1 posted on
12/01/2003 5:31:38 AM PST by
oblomov
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To: oblomov
Enemies, Foreign and Domestic.
Glue a little mirror on the front cover.
To: oblomov
Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations.
To: oblomov
The Black Book of Communism
Death By Government
4 posted on
12/01/2003 5:37:16 AM PST by
Tijeras_Slim
(SSDD - Same S#it Different Democrat)
To: oblomov
6 posted on
12/01/2003 5:37:26 AM PST by
ml/nj
To: oblomov
David Horowitz' "Radical Son," which describes how he evolved from a Red-Diaper Baby to a conservative spokesman.
To: oblomov
Dereliction of Duty, Hell to Pay
8 posted on
12/01/2003 5:38:10 AM PST by
Maria S
("…the end is near…this time, Americans are serious; Bush is not like Clinton." Uday Hussein 4/9/03)
To: oblomov
The Conservative Mind by Russell Kirk
10 posted on
12/01/2003 5:39:14 AM PST by
Russ
To: oblomov
Click
here for a recommendation from a former loony leftie. Hayek's book
The Road to Serfdom made an indelible impression.
11 posted on
12/01/2003 5:39:44 AM PST by
mewzilla
To: oblomov
Ayn Rand. She was not flawless but did have a knack of engaging the passive liberal mind.
12 posted on
12/01/2003 5:39:48 AM PST by
palmer
(They've reinserted my posting tube)
To: oblomov
It might be easier to find a new friend.
13 posted on
12/01/2003 5:40:23 AM PST by
billhilly
(If you're lurking here from DU, I trust this post will make you sick)
To: oblomov
"Radical Son" by David Horowitz
I haven't read the book, but I did just read two chapters from it in an anthology, and I am thinking if I drop a hint or two I can be given it for Christmas.
As you may know, Hororwitz was a red-diaper baby who became a leading light on the radical left, after the murder of his bookkeeper by the Black Panthers he finally saw through the lies of communism/socialism and finally migrated all the way over to become a leading light of the right. He is also a tremendous intellectual who has written (with his oft time collaborator Peter Collier) several well regarded books of multi-generational biography on great American dynastys.
He is an excellent, highly readable writer. You start reading his stuff and the writing just carries you along, you don't want to put down the book. Not just because of what he is saying, but because of the fluid and interesting way he is saying it.
I'm not sure how left-wing your friend is. If he's a hard-core commie he may regard Horowitz as a traitor to the cause and not want to listen to him. Otherwise I think anyone would find his story of a tremendous life-change interesting and eye opening.
14 posted on
12/01/2003 5:42:28 AM PST by
jocon307
(The Dems don't get it, the American people do.)
To: oblomov
15 posted on
12/01/2003 5:46:35 AM PST by
IoCaster
("That to live by one man's will became the cause of all men's misery." - Richard Hooker)
To: oblomov
16 posted on
12/01/2003 5:47:14 AM PST by
Mad Dawgg
(French: old Europe word meaning surrender)
To: oblomov
17 posted on
12/01/2003 5:49:16 AM PST by
Mad Dawgg
(French: old Europe word meaning surrender)
To: oblomov; Travis McGee
I have a friend who is a hardcore left-liberal. Looking to buy a book that will not convert him, but which might open his mind a little to other political possibilities. Age range? Education? Family? That first suggestion for a copy of Enemies, Foreign and Domestic is a good one, and I'd bet you could get the author to include a personal inscription for the recipient, maybe even yet in time for a Christmas present.
Aside from EF&D, much of the late Robert Anson Heinlein's work comes to mind, and most of his works are still in print, one clue that they're a pretty good read. A lot depends of your friend's taste, of course, and I'm hoping you can give us a little more info in that regard.
-archy-/-
18 posted on
12/01/2003 5:52:46 AM PST by
archy
(Angiloj! Mia kusenveturilo estas plena da angiloj!)
To: oblomov
If you're trying to convince him of the moral and ethical bankruptcy of the hard left:
Shakedown, by Kenneth Timmerman, is an excellent read.
If you want to make him aware of the true, documented depths to which the Dems sank in order to (attempt to) steal the election of 2000: Bill Sammon's At Any Cost should open his eyes (and make his jaw drop open...) :)
If (like most leftists) he's succumbed to the subtle poison of today's fashionable leftist anti-Semitism: Alan Dershowitz's The Case For Israel, Phyllis Chesler's The New Anti-Semitism and Yaacov Lozowick's Right To Exist are all excellent cures for that particular disease.
Possibly your best bet, however, is to give him something from a fellow Democrat: Zell Miller's A National Party No More. It spells out, succinctly and inarguably, the horrors of the present-day leftist agenda... and, coming from one of his own, he can't reasonably cry "bias" against its arguments.
I don't know how to make hyperlinks -- perhaps some enterprising fellow Freeper could help out, here? -- but, all of these are currently available on Amazon. Just type in the titles, and read the descriptions offered of each. Hope this helps! :)
19 posted on
12/01/2003 5:56:13 AM PST by
KentTrappedInLiberalSeattle
("The Clintons have damaged our country. They have done it together, in unison." -- Peggy Noonan)
To: oblomov
I know I'm going off on a tangent, but I'm more fascinated by the fact that you are able to have a Leftie friend at all. I've tried to ignore it in family and friends and have not been able to do so. I find that it permeates their outlook on everything and drives their every action, keeping us at a distance. It is so difficult to respect their intelligence. I guess you're a better man than I am (even though I'm female, heh.)
To: oblomov
1984 and Animal Farm
22 posted on
12/01/2003 6:02:53 AM PST by
2banana
To: oblomov
http://www.dianeravitch.com/
Diane Ravitch, The Language Police: How Pressure Groups Restrict What Students Learn (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, May 2003)
To: oblomov
My first thought was also "Radical Son," but I tried to convert someone with that book once, and she practically hissed at me when I put the book in front of her. Horowitz's name has been so thoroughly thrashed by the left that even moderate leftists associate him with Nazis and the Klan. Reality, of course, doesn't enter into it.
I recommend PJ O'Rourke's "All the Troubles in the World," a book that started me down the path to conservatism. Rather than talking outright politics or assassinating specific public figures, it takes on some of the darling causes of the left like ecology and points out how the progressive solutions are miserably counter-productive to the professed goals. It's absolutely hilarious, and filled with useful facts. I love the reaction I get from lefties when I tell them with a straight face that I don't recycle because it's bad for the environment.
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