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The War on the West by Douglas Murray
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The War on the West (edition 2022)

by Douglas Murray (Author)

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2991187,766 (4.31)3
History. Politics. Sociology. Nonfiction. HTML:

An Instant New York Times Bestseller!

China has concentration camps now. Why do Westerners claim our sins are unique?

It is now in vogue to celebrate non-Western cultures and disparage Western ones. Some of this is a much-needed reckoning, but much of it fatally undermines the very things that created the greatest, most humane civilization in the world.

In The War on the West, Douglas Murray shows how many well-meaning people have been fooled by hypocritical and inconsistent anti-West rhetoric. After all, if we must discard the ideas of Kant, Hume, and Mill for their opinions on race, shouldn't we discard Marx, whose work is peppered with racial slurs and anti-Semitism? Embers of racism remain to be stamped out in America, but what about the raging racist inferno in the Middle East and Asia?

It's not just dishonest scholars who benefit from this intellectual fraud but hostile nations and human rights abusers hoping to distract from their own ongoing villainy. Dictators who slaughter their own people are happy to jump on the "America is a racist country" bandwagon and mimic the language of antiracism and "pro-justice" movements as PR while making authoritarian conquests.

If the West is to survive, it must be defended. The War on the West is not only an incisive takedown of foolish anti-Western arguments but also a rigorous new apologetic for civilization itself.

.
… (more)
Member:LokiSnook
Title:The War on the West
Authors:Douglas Murray (Author)
Info:Broadside Books (2022), 320 pages
Collections:Adventures
Rating:
Tags:non-fiction, politics, sociology

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The War on the West by Douglas Murray

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Showing 1-5 of 10 (next | show all)
A very well written book that clearly describes the cultural and political challenges that the west is undergoing and exposes the nature of the Marxist approach to deconstruct and the destruct all western institutions, beliefs, etc. the brief concluding chapter offers 2 ways forward to reverse the negative trend, of which only one preferred by the author, my view is unfortunately, the option that is to be avoided looks far more likely to be realised.
The 4 star rating was die to the brief and less than convincing conclusion, again a well written book describing the ills facing the west but very little on how to truly combat the threats faced. ( )
  Daniel_M_Oz | Mar 26, 2024 |
Much as with The Strange Death of Europe this book is primarily descriptive, not instructive. A lot of it takes the form of "look at X event from the recent years, isn't this crazy". If you're even slightly tuned into this topic you will have already heard of the majority of things Murray brings up, making the book work great as an overview for uninformed people who would never read the book in the first place.
But the principal problem of the book is that after all the descriptions of cancerous ideas infesting the west, it has no solutions but "grin and bear it". The majority of his own pushback comes in the tepid form of the conservative gravestone; "what if the roles were reversed".
You can trace the infection back in time much better than Murray bothers to here (only scant remarks about the intellectual heritage from Focault and others), and see a stronger reaction from people like Harold Bloom (and his "culture of resentment") or Victor Davis Hanson tracing out one of the first casualties in academia, the classics departments, in Who Killed Homer in the tail end of the 90s. This is not a new problem, it's just a malignant cancer that's finally spread to most areas of society. We're decades beyond the need to point to the cancer and well into the need for a treatment.
Unfortunately this book has no such answers. You get a nice back pat for the west being the only place that would tolerate the cancer having a platform and that's it. ( )
  A.Godhelm | Oct 20, 2023 |
3.5 actually.

Nothing really wrong with the book, but, at least for me, I didn't learn too much more about the subject, that I didn't know already. ( )
  Tower_Bob | Nov 7, 2022 |
The arguments in The War on the West are meticulous and convincing. I agree with pretty much all of them. What feels off is how these problems might seem like a "war" only if you primarily live and work inside Academia. Experts and intellectuals would contend that Academia isn't simply one industry among many, but a leading frontier for of ALL of society. Any internal threats to the industry would feel like a threat to everyone, but is really? Maybe. It's difficult to tell in the context of all the other problems the modern world faces.

