Cover Image: Tyranny from Plato to Trump

Tyranny from Plato to Trump

Pub Date:   |   Archive Date:

Member Reviews

It is easy to like a book when you agree with everything the author is saying and that was the case with Tierney from Plato to Trump. That doesn’t mean I wasn’t amazed by all the comparisons they were to be made by historical figures and Trump and his boys. Just like Play-Doh, Trump isn’t a team player even when it comes to his own team. I was thoroughly intrigued by this book and what made it most interesting is that I knew everything written was true. This was a great book that will hopefully go down in history and taught in colleges as to what not to do winning power. With the sycophants and then party fighting bye party fighting and all the underhanded tricks that go along with politics and then here comes Trump to add more chaos to an already chaotic system. I highly recommend this book to anyone who likes political history and even to those who think trumps a great guy. I received this book from NetGalleyShelf and I am leaving this review voluntarily. please forgive the grammatical punctuation errors I am blind and dictate my review but all opinions are my own.

Was this review helpful?

Tyranny from Plato to Trump: Fools, Sycophants, and Citizens is an expository survey of the historical, social and theological impacts of tyranny and suppression written by Dr. Andrew Fiala. Due out 1st March 2022 from Rowman & Littlefield, it's 256 pages and will be available in hardcover and ebook formats.

This is a layman accessible but meticulously annotated examination of tyranny, drawing parallels from Plato's time (fourth century BCE) down through history to the Trump era. The author is a philosopher and lecturer and it's clear from the first sentence onward that he is not a "very fine people on both sides" kind of guy. This is not a dispassionate obstinately neutral factual examination of the concept of tyranny. It is an eloquently and logically built exposition on how to fight tyranny and recognize it in its nascent stages without having to radically excise it at a dangerously late stage of metastasis.

The author writes well and eloquently about the interrelationships between philosophy, human nature, theology, and how tyranny can generally be averted or defeated by the virtues of wisdom and reason (and how those often seem to be sorely lacking in time periods which are marked by extreme partisanship and divisiveness). He builds up a cogent logical argument step-by-step and brick by brick. I worry that the people who *agree* with his philosophy will be the only ones who read this book. The ones who think Trump was a swell guy and got robbed in 2020 will slam it shut enraged after the first paragraph and read no further.

Even the most cursory examination of my online background will show that I'm dead center in his "demographic group": fully educated healthcare professional, somewhere politically left of Senator Bernie Sanders, bewailing the downward death spiral of public education and the lack of single payer healthcare in the USA. I heartily agree with everything Dr. Fiala has said in this book and see it as painfully obvious truth. In other words, I'm what Trump supporters disparage as "elitist" and refuse to engage. I'm the choir to whom Dr. Fiala is preaching. The sad thing is that the people who need to find and cultivate reason and objectivity are the very ones who will read the first pages of the preface and slam the book shut in outrage.

Five stars. I hope it gets a lot of traction, because we desperately need to stave off the emboldened and enraged fury of the alt-right worldwide. I fear that the people who need to read it won't ever see it.

Disclosure: I received an ARC at no cost from the author/publisher for review purposes.

Was this review helpful?

Andrew Fiala provides a timely historical and political analysis of the Trump era, with a view to the wider scope of dictatorship and tyranny. Well worth reading as people continue to contend with what it means to a functioning democracy.

Was this review helpful?