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BOOKS

Michael Finch’s Riveting ‘A Time to Stand’ The President of the Freedom Center delivers a masterpiece. by Bruce Bawer

Patriot. Philosopher. Prophet. Poet.

Let’s start with this. Michael routinely, and reverently, reaches back into American history, contrasting today’s corrupt and mediocre political class – and the preposterous cultural elites who support them – with our brilliant Founders and the greatest of our presidents, military heroes, artists, and authors. In an era of grubby race hustlers, insane transgender ideologues, appalling apologists for Islamic jihad, and miscellaneous merchants of madness, Michael patiently reminds us, time after time, that our beloved country is the product of the strenuous efforts of millions of men and women who, over many generations, and with a quiet nobility and extraordinary sense of self-sacrifice, settled the land, worked the land, and, when called to do so, took up arms for the land.

In some moods, to be sure, Michael is capable of expressing the view that the America that some of us are old enough to remember and were brought up to revere – the America of hard work and high principle – is slipping through our fingers, or is lost already: as he puts it, to Americans “over a certain age, this America, this culture, this society have become beyond foreign. It is not the country we grew up in and it is not the country we want to die in. It is alien.” More often, however, Michael is a man of hope and faith who is quick to assure us – and himself – that in spite of everything that the bad guys, the soulless self-seekers, have done to despoil it, our America “is still out there, that America that we remember, the one that was proud and strong, but also assured, humble — the one that embodied a quiet patriotism that didn’t need boasting.”

Indeed, in a time when we are subjected constantly to the inane bombast of despicable political careerists and unscrupulous media lackeys, Michael reminds us that the nobility of our immigrant and settler ancestors was, indeed, overwhelmingly a humble nobility. And if he is so extremely effective in reminding us of this, it is because he himself embodies that same kind of humble nobility, speaking to us, in most of his essays, not in a hectoring tone but in a gentle yet urgent voice that commands attention because it is speaking fundamental truths – home truths – about who we, as Americans, were, once upon a time, and who we can be again.

Yes, Michael can lay it on the line with the best of them, asking in one essay, with a richly justified asperity, “When did this war on race begin, where did this sudden hatred of white people come from?  What is a white person anyway?  Am I supposed to have more in common with say, a Bulgarian than with my Mexican-American neighbor or a black man that has roots in America going back almost four centuries?  What foolishness is this?” In 2016, when some Trump supporters were “running for the hills” after the release of NBC’s infamous Access Hollywood recording of Trump saying a single vulgar word, Michael was able to work up genuine anger at these “quislings” and to mount an eloquent and stirring – and deeply wise and well-informed – defense of the future president:

As conservatives, we love to think of America being founded, and for 240 years, run by nothing but pious Christian pilgrims. But, this is just fantasy. We have had very pious men in our history, but also very many rogues, drunks, gamblers, womanizers, etc., lead our country, fight our wars, and create our industries. We may not want to admit it, but the very same traits required to take risks, to lead men, to create and build, often coalesce with some of the traits that we find so morally repugnant.

Explaining Israel: The Jewish State, the Middle East, and America Israel’s story is one of dazzling success and unrelenting peril—prosperity, innovation, and resilience tested by enemies abroad and divisions within. By Peter Berkowitz

https://amgreatness.com/2025/09/23/explaining-israel-the-jewish-state-the-middle-east-and-america/

This is the Introduction to “Explaining Israel: The Jewish State, the Middle East, and America,” by Peter Berkowitz. 

Introduction

In 2014, Israel’s future had never seemed brighter. Led by the high-tech sector, the economy was booming. The Israel Defense Forces—with advanced weapons, an outstanding air force, sophisticated intelligence capabilities, and cybersecurity prowess—gave the Jewish state the most powerful military in the Middle East. While not producing warm relations and bustling commerce, treaties with Egypt (1979) and Jordan (1994) brought cold peace and stability along Israel’s two longest land borders. World surveys placed Israelis among the happiest of populations. In a country whose national security interests compelled it to impose mandatory military service on men and women, life expectancy ranked among the longest in the West. Secular Israeli women had higher fertility rates than secular women in any country in the West; those of their ultra-Orthodox sisters were significantly higher. Israel pumped plentiful amounts of natural gas from offshore fields that had come online during the previous decade. Over the previous 30 years, the country had gone from a few vineyards making largely cheap wine for sacramental purposes to around 300 vineyards producing a variety of fine wines. And with its bustling commerce, stunning Mediterranean beachfront, culinary delights, thriving culture, and work-hard-play-hard spirit, Tel Aviv had become one of the world’s most exciting, and expensive, cities.