I absolutely believe in the free exchange of ideas and will always welcome a spirited debate, even at the expense of someone's comfort level, and when I hear countless examples of this not happening, on campuses or in the public square, I am, of course, concerned. But at the same time many of those examples feel so insular, like they're an unintended consequence of the changing nature of the institutions themselves. I am concerned, but I'm not yet outraged at the level Douglas Murray is trying to convince me to be. Time will tell if I should be. ( )
1 vote Daniel.Estes | Aug 25, 2022 |
Murray is wrong to suggest that there is a War on the West if that war means actual armed conflict against Western institutions. The rich are every richer than the middle class as they continue to evade paying their fair share of tax due to their brilliant accountants and laywers. Capitalism, modern finance and stock markets, not to mentioned entrenched privilege and informal networks of patronage among chums or mates (England or Australia) from private schools, still romp home in the West. However he is right to say that the Left in control of symbolic power in cultural institutions such as the arts and the humanities in universities and galleries and museums and a significant part of the 'serious' media, have been keen in recent years to accentuate the ills of Western history and culture while showing a consistent lack of gratitude for its boons and benisons. I personally have always thought I was a left leaning person, but I have become increasingly shocked at how there is always someone more left wing than you are who will persecute the Heretic with the bile and ferocity of a eighteenth century Spanish inquisitor. Luckily Twitter is not an accurate representation of the overall population's political views - extreme views are over-represented on social media. Murray's book would have benefited from being honest about all of the institutions that have not been altered by the rising tide of 'wokeness', but his book is of value in standing up above the parapet and speaking in measured tones about the incoherence of many of the attacks on Western European culture made in recent times.
  Tom.Wilson | Aug 15, 2022 |
Showing 1-5 of 10 (next | show all)
The War on the West (HarperCollins) has had a particular fortune: the vast, valiant book by Douglas Murray, author of The madness of the crowd, talks about the ongoing culture war, the painful attack that Western culture suffers without really having a wall of defense, while real cannons are fired, the Russian ones, shaking our world to its foundations. Those blows, despite the general confusion, resonate everywhere, questioning the political and cultural world; Murray tries with evident fury, passion, sense of urgency, just dampened by an ironic British accent, to wake up the world from the hysteria and guilt by which it is put in grave danger of life.

Murray examines the war against our world above all from the center of the empire, the United States, and from his own England. The lens chosen is that of racial obsession, the so-called "critical race theory" that developed with the horrid killing of George Floyd by the American police in 2020 and then with Black Lives Matter. Like a deadly disease, CRT takes hold of Western society, creating deep ramifications: the consequence is a form of obsessive and definitive guilt, Murray says point by point. Our civilization has been reduced to this by the texts that now fill the bookstores, the school curricula, determine the chairs of the major universities such as Harvard, Stanford, Columbia, inspire the screams of incongruous and devastating demonstrations: they see our civilization as an octopus wrapped in slavery and racial hatred, from the foundations of Jerusalem, religion, and Rome, the order of the law. Racial culture, according to the CRT, nullifies all the way to equality and human fraternity regulated by postcolonial rules, by law, by democracy: "Progress in race relations is for the most part a mirage that obscures the fact that whites continue consciously and unconsciously to do everything in their power to secure dominance and maintain control." This is affirmed, among a thousand that Murray cites, one of the most important authors who wrote the new Talmud of our time, Derrick Bell.
added by NZFOI | editIl Giornale, Fiamma Nirenstein (Jul 7, 2022)
 
The author of The Strange Death of Europe has never been afraid of controversy, and Murray’s latest is no exception. The War on the West is a panoramic survey of a new prejudice that has commandeered western institutions in the name of social justice. It is, Murray argues, out to “demonise the people who still make up the racial majority in the West”. The war on our civilisation turns out, for Murray, to mean a war against whiteness.
As a result, we get two books in one. A series of celebrations – and defences – of the best of the West sits alongside a catalogue of anti-white discrimination, mostly pursued as a form of white self-flagellation to atone for racial sin. In the end, for all the West’s failings, as Murray says in his chapter on China, the most important question to ask its critics is “compared to what?” Today, the China-Russia alliance presents a chilling glimpse of the real alternative: a pair of genocidal, expansionist regimes, each justifying its crimes in the name of civilisational purity.
Susan Sontag called white Western civilisation “the cancer of human history”. Given what Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin are up to, it might be fairer, if unconsoling, to see the West as history’s chemotherapy. Traumatic to encounter, in many ways destructive, but the alternatives don’t bear thinking about.

added by NZFOI | editThe Telegraph, Marc Sidwell (Apr 20, 2022)
 
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For my godchildren.
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There is an obvious, observable truth about people in the West.
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History. Politics. Sociology. Nonfiction. HTML:

An Instant New York Times Bestseller!

China has concentration camps now. Why do Westerners claim our sins are unique?

It is now in vogue to celebrate non-Western cultures and disparage Western ones. Some of this is a much-needed reckoning, but much of it fatally undermines the very things that created the greatest, most humane civilization in the world.

In The War on the West, Douglas Murray shows how many well-meaning people have been fooled by hypocritical and inconsistent anti-West rhetoric. After all, if we must discard the ideas of Kant, Hume, and Mill for their opinions on race, shouldn't we discard Marx, whose work is peppered with racial slurs and anti-Semitism? Embers of racism remain to be stamped out in America, but what about the raging racist inferno in the Middle East and Asia?

It's not just dishonest scholars who benefit from this intellectual fraud but hostile nations and human rights abusers hoping to distract from their own ongoing villainy. Dictators who slaughter their own people are happy to jump on the "America is a racist country" bandwagon and mimic the language of antiracism and "pro-justice" movements as PR while making authoritarian conquests.

If the West is to survive, it must be defended. The War on the West is not only an incisive takedown of foolish anti-Western arguments but also a rigorous new apologetic for civilization itself.

.

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