Rating:  Summary: The Best of His Work Review: D'Souza publishes the best of his works to date with this book, a flattering statement since his other works are some of the most significant contributions to the conservative cause during this generation. If you need additional ammunition for political debate (and we all do), then pick up this book!...
Rating:  Summary: Great bathroom reading! Review: Although I am a young, progressive, Minnesota liberal I found this book to be intensely entertaining. It answered many of my questions about conservatism...all those times I've knotted my brow and exclaimed with absolute fury and frustration, "how could anybody actually think that!?!" D'Souza lays out quite nicely how all this garbage gets shoveled in the brains of mindless youth like "Chris" who are more interested in rebelling against their feminist professors than anything else. While I've also felt rage towards some of my professors who refuse, absolutely refuse, to be pragmatic, this has not caused me to run out an become a facist. Sadly, this book makes it clear why some of the kids these days are doing exactly that.
Rating:  Summary: Just what the conservative college student ordered! Review: Finally the lifeboat for conservative college students has arrived. D'Souza's witty, brief, and diverse comments make this book a must have for any young conservative heading off to the liberal brainwashing academies known as college. This book gives you enough ammo to see through the muck and mire of liberalism and it will help you to celebrate America for what it truly is...THE GREATEST COUNTRY IN THE WORLD!!!
Rating:  Summary: An Unbelievable Book Review: Being a high school student, I get liberalism shoved down my throat every day that I go to school. This book has given me the tools to fight back against the liberal lies and an opportunity to finally see both, not one, side of the political spectrum. Every high school student should read this book because it is an easy, fast reading book that will dispel many of the myths that high school teachers have embedded into our thought process.
Rating:  Summary: Black Democrat Review: I am a 24 African American, and I found this book to be a mind opener. I live at a campus that is very liberal and every day I get shrill after shrill about how awful America is. I swear to GOD I have never gotten a differnt view point about america. I always just thought my counrty was sick and somehow evil but this book brings some light into the complexity of this nation. I am so sick of the attacks on this country by proffesors and liberals. The students are talking about transvestive studies being added to my school, and why I am homophobic if I dont support it...pleeease!! I have had it I think the saying is true a conservative is a liberal who has been robbed and I think I ahve gotten robbed and I am mad, very mad. I am still a democrat but I am voting Republican 2004. I am so sick of this ... God bless america
Rating:  Summary: Read this book! Review: D'Souza continues his winning streak by writing another fabulous book. The fact that liberals react to this book like Linda Blair to the crucifix is an added bonus.
Rating:  Summary: again, why america is great Review: In his earlier book, "What's So Great About America", D'Souza wrote of how the conservatives made this country great, and how the liberals are screwing everything up. But in this book, D'Souza approaches the same topic, but from another perspective. In this one, he talks about how the liberals are screwing everything up, and how the conservatives are doing things to make this country great. D'Souza is to be applauded for the great diversity of knowledge he consistently displays in his books, covering a wide range of issues, from how the conservatives are great to how the liberals are screwing everything up.
Rating:  Summary: Refreshing Review: Dinesh D'Souza has written here about the very foundation for conservatism and why he holds to conservative values. This book is a must-buy for liberals and conservatives. I would encourage liberals to pick it up not to be 'enlightened', but rather, at the very least, to understand where conservatives are coming from. Conservatives will enjoy reading D'Souza's candid analysis of affirmative action, feminism, and multiculturalism. Dinesh truly understands the issues, addresses both arguments, and cites many examples throughout of why conservative doctrine is legitimate. All in all, it's a great book for both political and social understanding. Highly recommended.
Rating:  Summary: Liberalistic Librarians, Awake! Review: Dinesh writes eloquently about the myths of mutibalkanism and pluralism and unilliberal education and libertenarianans and how all those libertine liberal librarians are libeling the conservationist conservative consortiums that have made this country great. D'Souza, although he comes from one of the pooreset and most backward countries in the world, has quickly learned that it was the conservatories run by the consortium of conservative conservatives that have made this country the great conservative beacon of freedom and opportunity that it is. Come on all you libertine liberal librarians, read this book and see how false your libersified libertarian liberalism has been and how the consorted conservative conervatarians are the ones who will restore this nation to the great concerted conservative conservatory that it once was.
Rating:  Summary: Infinitely Useful For College Students Review: This is the type of material that young conservatives should be reading. It is full of substance and original thought, unlike other conservatives whose intellect I question (like Hannity, Coulter, etc.). Dinesh breaks his work into many sections, and I find the chapters on "Who Are The Post-Modernists?" and "How To Harpoon A Liberal" to be so correct on their asssessments it is actually is quite amusing. When I meet a 'PoMo' I mentally check off all the points which Dinesh lists as their characteristics, and what do you know...they almost always perfectly fit their stereotype! Sure this book is brief and I would have appreciated more depth, but the examples Dinesh gives are helpful. Consider "Letters To A Young Conservative" almost as a crash course for preparation for dealling with what awaits non-liberals, non-radicals, and non-Marxists on college campuses and the like.
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