Wall Street Journal Reviews “Rage and the Republic”

The Wall Street Journal just published a comprehensive book review of Rage and the Republic: The Unfinished Story of the American Revolution. It is a thoughtful and well-written discussion of the book that I recommend to readers.

I have been delighted by the reviews and the reception of the book, including debuting at #2 on the New York Times Bestsellers list (NF).

The most recent review was written by Adam J. White, the Laurence H. Silberman Chair in Constitutional Governance at the American Enterprise Institute and codirector of the Antonin Scalia Law School’s C. Boyden Gray Center for the Study of the Administrative State.

The review focuses more on the historical exploration of the American Revolution in the first half of the book. The second half of the book explores whether (and how) this unique Republic can survive in the 21st Century. It looks at new challenges, including the rise of AI, robotics, global governance, and the “new Jacobins.”

The first half of the book examines the Founders’ emphasis on crafting a republic that could avoid the historical pattern of democracies turning into “mobocrasies.” When rage becomes revolution, it can invite a form of “democratic despotism” unless those passions are funneled constructively in a constitutional system.

The Wall Street review states:

“Those dueling impulses, rage and reason, are the focus of “Rage and the Republic: The Unfinished Story of the American Revolution” by Jonathan Turley, a law professor at George Washington University. The question of democratic rage is timeless, and Mr. Turley’s historical narrative is sweeping—from the trial of Socrates to the rhetoric of Huey Long.”

In the brief discussion of the second half of the book, the review notes that the book focuses more on voices on the left. That was a conscious choice and I wanted to further address it.

Rage and the Republic calls out the reckless rhetoric on both the left and the right. However, my earlier book, The Indispensable Right: Free Speech in an Age of Rage, discussed the rage on both the left and the right in American politics. That earlier work explores precisely the issue raised by White, who notes that “political rage is a bipartisan sport.” That is not the focus of this book.

This is a book about revolutions. I address the anti-constitutional rhetoric on the left because that is where we are hearing calls for radical changes to our system to allow for greater direct democratic expression. The book examines the implications of fundamental changes to our constitutional system from both historical and contemporary perspectives.

The calls for packing the Supreme Court, changing the Senate, and trashing the Constitution are primarily coming from the left today, particularly from academia. Moreover, some of these voices echo the language and rationales of many intellectuals in the early Jacobin movement before the French Revolution—the core element of the book’s historical and political narrative.

The review also notes that the book briefly references the work of law professor Mary Ann Glendon in her criticism of “rights talk.” I wanted expand on that point to place the criticism in context.

I respect Professor Glendon’s work, Rights Talk, even though I disagree with her on critical points. Professor White notes that Professor Glendon “believes in constitutional rights but warns that framing political issues mainly in terms of competing claims of absolute rights makes our political debates more pointed and less productive.” I present that view in a block quote from Professor Glendon, and I want to explain the more nuanced point I was trying to make on the page referencing Glendon’s work.

The Glendon reference comes in the chapter titled “Why Big Fierce Rights are Rare.” The title is a reference to a book by Paul Colinvaux from the 1970s:

“As an undergraduate student at the University of Chicago, I read Paul Colinvaux’s book Why Big Fierce Animals Are Rare. The book explained that large carnivores are present within a given ecosystem at lower densities than their prey populations because they need to consume more to survive. Moreover, big fierce animals tend to frighten locals and are targeted due to how they impact lives or threaten commerce or agriculture. These animals tend to modify the behavior of their prey and produce an “ecology of fear.” The result is that they themselves are hunted to make life easier and more productive. Big fierce rights can follow the same pattern as big fierce animals. These rights can threaten the range of action within a given society, particularly in implementing sweeping political agendas and majoritarian policies. They menace and frustrate those who want to implement reforms. As a result, those seeking sweeping changes, particularly law professors, tend to resist big, bold rights in favor of more nuanced and flexible interpretations.”

My reference to the Glendon work did not say that Glendon, who is justifiably one of the most influential academic voices in the United States, is opposed to core freedoms. Rather, I address her criticism of those of us who focus, in her view, too much on individual rights as opposed to more fluid and functionalist understandings of right. I highlight a quote from her work, including:

“In its relentless individualism, it fosters a climate that is inhospitable to society’s losers, and that systematically disadvantages caretakers and dependents, young and old. In its neglect of civil society, it undermines the principal seedbeds of civic and personal virtue. In its insularity, it shuts out potentially important aids to the process of self-correcting learning. All of these traits promote mere assertion over reason-giving.”

The point is not that Glendon opposes those rights, but rather that her approach can allow for a more functionalist treatment of rights that encourages greater trade-offs with rights such as free speech. Both of my books criticize these tradeoffs and functionalist approaches.

As I state in Rage and the Republic, the thrust of academic work has been to whittle away at robust interpretations of core freedoms, the very “rights talk” that Professor Glendon has addressed:

“This brings us back to the Colinvaux book, which explores different explanations for the relative scarcity of big fierce animals, including the theory that smaller animals simply have greater reproductive rates. Colinvaux argued against that theory and noted that “numbers are set by the opportunities for one’s way of life, not by the way one breeds.” He offers the cheeky example that the population of professors is not set by their productivity but the availability of professorships. Colinvaux embraces the theory that we must think of big fierce animals in terms of their biomass and the calories that they must consume to survive. Large animals like lions must burn a huge amount of calories to hunt and, therefore, must consume large quantities of calories to survive.

