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In this provocative set of essays, John Bookman delves beneath
the transitory issues of the day to identify and respond to the
fundamental, perennial questions of American politics. The
questions concern the myths that shape the thinking of so many
Americans about politics. These myths are the popular narratives
that impart meaning to the American experience and define for many
what it is to be an American. For the first time, readers have
under one cover a sober, informed examination of these myths.
Among the myths subjected to critical examination are the
following:
1. The Framers of the Constitution were fundamentalist Christians.
Americans at the time of the founding constituted a Christian
nation.
2. The Framers were disinterested demigods who wrote a constitution
for the ages.
3. James Madison intended separation of powers and checks and
balances to protect the general citizenry against government.
4. Constitutional constraints on democratic majorities are
necessary to prevent tyranny of the majority.
5. The United States is exceptional. It is more populist,
egalitarian, religious, patriotic, and prosperous than other
nations.
6. Americans are a chosen people marked out by God or history to
carry out a world-historical mission.
7. The unfettered market uses resources more efficiently, better
promotes growth, and confers more freedom than other ways of
organizing the production and distribution of goods and
services.
In his examination of these myths, Bookman does not slight argument
in favor of description and explanation. He does not neglect
description and explanation, but he enlists them in the service of
arguments, and those arguments reach conclusions sure to be
controversial.
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