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Charles Cooke

    Charles C. W. Cooke es un escritor cuyo trabajo examina críticamente la historia angloamericana, los principios de la libertad británica, la importancia vital de la libertad de expresión, el alcance de la Segunda Enmienda y el concepto de excepcionalismo estadounidense. Su escritura profundiza en los intrincados paisajes históricos y políticos que han dado forma a estas áreas cruciales. Cooke ofrece una perspectiva matizada sobre la compleja relación entre el Reino Unido y los Estados Unidos, y su impacto duradero en la sociedad actual. Sus análisis se basan en una profunda comprensión de la historia y la política modernas.

    The Conservatarian Manifesto
    Playing the Piano for Pleasure
    • Playing the Piano for Pleasure

      • 192 páginas
      • 7 horas de lectura

      Skyhorse Publishing is proud to revive Playing Piano for Pleasure. With the wonderful writing one would expect from a longtime New Yorker reporter, Piano aficionado Charles Cooke, offers concrete routines for improving your piano performance. A pleasant and constant cheerleader, Cooke asks readers to practice every day, suggesting that they work th

      Playing the Piano for Pleasure
    • The Conservatarian Manifesto

      • 256 páginas
      • 9 horas de lectura

      There is an underserved movement budding among conservatives, in which fiscal responsibility, constitutional obedience, and controlled government spending remain crucial tenets, but issues like gay marriage and drug control are approached with a libertarian bent. In The Conservatarian Manifesto, Charles C.W. Cooke engages with the data and the philosophy behind this movement, applauding conservatarianism as a force that can help Republicans mend the many ills that have plagued their party in recent years. Conservatarians are vexed by Republicans' failure to cut the size and scope of Washington D.C., but they are critical of some libertarians for their unacceptable positions on abortion, national defense, and immigration. They applaud conservatives' efforts to protect Second Amendment rights---efforts that have recently been wildly successful---but they see the War on Drugs as an unmitigated disaster that goes against everything conservatives ought to value. All movements run the risk of stagnation, and of losing touch with the principles and values that made them successful in the first place. In this book, Charles Cooke shows the way back to a better and more honest conservatism that champions limited government, reality-based policy, and favor for the smallest minority of all: the individual

      The Conservatarian Manifesto