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Authors: Robert H. Bork

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welfare, 55, 155, 156, 158—64, 170—71, 230, 282, 342

Wellesley College, 86, 87, 217, 244

Wendel, Antoinette van, 191—92

Wendel, Cees van, 191—92

“West as America, The: Reinterpreting Images of the Frontier, 1820—1920” (exhibition), 90

Westmoreland, Gen. William, 20

West Point, 221

white males, heterosexual, 299

discrimination against, 78, 107—8, 214, 231, 233—35, 241—42, 247

feminist harassment of, 209—11

multiculturalism and, 304, 307—9, 311

post-modernism and, 268

religious attacks on, 284

scapegoating of, 248

and victim status, 82

Whitewater, 341

Will, George, 52, 108, 144, 147, 212—13

Williams, Montel, 128

Wilson, James Q., 72—73, 94—95, 158—59, 176, 199, 273—76, 340

Winchester, Simon, 135, 136

Winter, Ralph, 42

wisdom, equality of, 75

witchcraft, 287

Wolf, Naomi, 179—80

Wolfenden Report, 354—65

women

affirmative action for, 233

crime perpetrated by, 165, 168

and Equal Rights Amendment, 324

multiculturalism and, 304, 309, 311

popular culture attacks on, 125

radical egalitarianism and, 106, 108

religion and, 272

technology and, 195

see also
feminism

Women in Mission and Ministry, 284

women’s studies programs, 208, 211, 214, 217—18, 244, 267

Wood, Gordon, 66, 81

Woodstock festival, 50

World Council of Churches (WCC), 282—84

World War 1, 8, 76, 77, 88

World War 11, 8, 18, 20, 22, 76, 77, 88, 94, 336

Wright brothers, 255

Wuthering Heights
(Bronte), 212

Yale University, 36—43, 47, 48, 51—52, 129, 173, 241, 282

Law School, 1, 33, 36—39, 75, 258—59, 334

Yugoslavia, 23, 229

Acknowledgments

M
y first debt is to the late Erwin Glikes, my editor and publisher at The Free Press when I wrote, with his sympathetic guidance, my previous book. We agreed that the next book should deal with American culture. He did not live to see the project underway. His death at the age of 56 was both a great personal and an intellectual loss.

Judith Regan, the publisher of ReganBooks at HarperCollins, has my gratitude for offering me a new home after Erwin’s death. She has proved an extraordinarily patient editor-publisher, with just the right amount of impatience to bring what could have been an endless labor to an end.

Midge Decter, the editor of my first book, on antitrust policy, consented to edit this book as well. She proved exceptionally helpful and supportive, not only on questions of tone and approach, but upon details of the argument. I am deeply indebted and grateful to her.

Daniel E. Troy, who was my clerk when I was a judge, took time out from a busy private practice to read the manuscript more than once and make any number of highly intelligent and useful suggestions.

John Dilulio, Professor of Politics and Public Affairs, Princeton University, and Director, Center for Public Management, Brookings Institution, read and greatly improved chapter 9. Charles Krauthammer, columnist and former practitioner of medicine,
read and made very useful comments on chapter 10. Irving Kristol read the book and offered some general and well-taken criticisms that I tried to meet. Dianne Irving, Professor of Philosophy, DeSales School of Theology and a research biochemist, educated me about the beginnings of life and abortion. (See, for example, her “Scientific and Philosophical Expertise: An Evaluation of the Arguments on ‘Personhood,’”
Linacre Quarterly
, February, 1993, p. 18.) My wife, Mary Ellen, made many suggestions and provided moral support on bleak days.

Jennifer Boeke Caterini conducted research, gave advice, and supervised the interns who assisted with research and the organization of materials. My secretary, Laura Hardy, did everything: typing, copying, dealing with callers and correspondents, finding books, and handling innumerable details of life so that I was free to write.

In the early stages, research assistance was provided by Gregory Maggs, now an Associate Professor of Law at George Washington University, and Joshua Abramowitz.

Robert Barnett, lawyer and literary agent, has now twice led me through the labyrinths of the publishing world and again drafted a contract that pleased everyone involved.

The New Criterion
has authorized me to include passages from my article in their series “The Survival of Culture”: “Adversary Jurisprudence,” Vol. 20, No. 9 (May 2002), p.4.

Chapter 16 is a substantial revision of a chapter of the same name in
Aspects of American Liberty: Philosophical, Material, and Political
(Philadelphia: The American Philosophical Society, 1977), p. 174.

I am grateful to the American Enterprise Institute, which has supported me in this enterprise, and to the John M. Olin Foundation, whose grant makes that support possible. My personal thanks go to Christopher C. DeMuth, the President of AEI, and to William Simon and James Piereson, President and Executive Director, respectively, of the Olin Foundation.

