...and missed. And there is irony, too, in the growing number of liberals writing them. Many still regard John B. Judis' "William F. Buckley Jr.: Patron Saint of the Conservatives" (1988), the first full-scale biography of Buckley, as the best, and it looms...
...and missed. And there is irony, too, in the growing number of liberals writing them. Many still regard John B. Judis' "William F. Buckley, Jr.: Patron Saint of the Conservatives" (1988), the first full-scale biography of Buckley, as the best, and it...
...and missed. And there is irony, too, in the growing number of liberals writing them. Many still regard John B. Judis' "William F. Buckley, Jr.: Patron Saint of the Conservatives" (1988), the first full-scale biography of Buckley, as the best, and it...
...New Republic, but ever so ironically, the back of the book has, of late, come close. First was John Judis's review of Ron Suskind’s book, which is the only piece I've read anywhere that makes sense of both its strengths and weaknesses (though it was...
...18 No. 2, Spring 2008. [↩] Hans Hermann Hoppe, Democracy: The God That Failed, (Transaction Publishers, 2001). [↩] John B. Judis and Ruy Teixeira, The Emerging Democratic Majority, (Scribner, 2004). [↩] Keith Preston, The New Totalitarianism,...
The Daily Dish | By Andrew Sullivan, September 28, 2011
...connected some crazy dots from Hezbollah to Cuba, and neocons ignored Chris Christie's notion of American exceptionalism. John Judis urged the US to do the right thing for Palestine like it did in 1947 for Israel, neocons aren't funny when they try to...