Our Own Worst Enemy, Tom Nichols
Our Own Worst Enemy, Tom Nichols
8 Rating(s)
List: $19.99 | Sale: $13.99
Club: $9.99

Our Own Worst Enemy
The Assault from within on Modern Democracy

Author: Tom Nichols

Narrator: Tom Nichols

Unabridged: 7 hr 30 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Kalorama

Published: 08/19/2021


Synopsis

Over the past three decades, citizens of democracies who claim to value freedom, tolerance, and the rule of law have increasingly embraced illiberal politicians and platforms. Democracy is in trouble—but who is really to blame?

In Our Own Worst Enemy, Tom Nichols challenges the current depictions of the rise of illiberal and anti-democratic movements in the United States and elsewhere as the result of the deprivations of globalization or the malign decisions of elites. Rather, he places the blame for the rise of illiberalism on the people themselves. Nichols traces the illiberalism of the twenty-first century to the growth of unchecked narcissism, rising standards of living, global peace, and a resistance to change. Ordinary citizens, laden with grievances, have joined forces with political entrepreneurs who thrive on the creation of rage rather than on the encouragement of civic virtue and democratic cooperation. While it will be difficult, Nichols argues that we need to defend democracy by resurrecting the virtues of altruism, compromise, stoicism, and cooperation—and by recognizing how good we've actually had it in the modern world.

About Tom Nichols

Tom Nichols is professor of national security affairs at the US Naval War College, a columnist for USA Today, and a contributing writer at the Atlantic. He is the author of The Death of Expertise, No Use: Nuclear Weapons and US National Security, and Eve of Destruction: The Coming Age of Preventive War. He is also an instructor at the Harvard Extension School and an adjunct professor at the US Air Force School of Strategic Force Studies. He is a former aide in the US Senate and has been a Fellow of the International Security Program at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Kem on August 10, 2021

Nichols' book is an engaging though distressing read. The book builds on his previous book "The Death of Expertise." His arguments jibe with much of my own thinking and my concern for the future of American democracy. (Though I'm pretty sure we're not politically aligned which is encouraging.) For e......more

Goodreads review by Sandra on August 19, 2021

Last chapter is a gut punch I hesitate to say I “liked” this book. Instead, I’ll say I needed this book. Nichols echoes many of my thoughts and fears. I am appalled at the level of civics education in the USA. It seems people don’t know the meaning of democracy or autocracy. This is a confused elect......more

Goodreads review by David on April 03, 2024

I have many Kindle highlights and notes that I first thought to use in pointing out contradictions or opinion parading as fact, and stuff like that. And I was going to bring in quotes from Erich Fromm (Escape From Freedom) and Reinhold Niebuhr (the Irony of America), buuuut, by the end I just didn’t......more

Goodreads review by Andrew on August 28, 2021

...why are people who are already free, and who are by any relative measure materially and politically better off than those in more repressive states, attacking their own system of government? The answers are as disturbing as they are counterintuitive: We are losing because we won. We are suffering......more

Goodreads review by Allen on February 12, 2025

One of my favorite non-ficiton books ever. A lot of disparate thoughts I'd had on the state of virtue and self-deification all coalesces into a coherent argument in Nichols's book here. Our system of government, just like the Roman Republic, was meant for a virtuous populace and virtuous leaders, an......more