In this rousing, persuasive, and hugely entertaining book, John Podhoretz says that George W. Bush has earned a place in the pantheon of great American chief executives---and shows in one amazing detail after another how Bush's success has driven some of his critics into a pathological frenzy. Podhoretz is the first to acknowledge that the odds were stacked against Dubya, the inexperienced Texas governor who took up residence in the White House lacking an electoral majority, dogged by widely publicized verbal mishaps, and widely viewed by the American elite as a lightweight. But to the delight of his friends and the teeth-gnashing frustration of liberals, George W. Bush has proven himself an immensely effective president. Throughout his three years in the White House, as Podhoretz explains, Dubya has outsmarted, out-maneuvered, out-articulated, and outshone adversaries and critics. Steeled by the tragedy of September 11, the new president took a nation more obsessed with reality television than with the reality of international terrorism and girded it for the long struggle that lay ahead. He has presided over two major military campaigns to stunning success, initiated tax cuts whose dimensions have awed critics and fans alike, and brought his party into the twenty-first century. He has been resourceful, disciplined, and independent-minded---so much so that he was able to reject his own father's governing style as president to find his own voice and his own place in history. Bush hasn't hoarded his political capital, but has used it in bold and unexpected ways. Instead of bowing to conventional wisdom and carving out a centrist position, he has remained true to his ideological roots. Instead of deferring to established Beltway thinking, he has done what he thinks is best for America and the world. As Bush has grown more presidential, the criticisms of him have grown more intense---and, in Podhoretz's view, crazier and crazier. In a series of short chapters, Podhoretz takes a rhetorical scalpel to eight of the wildest caricatures of Bush and leaves them in hilarious shreds. In a season of broadsides being fired from both sides of the aisle, here is a book that distinguishes itself by the force of its arguments and the ringing clarity of its thought. Impassioned, insightful, and convincing, Bush Country is an analysis of a presidency gone right and a celebration of a 0man who has already earned his place in history.
Well done book. Bottom line here, Kerry doesnt have a prayer. The real debating hasent even begun and already Kerry is tripping on his own statements and misstatements. Please. I'm a die hard Democrat, is this the best face we can put forward. Good book though.
The right man at the right time
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
First of all, I was thrilled to see our local Costco offering this book along with Let Freedom Ring and Deliver Us From Evil as replacements for all of their copies of The Price of Loyalty and American Dynasty. Did those two books bomb or what?George W. Bush is the right man at the right time. Good to see that authors like Podhoretz is telling it like it is. MANY OF US ARE GETTING TIRED OF THE DEMOCRAT LIES.Good to see that GWBII has once again passed Kerry according to recent polls. I guess the real truth is finally getting out.In another regard, I find it interesting that so many negative reviews were posted here on this book before it was even released. Guys, try reading the book. A saying that I believe in goes like this:"A mind is like a parachute, it only works when it is open."Try opening your minds guys.
I liked it
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
I thought this might be another rabid right-wing book, but it really isn't. Compared to Hannity and Coulter, this book is something that most people can read and see the clearly explained arguments for Bush.
Pleasantly surprised
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 21 years ago
Until now, it seemed the anti-Bush crowd had all the big books out there. I thought "An End To Evil" would be the first good defense of Bush, but despite an impressive pedigree, it was too preachy and narrow in focus. I had low expectations for Bush Country, and did not much appreciate the subtitle. But after a few pages, I was hooked, and found myself blind-sided by an exceptional repudiation of Bush haters, leaving no anti-Bush charge unanswered.Liberals will not appreciate this book (especially the way "liberal" ends up being synonymous with "wrong"). They will be irked by almost every Bush-loving sentence. But they will be hard pressed to dispute anything this book says.
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