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Since the 1970s American national politics have moved decisively to the right. Yet polls indicate that there has been no corresponding shift in the values of most Americans. What explains this disparity? In this book I argue that part of the problem is that people working for social justice have largely—but unnecessarily—ceded the moral high ground to the right. Too often progressive activists present their proposals in a cool and technical tone, avoid articulating broad social visions, and fail to make links between politics and the cultural traditions to which Americans are attached. In short, the compassionate and even egalitarian values found at the grass roots, and the public-spirited energy seen every day in local communities around the country, have not been adequately connected to our national political debates. To address these failings, we need to pay greater attention to the cultural dimension of political activity and to “styles” of political discourse.
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