For decades the liberal class was a defense against the worst excesses of power. But the pillars of the liberal class-- the press, universities, the labor movement, the Democratic Party, and liberal religious institutions--have collapsed. In its absence, the poor, the working class, and even the middle class no longer have a champion.
In this searing polemic Chris Hedges indicts liberal institutions, including his former employer, the New York Times, who have distorted their basic beliefs in order to support unfettered capitalism, the national security state, globalization, and staggering income inequalities. Hedges argues that the death of the liberal class created a profound vacuum at the heart of American political life. And now speculators, war profiteers, and demagogues-- from militias to the Tea Party--are filling the void.
Edward Ongweso Jr is a tech writer.
Chris Hedges’ DEATH OF THE LIBERAL CLASS was the first text I ever read that laid out this narrative and helped give some nitro to my radicalization. I also remember that book being shit on at the time for being far too gloomy and depressing, turns out he was holding back https://t.co/8zMc9yX8vY
Weed advocate.
@EricRWeinstein It always has been! Read Chris Hedges Death of the Liberal Class!
illustration, motion, strategy.
@Tracinski Scruton wrote Fools, Frauds, Firebrands in 2015. Chomsky's Manufacturing Consent was 1988. (A warning not a manual) Chris Hedges, Death of the Liberal Class, 2011. Sowell, Quest for Cosmic Justice, 2002. Camille Paglia, Horowitz, Zizek, Loury... "literally all" try again bro.