At the same time, and generally ignored or downplayed by much of the population and more than a few political leaders, Israel’s enemies strengthened their capabilities and plotted the Jewish state’s demise. In the summer of 2014, Iran-backed Hamas jihadists kidnapped and brutally murdered three young Israeli men in Judea and Samaria—the biblical names, used with increasing regularity in Israel, for the West Bank. Subsequently, Iran-backed Hamas jihadists in Gaza showered southern Israeli communities with rockets. In response, Israel conducted a seven-week military campaign in Gaza, Operation Protective Edge, to degrade Hamas’s ability to launch rockets at Israel’s civilian population, but not to destroy the organization or remove it from power. In Lebanon to the north, Iran-backed Hezbollah had amassed a vast arsenal of projectiles aimed at Israel—by that time tens of thousands of ordinary rockets, precision-guided rockets, and intermediate-range missiles—while its fighters gained battlefield experience in the Syrian civil war. The Islamic Republic of Iran made steady progress toward constructing nuclear weapons; insulating its nuclear program from attack; producing ballistic missiles; and funding, training, and equipping not only Hamas and Hezbollah on Israel’s borders but also other militias around the region.

As external threats intensified in 2014 and in the following years, internal strife in Israel mounted. Members of the working class, often Mizrahi Jews with roots in the Muslim-majority countries of North Africa and the Middle East, resented the well-educated, highly remunerated, and progressive Israeli elites, in large measure, Ashkenazi Jews hailing from families that had emigrated from, or could trace their ancestry to, Europe. While priding themselves on their commitment to equality and pluralism, Israel’s Ashkenazi elites often looked down on Mizrahi Jews’ traditional beliefs and practices. Meanwhile, much of the non-ultra-Orthodox majority angrily objected to the ultra-Orthodox minority’s exemption from military service and to the substantial subsidies that the government allocated to their religious schools (in 2014, the ultra-Orthodox constituted about 11 percent of the population and by 2024 about 13.5 percent). Although Israel had made considerable progress in improving the social and economic well-being of its Arab minority – around 21 percent of the citizenry – much remained to be done.

The Sword of Freedom: Israel, Mossad, and the Secret War – September 16, 2025 by Yossi Cohen

Israel has always won. They are winning now. And they must always win in the future.

In The Sword of Freedom, former Mossad chief Yossi Cohen pulls back the curtain on Israel’s success in the face of never-ending war. Cohen has played a pivotal role in shaping Israel’s modern defense strategy. Blending personal stories and the nation’s history, he offers a rare glimpse into how Israel has defied existential threats and built a cutting-edge defense system. Now, he reveals how Israel always finds a way to win, as well as:

·        The secret to Israel’s success as a nation and military power

·        The future of Gaza and Hamas

·        What it takes to be in the Mossad

·        The mistakes Westerners make when they look at the Middle East

·        How Mossad helps counter terrorism around the world

·        How the art of spycraft has changed in the advent of AI and social media

·        What Donald Trump’s second presidency means for Israel

In today’s volatile world Israel must remain adaptable and resolute to survive. Cohen explores how Israel achieves this: by questioning all intelligence, prioritizing human ingenuity, cooperating with other countries (even ones you might not expect), and ensuring enemies fear defeat before battles begin.

As David Ben-Gurion observed, “History is not written, it is created.” From thrilling covert operations to strategies that safeguard borders, The Sword of Free­dom demonstrates how Israel’s transformation from a vulnerable state to a global power was no accident.

Honoring our Founders A new book foregrounds our duty as America’s heirs. Bruce Bawer

https://www.frontpagemag.com/honoring-our-founders/

Trent Staggs’s Heirs of the Revolution is a smart, snappy, and supremely timely jeremiad about the legacy of America’s founders, about the ways in which that legacy has been betrayed over the course of American history, and about our duty as Americans to (as the subtitle puts it) “restore our Republic.” It’s a short book, comparable to the pamphlets – most famously, Thomas Paine’s Common Sense – that, in the days of the founders, played a significant role in shaping the political ideas of the British colonists who would soon become citizens of the United States of America. And, like the best of those pamphlets, it packs a punch.

