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[National Review] E Pluribus Nihil

Ethnic and racial identitarianism are incompatible with the Constitution. Is America sleepwalking to socialism?

Jorge González-Gallarza
16 min readJun 22, 2020

The Plot to Change America: How Identity Politics is Dividing the Land of the Free. By Mike Gonzalez. Encounter Books; 254 pages; $28.99.

Editor’s note — an excerpt of this book review featured in National Review on June 20th, 2020 under the heading "The Intellectual Roots of Today's Identity Politics — A new book explores the ideological wellsprings of ethnic and racial identitarianism". Read the abridged version here.

When I asked Mike Gonzalez what new constituency identity politics would start pandering to next, he quipped “not to let the imagination run wild, lest we give them ideas”.

His answer spoke to the movement’s unbounded tendency to socially engineer a fractured map of ever-smaller subnational communities with shared interests more trivial each time — not to mention contradictory, in some ironic instances of the recent past. But one could have also mistaken Mike’s humorous cynicism for genuine prudence. Such is our era of hyper-tribal culture wars that in the minds of many a social justice warrior, the urge not to let the enemy define you has given way to the imperative of embodying their worst caricature of you…

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Jorge González-Gallarza
Jorge González-Gallarza

Written by Jorge González-Gallarza

Writing from Paris, Jorge's work has featured in The Wall Street Journal, National Review, The American Conservative, The National Interest and elsewhere.

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