In a way, big, fierce rights are similar. What some professors object to is how a right like free speech consumes so much in the constitutional ecosystem. As previously discussed, Professor Wu describes the First Amendment in virtual predatorial terms, complaining that “nearly any law that has to do with the movement of information can be attacked in the name of the First Amendment.” He objects that courts have allowed it to become so big and fierce that it now “threaten[s] many of the essential jobs of the state, such as protecting national security and the safety and privacy of its citizens.” The solution of many academics is to scale down the rights so that they do not threaten policies and reforms that are deemed of greater importance.”

Once again, I deeply appreciate the Wall Street Journal review and the continuing interest in Rage and the Republic. The book tour resumes next week, including an upcoming event at the Reagan Presidential Library on March 10th at 7 pm in Simi Valley, which will be open to the public and accessible virtually.

 

 

 

17 thoughts on “Wall Street Journal Reviews “Rage and the Republic””

  1. Madison covered both sides of this in Federalist 51 and 55. In 51, he said we need checks and balances because men aren’t angels. In 55, he said republican government assumes a certain level of virtue in the people.

    The Constitution is structure, but it doesn’t run itself. It depends on citizens who have the knowledge and restraint to operate it. It’s parchment until people animate it. When citizen capacity weakens, no amount of architecture can save the system.

  2. ” “… As previously discussed, Professor Wu describes the First Amendment in virtual predatorial terms, complaining that “nearly any law that has to do with the movement of information can be attacked in the name of the First Amendment.” He objects that courts have allowed it to become so big and fierce that it now “threaten[s] many of the essential jobs of the state, such as protecting national security and the safety and privacy of its citizens.”

    Professor Wu’s position is terribly wrong in regards to the current ‘status and activities’ of the Central Control State/System. The War launched yesterday with Iran and the activities of Jeffery Epstein (Arms Trading, Sensitive Security Data exchanges, etc..) are evidence of the over-riding structure of power and on going ambitions of these Control Systems (Illuminati Systems) consuming Us from the inside out.

    The Constitutional Frame work was designed (or is limited) to fight “Ambition vs. Ambition” but it was not designed for Outside Ambition(s) to overtake It [K].
    Freedom of Speech is only one tool in the arsenal to combat this pariah, among tools to maintain transparency in the Governmental structure.

    WE the People have been Blind, much to long – Long Live Freedom of Speech.

    Koodos Jonathan

  3. Congratulations, and thank you for the book, Professor Turley. Your tact and passion are inspiring.

  4. Professor Turley, Are you coming to the South in the United States as in the south eastern conference. We also know how to read and write down here too

  5. For the 40,000 people executed by the regime during the French Revolution, there was no comfort in the fact that many of those evil megalomaniacs, like Robespierre, would one day meet the same fate. For them it was too late. There will be little comfort for those destroyed by the far-left fascists circling the American political system like sharks today, waiting to destroy their “enemies” (as Obama once called the opposition). There was little restraint shown by Democrats during the Biden regime–which infamously coordinated a vast lawfare, debanking, and censorship campaign to destroy Trump and his allies, his attorneys, his businesses, his friends, his supporters–and there will be even less next time. Good luck.

    1. In other words we are at the cusp of a revolution? Current day USA is the same state as the pre French Revolution circa 1799? You have exaggerated your so-called facts immeasurably. The only missing is you claiming the Democrats have a guillotine ready and waiting.

      1. I’m not sure what you think he exaggerated. He noted some of the instigators of the French Revolution ultimately became victims of the mob they created, and he suggested the same fate may wait the far left in this country.

        We know with certainty at least three different Trump haters have planned to assassinate him. One would be assassin missed splattering Trump’s brains out on live TV by a few inches. Most of us watched in horror as one of the youngest and brightest conservative voices, Charlie Kirk, was assassinated on video. We know a man travelled from CA to DC to assassinate Justice Kavanaugh.

        We know Democrat aligned celebrities like Kathy Griffin filmed herself prancing around with a bloody and severed simulated Trump head. Snoop Dog depicted himself shooting Trump. He, of course, now gets paid lots of money for various gigs to appear on NBC. MANY, MANY Democrat aligned influencers have compared Trump to many of history’s worst men, including genocidal maniacs like Hitler.

        And yes, during his first term Democrat voters did, in fact, drag a makeshift guillotine to the White House to demonstrate to other Democrats how much they hate him and would like to see his head chopped off.

        1. You don’t know…. that’s obvious from your response.
          Mob. Kirk, Kavanaugh, Griffin, Snoop Dog, Hitler, NBC etc… what do they have to with the French Revolution?
          Lay off the drugs stupid.

  6. “Professor Glendon “believes in constitutional rights but warns that framing political issues mainly in terms of competing claims of absolute rights makes our political debates more pointed and less productive.” Curious, so how many points have to be considered to be a legitimate debate? There are only two political parties. Us and them. Right? Is that considered pointed? The implication is that everyone with an issue is invited to force change on our society so that we are more productive?

    Oh woe is us.

  7. This likely seems off topic, But something that Rush Limbaugh said decades ago comes to mind:

    He said, “Conservatives believe that Liberals are misguided, but Liberals believe that Conservatives are Evil” (or words to that effect).

    Karl Marx saw revolution as requiring forceful, potentially ruthless action to succeed, and he viewed bourgeois moral restraints as ideological tools of the oppressor class.

    Modern day Conservatives fail to recognize that modern Liberals don’t want to understand the opinions of Conservatives.

    They want to obliterate the Conservative ideology, and the Conservatives themselves, should they futilely resist assimilation.

    1. So here’s an example of the pointed debate without the possibility of productivity of debate.
      Us vs. them. They want to kill so we have to kill them first. And tosses in Marx for effect, who supported the forcible overthrow of existing social conditions, not revolution. Which is not the overthrow of an existing government. Just a change in the way of thinking, which is what Prof. Glendon wants.

      I’ll say it again, oh woe is us.

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