Staggs, a businessman who serves as mayor of the Utah town of Riverton (pop. 45,000) and who lost last November’s Senate election despite enthusiastic endorsements by the likes Donald Trump, Charlie Kirk, and Kash Patel, has boiled his message down to six points, each of which is given its own chapter. First, we need to restore citizenship, which, Staggs argues, “was once seen as a privilege and an honor” but “has been eroded by apathy, ignorance, and disengagement.” One aspect of serious American citizenship, he proposes, is a belief in American exceptionalism, which, he points out, can be traced back to John Winthrop, who in his 1630 sermon “A Model of Christian Charity” envisioned the New World as “a city upon a hill” that, in Staggs’s words, “had a divinely ordained responsibility to serve as an example of moral leadership and governance for the rest of the world.”

Staggs places a great deal of emphasis on dual citizenship, which he considers anathema because it “presents a direct challenge to the concept of undivided national loyalty.” I would agree that holding a US passport along with one from Iran or Qatar or North Korea is problematic, but I would contend that being (as I am) a national of two longstanding NATO allies is a somewhat different thing. Granted, the political and media establishments in Norway, where I live, can be nothing short of appalling – but then so can their counterparts in the U.S. But most of the Norwegian people are very America-friendly.

Two cases in point. The other day, when the USS Gerald Ford, the world’s largest warship, docked in Oslo harbor, crowds gathered excitedly to welcome it. A few days earlier, there was an airshow in the town where I live, and people came from all over to watch F-16s, Spitfires, and older planes do their thing. (The roar of the F-16s shook our apartment windows and scared the cats.) All that being said, I most certainly appreciate Staggs’s point about divided loyalties, which is a problem that I’ve been writing about for years, mostly in connection with the influx into the West of so-called “refugees” who retain the passports from their homelands (and often have second homes – and second wives – there) and return regularly to the places from which they supposedly fled.

Robert Henderson Rolling with the Punches As Ed Latimore’s new memoir demonstrates, the most important lessons are forged in the fires of personal experience, often at great pain and expense.

https://www.city-journal.org/article/ed-latimore-memoir-hard-lessons-boxing

Hard Lessons from the Hurt Business: Boxing and the Art of Life, by Ed Latimore (Portfolio, 304 pp., $30)

“The book is also an illustration of what art is for. True art transforms pain into something meaningful, even beautiful. Much of what makes it into a writer’s work arrives below the level of full consciousness, and that is as it should be. Latimore allows the material to speak, and the result is a story at once raw and redemptive. The book’s final chapters, in which Latimore, from the perspective of a mature and improbably successful man, reflects on the lessons he has learned, are among the most satisfying.”

Occasionally, an author who has learned deep and durable lessons emerges to share them with the rest of us. That’s what Ed Latimore has done with his remarkable new book, Hard Lessons From The Hurt Business: Boxing and the Art of Life.

I first encountered Latimore in 2019 through his posts on Twitter (now X), where he had carved out a niche as an astute observer of struggle, discipline, and self-mastery. His writing was unusually sharp, and when I learned about his background—an impoverished childhood in Pittsburgh’s public housing projects, battles with addiction, a professional boxing career, service in the Army National Guard, and eventual graduation from college—his insights clicked into place.

My own life bears some resemblance to his: I grew up in foster homes, joined the military at 17, struggled with alcohol, didn’t begin college until my mid-twenties, and also wrote a memoir at a relatively young age. Meeting Latimore and finding another person who had made it out gave me a kind of reassurance that is hard to articulate. This personal connection is one reason I find his book so compelling, though readers with different biographies will still find plenty to admire.

Latimore’s memoir begins in the Pittsburgh projects, where he was raised by a single mother and had only sporadic contact with his father. The early chapters are raw and sometimes brutal. In one of the book’s most harrowing passages, he describes witnessing the aftermath of his mother’s boyfriend beating his two-and-a-half-year-old sister with a metal coat hanger. These scenes are not presented for shock value. They are meant to show the environment that shaped him.

The book also offers glimpses into the kinds of moments that rarely appear in mainstream accounts of life in the inner city. In one unforgettable episode from eighth grade, Latimore brings a bag of sugar to school and pretends to sell cocaine. This provokes a fight with a school bully, leads to the author’s arrest for simulating the sale of a controlled substance, and ends with an officer uncuffing him and warning, “If you pulled that shit on the street, someone woulda shot you.”

