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THE LAND OF FLICKERING LIGHTS by Michael Bennet

THE LAND OF FLICKERING LIGHTS

Restoring America in an Age of Broken Politics

by Michael Bennet

Pub Date: June 25th, 2019
ISBN: 978-0-8021-4781-3
Publisher: Atlantic Monthly

A Colorado senator sees the country at a historic turning point.

Making his book debut, Bennet offers a strident critique of our current rancorous, ineffective government that has betrayed the Founders’ visions and is “desperately out of sync” with the nation’s needs. Like the late congressman John Dingell (The Dean), Bennet’s fellow legislator—and echoing other recent political analysts—Bennet laments the destruction of bipartisanship, the corrupt influence of wealthy donors and lobbyists on politicians, and the rise of “an insurgent faction of Republicans.” He credits the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision with the insidious rise of dark-money groups, empowering billionaires to manipulate campaigns and legislation. “Citizens United, quite simply, has warped the character of our political system,” writes the author. So have individuals now in power, notably Mitch McConnell and Donald Trump. Bennet aptly characterizes McConnell as Machiavellian: “patient, strategic, undistracted, impervious to give-and-take (except when he is taking everything)—and, in a political sense, ruthless.” The author underscores Trump’s ignorance of foreign policy, his nurturing of “ugly nativism,” and his shocking denial of climate change, to name just a few of his shortcomings. “Income inequality, stagnant social mobility, and inadequate access to health care and education” are overarching problems that need vigilance and action, Bennet argues, urging Americans to muster confidence in themselves and one another: “Only citizens,” he writes, “can answer the fire bells in the night.” He proposes four values that can lead us into the future: freedom to rise, which requires decent health care, equitable tax policies, and a safety net for the vulnerable; freedom from ignorance, which requires strong public schools and financial support for students; freedom from violence, including the “insidious violence” flourishing on social media; and freedom to govern ourselves, which requires citizen engagement and participation in public life. “The loss of faith in our governing institutions, and in one another,” Bennet writes, “is a death spiral.”

A forceful argument that patriotism, hard work, and belief in the common good can revive a prosperous and powerful democracy.