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April 30, 2006
The Way We Live Now
Freud and the Fundamentalist Urge
By MARK EDMUNDSON
The Rehabilitation of the Cold-War Liberal
By PETER BEINART
Published: April 30, 2006
The Way We Live Now
Freud and the Fundamentalist Urge
By MARK EDMUNDSON
To most of us, Sigmund Freud, who was born 150 years ago next Saturday, is known chiefly as a provocative and highly controversial student of individual psychology. He is the man who theorized the unconscious and the Oedipus complex. What is less well known — and now perhaps more important — is that Freud devoted the final, and maybe most fruitful, phase of his career to reflections on culture and politics. In his later work, Freud brought forward striking ideas about the inner dynamics of political life in general and of tyranny in particular. More
The Rehabilitation of the Cold-War Liberal
By PETER BEINART
Published: April 30, 2006
This fall, for the third time since 9/11, American voters will choose between Democrats and Republicans while knowing what only one party believes about national security. In 2002, Democratic candidates tried to change the subject, focusing on Social Security and health care instead. In 2004, John Kerry substituted biography for ideology, largely ignoring his own extensive foreign-policy record and stressing his service in Vietnam. In this year's Senate and House races, the party looks set to reprise Michael Dukakis's old theme: competence. Rather than tell Americans what their vision is, Democrats will assure them that they can execute it better than George W. Bush. More