Latimore credits the officer for using the incident to teach him a lesson. It’s a reminder that police officers are not merely law enforcers but also, at their best, moral instructors. The discretion of a good cop can save a young person’s future—a lesson worth remembering in an era when policing is often portrayed in the most negative light. Instead of funneling him into the juvenile justice system, these officers chose to deliver a hard warning that might have changed the trajectory of his life. Latimore’s story is a counterweight to the prevailing narrative that police presence is inherently harmful. Sometimes, the intervention of an authority figure is precisely what a troubled kid needs.

Hard Lessons from the Hurt Business sometimes moves too quickly past moments where readers might want to linger. This briskness is part of Latimore’s style. He lands his punches and moves on, leaving readers to absorb the impact.

A Republic Overrun by Lawfare Peter Navarro’s new book warns that Democrats’ lawfare endangers liberty, executive privilege, and the Constitution itself—making his fight a defense of self-government. By Loren Kalish

https://amgreatness.com/2025/09/09/a-republic-overrun-by-lawfare/

Democrats are not only the party of enmity but also the enemies of liberty and justice for all. Enmity consumes the Democrat Party, based not on hostility to certain ideas but hatred of certain individuals, chief among them President Trump and his friends and advisers. Among the latter is Peter Navarro, the president’s trade adviser, whose new book, I Went to Prison So You Won’t Have To, details Democrats’ efforts to criminalize politics. Navarro writes from experience and about his experiences as a political prisoner, enjoining us to defend the Constitution. The book is also a reminder of the precariousness of personal liberty and of the vigilance necessary to sustain it, lest we be the targets of malicious prosecution. As Navarro shows, malice begets injustice and threatens to destroy our system of self-government.

At stake is the doctrine of separation of powers as outlined in the Constitution. Upon this doctrine rest the respective rights of the legislative, executive, and judicial branches of the federal government. Because of this doctrine, executive privilege is a reality; without this doctrine, testimonial immunity—the right of a presidential adviser to refuse to abet a congressional witch hunt—is meaningless, which is why Navarro went to prison.

“If I lose, future presidential advisers of either party could face jail for honoring executive privilege and defending the Constitution’s separation of powers,” Navarro said in a statement. In this scenario, the investigative state grows stronger while the presidency becomes weaker. The result is an unlawful transfer of power from the White House to Congress.

Abuse of power is also inevitable, what with bureaucrats and hacks in charge of the prison system. The summary raids, the truncated religious services, the food mixups, the commissary markups, the interminable counts, the brokenness of the facilities themselves—the indignities are manifold. Despiriting though things are, Navarro does not waver; his spirit, like his faith in the Constitution, is total. He shows his faith by his works, inspiring us to do likewise.

Navarro’s book is itself a work of courage, free of score-settling or recrimination. The emphasis is on fairness, on the balance necessary to establish justice and secure the blessings of liberty. The words summon us to end lawfare, so executive privilege can endure and testimonial immunity can survive. The words give new meaning to the principle of limited government.

Freedom Revealed Should Be Required Reading for DC Swamp Creatures Freedom Revealed slices through political noise with a blunt truth: freedom is a system of limited government, open markets, and responsibility—or it breaks down. By Tim Tapp

https://amgreatness.com/2025/09/07/freedom-revealed-should-be-required-reading-for-dc-swamp-creatures/

Every now and then, a book comes along that doesn’t just add to the pile of political commentary—it slices through the noise like a clean, sharp blade. Freedom Revealed by Don Wilkie is one of those books. For readers tired of politicians who speak in platitudes about “our freedoms” while voting for another bloated spending bill, this work reads like a slap of cold water across the face.

The book is built around a bold thesis: freedom isn’t some warm-and-fuzzy abstraction; it’s a system. Like a machine, it has parts that either work together or jam. And here’s the kicker—once you see freedom this way, you realize how fragile it is and how reckless our political class has been in tinkering with the gears.

Most Americans think of freedom in sentimental terms—flags, fireworks, maybe a soaring anthem at a ballgame. But this book demolishes that shallow view. Freedom is mechanical: limited government, open markets, and individual responsibility. Remove or weaken one, and the machine sputters. The point isn’t poetic; it’s brutally practical. The book walks the reader through Franklin’s insights and shows that the republic’s design was never accidental. It was an engineering marvel, and we’ve been stripping it for parts.