The views expressed in this book are my own and are not necessarily shared by any of the people or organizations I have thanked.

About the Author

R
OBERT
H. B
ORK
has served as Solicitor General and Acting Attorney General of the United States, and as a United States Court of Appeals judge. A former professor of law at Yale Law School, he is currently a professor at Ave Maria School of Law, a Senior Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, and the Tad and Dianne Taube Distinguished Visiting Fellow at the Hoover Institution. Also the author of the bestselling
The Tempting of America,
he lives with his wife in McLean, Virginia.

Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins author.

Praise for
Slouching Towards Gomorrah

“Bork makes some astute points about the politicization (not to mention Balkanization) of American culture and the diminished role that reason and rationality have come to play in our intellectual discourse.”


New York Times

“A superb new book.”

—Richard Grenier,
Washington Times

“America will ignore Robert Bork’s call for courage and repentance at its own peril.”

—Ernest Lefever,
Books & Culture

“Judge Bork pulls no punches in describing the past and challenging us to fight for our children’s future.”

—Dan Quayle,
Forty-fourth Vice President of the United States

“Here is a certain trumpet in the midst of the cacophony of crap flooding and penetrating our ears, eyes, and senses. Read and heed!”

—Alan K. Simpson, former Senator from Wyoming


Slouching Towards Gomorrah
is for Americans who are concerned about the hedonistic drift of our nation.”

—Alexander M. Haig

“The ideological triumph of liberalism among American elites—far from bringing the individual and social enlightenment it promised—has produced unprecedented moral decay. The principal victims of this decay are the poorest and most vulnerable among us—those most in need of the support of a healthy culture. Bork courageously and boldly states these truths. A judge as wise as Solomon has become a prophet as powerful as Isaiah.”

—Robert P. George,
Department of Politics, Princeton University

“A thesis that cannot be ignored. Mr. Bork, one of Americas clearest thinkers, uses a variety of current issues of debate to argue that America is on the decline.”

—John Cardinal O’Connor, Archbishop of New York

“A tour de force. A must-read for anyone concerned about the state of American society at the close of the twentieth century.”

—Ralph Reed, Executive Director, Christian Coalition

“A brilliant blend of passionate conviction and sustained argument. May be the most important book of the ’90s.”

—Michael Novak, George Frederick Jewett Scholar in
Religion and Public Policy, American Enterprise Institute

“With his inimitable combination of outrage and wit, Judge Bork has written the definitive account of an America on the eve of the millennium. Ranging through every aspect of our culture and society—sex and race, crime and welfare, religion and the courts—his book is not only a comprehensive description of our condition; it is a profound analysis of its ideological and historical roots.”

—Gertrude Himmelfarb, Professor Emeritus of History,
City University of New York

“A must-read for anyone who cares about the future of American society. Presents a provocative, critical, and convincing picture of a culture careening out of control, a culture that must change its ways or face destruction.”

—Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa)

A
LSO BY THE
A
UTHOR

The Antitrust Paradox: A Policy at War with Itself
The Tempting of America: The Political Seduction of the Law

Copyright

Grateful acknowledgment is made to Simon & Schuster for permission to reprint in the U.S. “The Second Coming” from
The Poems of W.B. Yeats: A New Edition
, edited by Richard J. Finneran. Copyright © 1924 by Macmillan Publishing Company; © renewed 1952 by Bertha Georgie Yeats. Reprinted in the U.K. with the permission of A. P. Watt Ltd. on behalf of Michael Yeats.

A hardcover edition of this book was published in 1996 by ReganBooks, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers, and a paperback edition appeared in 1997.

SLOUCHING TOWARDS GOMORRAH
. Copyright © 1996, 2003 by Robert H. Bork.

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

EPub Edition © JULY 2010 ISBN: 978-0-062-03091-7

Revised paperback edition published 2003.

 

The Library of Congress has catalogued the hardcover edition as follows:

Bork, Robert H.
     Slouching towards Gomorrah: modern liberalism and American decline / Robert H. Bork.
        p.  cm.
     Includes bibliographical references.
     ISBN 0-06-039163-4
     1. United States—Social conditions—1980-. 2. Liberalism—United States. 3. Social values—United States. I. Title.
HN59.2.B68   1996

306’ 0973—dc20
96-31277

 

ISBN 0-06-057311-2 (pbk.)
05 06 07
/RRD 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3

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Endnotes
Introduction

1.
Daniel Patrick Moynihan, “Defining Deviancy Down,”
The American Scholar,
Winter 1993, p. 17.

2.
Ibid.,
pp. 17–20.

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