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You must remember this

Andrew E. Busch is associate director and professor at the Institute of American Civics in the Baker School of Public Policy and Public Affairs at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. He is also a frequent contributor to the Claremont Review of Books. In “The Outsiders,” Professor Busch reviews When the Clock Broke: Con Men, Conspiracists, and How America Cracked Up in the Early 1990s (“One of the Washington Post’s Ten Best Books of 2024,” “One of The New York Times’s 100 Notable Books of 2024”), by John Ganz.

Professor Busch’s scrupulous review is interesting and long, but it will save you the time that would be necessary to read the book. Professor Busch concludes his review with this timeless reminder geared to Ganz’s book:

Driving Ganz’s analysis is a particular way of thinking, captured neatly in his list of the “good guys” of the early ’90s: Jesse Jackson, Bernie Sanders, Tom Harkin, Jerry Brown, Harris Wofford. His partisan leanings lead him to make observations that he is unable or unwilling to process fully. Clearly, he fears demagoguery and authoritarianism—at least from the right—but he simply equates democracy with egalitarianism, never pairing it with constitutionalism, rights, or the consent of the governed. Yet, it is precisely democracy untethered to constitutionalism or fundamental rights that is most vulnerable to demagoguery and authoritarianism. Once that door is opened, any unscrupulous actor can walk through. Ganz quotes Huey P. Long as claiming, “There is perfect democracy [in Louisiana], and when you have perfect democracy it is pretty hard to tell it from a dictatorship.” Long might well have read Aristotle. But, sincere or not, Long was nothing if not a voice for egalitarianism—the veritable Bernie Sanders of the 1930s.

Whole thing here.

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