
About the Author
Mona Charen's column on politics and culture is syndicated in more than 200 newspapers. Before becoming a columnist and television commentator on CNN's Capital Gang, Charen wrote speeches in the Reagan White House for Nancy Reagan and worked on the presidential campaign of Jack Kemp. After show more graduating from Barnard College, Columbia University, she began her career in journalism at National Review magazine. She lives in Virginia with her husband and three children show less
Works by Mona Charen
Useful Idiots: How Liberals Got It Wrong in the Cold War and Still Blame America First (2003) 295 copies, 3 reviews
Do-Gooders: How Liberals Hurt Those They Claim to Help (and the Rest of Us) (2004) 129 copies, 2 reviews
Whatever became of virtue? 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Gender
- female
- Education
- Barnard College
Columbia University
George Washington University (Law School) - Occupations
- editorial assistant (National Review)
speechwriter - Nationality
- USA
- Places of residence
- Livingston, New Jersey, USA
Virginia, USA
Washington, D.C., USA - Associated Place (for map)
- USA
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Reviews
Useful Idiots: How Liberals Got It Wrong in the Cold War and Still Blame America First by Mona Charen
Charon’s account of the twentieth century is strictly written from the right-hand side of the left-right spectrum. She recaps history from the big wars to Grenada, giving the title (the useful idiots) as the theme of her criticism of the left. As she winds her way through the cold war, Asia, Latin America, the fall of the iron curtain and Soviet collapse, she points to the unthinking support the left always seems to give the anti-American side. She illustrates the same for the war with show more Islamo-Facism and gives brief looks at internationalism and environmentalism.
While the viewpoint is constant, the analysis is limited, and I don’t expect it to change any minds. She seems to have published a long detailed set of quotations rather than any new opinion. I’ll keep the book as a reference due to its many extended quotations, but expect only the extreme right to enjoy it. show less
While the viewpoint is constant, the analysis is limited, and I don’t expect it to change any minds. She seems to have published a long detailed set of quotations rather than any new opinion. I’ll keep the book as a reference due to its many extended quotations, but expect only the extreme right to enjoy it. show less
Useful Idiots: How Liberals Got It Wrong in the Cold War and Still Blame America First by Mona Charen
So, a few years ago I read "Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them" or whatever that book was called. Now, as someone who considers herself neither democrat or republican, I enjoyed it. I asked my dad to read it, and he gave me this book to read. My dad is of the libertarian persuasion.
Anyway, I did learn from this book, but what I learned is hardly surprizing. It seems that this book was writen to point fingers at liberals and democrats and say "see? see how BAD they are? They HATE America! show more Why do they hate America so?" Well, I don't think that is quite how it is. The book is subtitled "How Liberals Got it Wrong in the Cold War and Still Blame America First." That last portion gets to me. I fail to see how examining our own faults makes us so terrible. Don't we learn from our mistakes? I would think it is a good thing.
Many of the other things, I agreed with. I've never been a fan of Katie Couric or a number of other journalists. Every word I read in the paper or on the internet, every word I hear coming from the tv or radio, I'm analyzing constantly, and I know that a certain turn of phrase, or a particular emphasis in the way they say something carries a particular meaning that they intend to convey. Sometimes, sneaking it in.
Anyway, I know that the media is biased. I know that reporters, authors, personalities, etc say really really dumb stuff. Sometimes, they even say things that disgust me. But that goes for republicans as well.
Eh. Both political parties are definately not for me. show less
Anyway, I did learn from this book, but what I learned is hardly surprizing. It seems that this book was writen to point fingers at liberals and democrats and say "see? see how BAD they are? They HATE America! show more Why do they hate America so?" Well, I don't think that is quite how it is. The book is subtitled "How Liberals Got it Wrong in the Cold War and Still Blame America First." That last portion gets to me. I fail to see how examining our own faults makes us so terrible. Don't we learn from our mistakes? I would think it is a good thing.
Many of the other things, I agreed with. I've never been a fan of Katie Couric or a number of other journalists. Every word I read in the paper or on the internet, every word I hear coming from the tv or radio, I'm analyzing constantly, and I know that a certain turn of phrase, or a particular emphasis in the way they say something carries a particular meaning that they intend to convey. Sometimes, sneaking it in.
Anyway, I know that the media is biased. I know that reporters, authors, personalities, etc say really really dumb stuff. Sometimes, they even say things that disgust me. But that goes for republicans as well.
Eh. Both political parties are definately not for me. show less
A wonderful compilation of evidence that the "progressives" claim of the moral high ground is an utter farce.
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- Rating
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