Join us on Facebook


Follow us on Twitter

The Politically Incorrect Guide to the Presidents
The Politically Incorrect Guide to the Presidents

Listen to a sample

The Politically Incorrect Guide to the Presidents

From Wilson to Obama
MP3 Audio Book Download
Sale Price $15.96
Price $24.00
Save 33%

9 hours and 57 minutes
Unabridged - English

  • Language & Profanity
  • Violence
  • Sexual Content

Report a problem or correction

Like or share this audio book

Description

What makes a president great?

Academics, journalists, and popular historians agree: our greatest presidents are the ones who confronted a national crisis and mobilized the entire nation to face it. That’s the conventional wisdom. The chief executives who are celebrated in textbooks and placed in the top echelon of presidents in surveys of experts are the bold leaders—the Woodrow Wilsons and Franklin Roosevelts—who reshaped the United States in line with their grand “vision” for America. Unfortunately, along the way, these “great” presidents inevitably expanded government—and shrank our liberties.

As the twentieth-century presidency has grown far beyond the bounds the Founders established for the office, the idea that our chief executive is obliged to “preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States” has become a distant memory.

Historian and celebrated Reagan biographer Steven F. Hayward reminds us that the Founders had an entirely different idea of greatness in the presidential office. The personal ambitions, populist appeals, and bribes paid to the voters with their own money that most modern presidents engage in would strike them as instances of the demagoguery they most feared—one of the great dangers to the people’s liberty that they wrote the Constitution explicitly to guard against. The Founders, in contrast to today’s historians, expected great presidents to be champions of the limited government established by the Constitution.

Working from that almost forgotten standard of presidential greatness, Steven Hayward offers a fascinating off-the-beaten-track tour through the modern presidency, from the Progressive Era’s Woodrow Wilson to Barack Obama. Along the way he serves up fresh historical insights, recalls forgotten anecdotes, celebrates undervalued presidents who took important stands in defense of the Constitution, and points the way to a revival of truly constitutional government in America.

What you didn’t learn from your history teacher but will find in The Politically Incorrect Guide to the Presidents includes:

  • Progressive hero Woodrow Wilson aired a pro–Ku Klux Klan movie at the White House
  • Calvin Coolidge, much mocked by liberal historians as a bland Babbitt, was the last president to write his own speeches, guided the country through years of prosperity and limited government, and was one of the most cultured men ever to live in the White House
  • Why Eisenhower’s two biggest mistakes as president were, in his own words, “both sitting on the Supreme Court”
  • How, as president, JFK took mind-altering drugs, many of them prescribed by a physician he called Dr. Feelgood, who later lost his medical license for malpractice
  • Nixon’s hysterically vilified Christmas bombing of North Vietnam in 1972 caused very few civilian casualties and compelled North Vietnam to negotiate an end to the Vietnam War
  • The “misunderestimated” George W. Bush read 186 books during his presidency, mostly nonfiction, biography, and history
Audio book chapters

Audio Book Reviews

“Steven Hayward, one of my favorite historians and writers, has some pretty whacky ideas. For example, he thinks presidents should be graded on their loyalty to their oath of office. Why, it’s just crazy enough to work! Read this book not only because it is entertaining, insightful, and informative but also because it’s the perfect antidote to presidential grade inflation.”—Jonah Goldberg, editor-at-large of National Review Online and author of Liberal Fascism: The Secret History of the American Left from Mussolini to the Politics of Meaning

“One of the keys to restoring the government to its proper limits will be to have our presidents serve in their originally intended role as defenders of the Constitution rather than undermining it through endless expansions of the administrative state. It is surprising how seldom we evaluate presidents according to whether they live up to their oath of office, and we have Steven Hayward to thank for reminding us of the presidents who understood this and those who didn’t.”—Edwin Meese III, attorney general in the Ronald Reagan administration and chairman of the Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at the Heritage Foundation

“Every president takes an oath to protect and defend the Constitution of the United States. But how well do they perform this basic duty? Modern historians have mostly ignored this question, but Steven Hayward tackles it head on, grading the presidents of the last hundred years. He’s a tough grader, and his conclusions will surprise—and delight—many readers.”—Michael Barone, senior political analyst at the Washington Examiner and coauthor of The Almanac of American Politics

About the Author - Steven F. Hayward

Steven F. Hayward is the F. K. Weyerhaeuser Fellow in Law and Economics at the American Enterprise Institute, a senior fellow at the Pacific Research Institute in San Francisco, and the Thomas W. Smith Senior Fellow in Political Economy, Ashbrook Center. He is a regular contributor to the influential blog Powerline, and his work has appeared in the New York Times, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, San Francisco Chronicle, and Chicago Tribune. His books include the critically acclaimed two-volume biography The Age of Reagan, Churchill on Leadership, and others. He lives with his wife in Virginia.

About the Narrator - Johnny Heller

Johnny Heller has won two prestigious Audie Awards and has earned numerous Audie nominations. He has been praised for his adult, personal development, history, comedy, and children's book narrations. Named a Best Voice of 2008 and 2009, as well as one of the Top 50 Narrators of the Twentieth Century by AudioFile magazine, Johnny has earned almost twenty Golden Earphones Awards. Two of Johnny's audiobooks have been picked by AudioFile as Best Audiobook the Year, and he has won two Publishers Weekly Listen-Up Awards.

Non-Fiction Categories

Publisher

Release date
February 14, 2012
Format
Unabridged MP3 Audio Download
ISBN-13
9781455158317
Copyright
(C) 2012 by Steven F. Hayward
Publisher
Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Audio Book submitted by
blackstoneaudio

Audio books from Blackstone Audio, Inc.

Audio books submitted by blackstoneaudio

Customer Reviews

Add my rating or review

Be the first to write a review for this audio book.