One of the most engaging sections is the comparison between the marketplace and government. The marketplace, competitive and dynamic, drives down waste and breeds prosperity. Government, by its nature, is non-competitive and therefore breeds waste. Simple? Yes. Devastating? Absolutely. The book lays it out with examples anyone can grasp: competition improves service, lowers costs, and fuels prosperity; government expands rules, bloats budgets, and smothers initiative.

You finish these chapters shaking your head at the obviousness of it all—and wondering why lawmakers in D.C. can’t seem to grasp it. Or maybe they can, and that’s what makes the book sting.

Freedom Revealed argues that prosperity and the rise of the middle class didn’t happen because of government policy; they happened because government was limited enough to let the marketplace breathe. This is the kind of point that would make Adam Smith and Benjamin Franklin nod in agreement. The middle class isn’t the product of subsidies and entitlements—it’s the natural reward of citizens allowed to compete and innovate without bureaucrats choking them out.

The Man Who Invented Conservatism A new book rescues Frank Meyer from obscurity. by Mark Tapson

https://www.frontpagemag.com/the-man-who-invented-conservatism/

Ask the random conservative to name a modern architect of his political philosophy and names like Russell Kirk or William F. Buckley are likely to come to mind. Maybe George Will or Irving Kristol, Barry Goldwater or Ronald Reagan. It would take a perceptive student of conservatism to come up with the name of Frank S. Meyer.

Daniel J. Flynn’s brand new book The Man Who Invented Conservatism: The Unlikely Life of Frank S. Meyer is a riveting, meticulously researched biography that breathes life into the extraordinary journey of Meyer, a man whose intellectual odyssey from fervent Communist to architect of modern American conservatism is as improbable as it is inspiring.

FrontPage Mag contributor Daniel Flynn is a senior editor of The American Spectator and a visiting fellow at the Hoover Institution. He is the author of seven books including A Conservative History of the American Left; Cult City: Jim Jones, Harvey Milk, and 10 Days That Shook San Francisco (I interviewed him about that one for FrontPage Mag here); and Why the Left Hates America, which I’ve also read and recommend.

Flynn’s new biography is a compelling contribution to the historiography of American political thought.

Victor Davis Hanson And The Daily Signal Got It Wrong – Diana West Is Owed An Apology And A Retraction by: George Rasley,

https://conservativehq.com/post/victor-davis-hanson-and-the-daily-signal-got-it-wrong-diana-west-is-owed-an-apology-and-a-retraction

What happens when people you like and respect screw up and defame another person you like and respect? Such is the case right now between Prof. Victor Davis Hanson and Rob Bluey, President and Executive Editor of the Heritage Foundation’s Daily Signal, and our good friend journalist Diana West, author of the must-read book American Betrayal.

It all started when Prof. Hanson, appearing on the Daily Signal’s podcast, smeared Ms. West by associating her and her book American Betrayal with Hitler-apologists who have recently appeared on Tucker Carlson’s program.

After watching the podcast and reading the subsequent article on the Daily Signal (where Hanson is a Senior Contributor) it was painfully obvious that Prof. Hanson and the team at the Daily Signal haven’t read American Betrayal.

I’ve actually read American Betrayal, and to associate Ms. West or the book with Hitler apologists and “World War II Revisionists,” such as Darryl Cooper and Dave Collum, is to reach a conclusion that is almost the exact opposite of the evidence presented in Ms. West’s meticulous research.

We would like to think that such respected figures in conservative politics and culture as Prof. Hanson and Mr. Bluey would own their mistake, apologize and retract the smear, but they haven’t. They have, according to Ms. West, merely said they will “look into” her request for remedial action (presented in its entirety below).

MIMI’S STRATEGIES: Coping Skills for Kids by Linda Goudsmit with Dr. Duke Pesta

https://goudsmit.pundicity.com/28805/mimi-strategies-coping-skills-for-kids

 goudsmit.pundicity.com  and website: lindagoudsmit.com 

On August 29, 2025, education reformer and Executive Director of FreedomProject Academy, Dr. Duke Pesta, invited me to talk with him about my illustrated children’s book series, Mimi’s Strategy. You can access the program by using this link: Mimi’s Strategies: Coping Skills for Kids. I am delighted to share the discussion with you and hope you enjoy the show!

Most sincerely,

Linda