speaks to those who have lost something - land, privilege of white men, authority of the husband, rights of a factory owner. The aim is recovery and restoration. Conservatives believe that the liberal obsession with the rule of law disables American power and that the events of 9/11 were a result of this loss of power-the peace and prosperity of the Clinton years weakened American society. Conservatives, through the belief that they have or will loose their power, need a catalyst to fight against.
My apologies for my meager attempt to digest some of this book!