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There is a feeling that our America is facing late-stage empire kind of issues, particularly when we do things that are so self-destructive and divisive at a time when our country is in real trouble economically. But what do the elites on the right only worry about? Cutting taxes and limiting government. The goal of the right should not be to achieve tax cuts or deregulation. It should be to rebuild American families, restore American sovereignty, and revitalize American culture. We should care less about our current system's placing the individual above the society than about having families…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
There is a feeling that our America is facing late-stage empire kind of issues, particularly when we do things that are so self-destructive and divisive at a time when our country is in real trouble economically. But what do the elites on the right only worry about? Cutting taxes and limiting government. The goal of the right should not be to achieve tax cuts or deregulation. It should be to rebuild American families, restore American sovereignty, and revitalize American culture. We should care less about our current system's placing the individual above the society than about having families and communities grow and flourish. If all we care about is the individual, then we are hopelessly lost as a society. For the right to succeed, it must reject the selfish individualism of our elites and, in order to rebuild our communities, embrace our obligations towards not just our neighbors but also to those that came before and those yet to come. In Remaking the Right, Chris Chappelear argues that it's time to set aside the neoliberalism that has dominated the American right, restore the Anglo-American conservative traditions, and realign the right with populism in order to do what is best for the average American family.
Autorenporträt
Chris Chappelear is a father, author, and small business owner. Born in Kansas, he was raised in Omaha, Nebraska, and attended the University of Nebraska at Omaha before starting his involvement in politics.He has served as Chairman of the Nebraska Federation of Young Republicans and on the Executive Board of the Nebraska Republican Party. Over the years, he has also been appointed to the Judicial Nominating Commission (Fourth District - District Court), Nebraska Boundary Commission, and Douglas County Fair Board. In these roles, he worked to shape policy and governance at both state and local levels.Chris lives in Omaha with his daughter.