Książka A Plastic World J A Griffin

A Plastic World

The Paradox of the Leftist Mind

Autor: J A Griffin
Język: Angielski
Oprawa: Miękka
Dostępność: Zapowiedź
Wydanie 10. 07. 2026
53.29
A PLASTIC WORLD is a trilogy about how the West is trading its real culture for a manufactured, plas...

Informacje o książce

Autor
Język
Angielski
Oprawa
Książka - Miękka
Data wydania
2026
strony
248
EAN
9798996377763
Enbook ID
53241358
Waga
338
Wymiary
152 x 229 x 14

Pełny opis

A PLASTIC WORLD is a trilogy about how the West is trading its real culture for a manufactured, plastic one.

Book One, How the World Stopped Making Sense, is the diagnosis - what happened to the West, and why ordinary life started to feel subtly unreal.

Book Two, The Paradox of the Leftist Mind, is the analysis - why the same words keep producing the opposite of what they promise, and why the machinery can't correct itself.

Book Three, The Fight to Save the West, is the defense - essays that each guard one thing worth keeping: family, beauty, memory, borders, the courage to judge.

They tell us they care about the poor, and the cities they run fill with people sleeping on the sidewalk. They tell us they want tolerance, and the person who disagrees loses his job. They tell us to follow the science, and the doctors who ask questions get punished. The same words keep producing the opposite of what they promise - and the contradictions stopped being occasional a long time ago. That is the pattern.

The Paradox of the Leftist Mind is the book about that pattern. If Book One showed what happened to the West, this is the book that explains why it keeps happening - why one worldview can be this incoherent and never notice, across speech, science, sex, equality, safety, and history alike.

The answer is not that these are bad people. Most who carry the leftist mind are decent - they see suffering and want it relieved. The problem is the mind itself: a habit of interpretation that takes a real moral good and severs it from the conditions that make it good. Compassion becomes the management of victims. Equality becomes the management of outcomes. Tolerance becomes the management of speech. The slogans stay pristine while the outcomes turn to wreckage - because the trick was never to reject virtue. The trick is to counterfeit it: to keep the noble words while quietly reversing what they mean.

And a counterfeit virtue is more dangerous than an open vice, because it arrives dressed as moral progress. When power learns to speak in the grammar of kindness, entire societies can be trained to kneel while believing they are becoming more humane.

Drawing on Orwell, Hayek, and Scruton - and nearly four decades of watching the same pattern play out on four continents - J A Griffin shows why the leftist mind cannot self-correct, and why seeing the pattern clearly is the first step to no longer being governed by it.

The chaos has a logic. Once you see it, you can't unsee it.