We the Fallen People, Robert Tracy McKenzie
We the Fallen People, Robert Tracy McKenzie
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We the Fallen People
The Founders and the Future of American Democracy

Author: Robert Tracy McKenzie

Narrator: Bob Souer

Unabridged: 10 hr 24 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 09/21/2021


Synopsis

The success and survival of American democracy have never been guaranteed.
What we must do, argues the historian Robert Tracy McKenzie, is take an unflinching look at the very nature of democracy—its strengths and weaknesses, what it can promise, and where it overreaches. And this means we must take an unflinching look at ourselves.

We the Fallen People presents a close look at the ideas of human nature to be found in the history of American democratic thought. McKenzie, following C. S. Lewis, claims there are only two reasons to believe in majority rule: because we have confidence in human nature—or because we don't. The Founders subscribed to the biblical principle that humans are fallen and their virtue is always doubtful, and they wrote the US Constitution to frame a republic intended to handle our weaknesses. But by the presidency of Andrew Jackson, contrary ideas about humanity's inherent goodness were already taking deep root among Americans, bearing fruit in such perils as we now face for the future of democracy.

Focusing on the careful reasoning of the Founders, the seismic shifts of the Jacksonian Era, and the often misunderstood but still piercing analysis of Tocqueville's Democracy in America, McKenzie guides us in a conversation with the past that can help us see the present—and ourselves—with new insight.

About Robert Tracy McKenzie

Robert Tracy McKenzie (PhD Vanderbilt University) is professor and chair of the department of history at Wheaton College, where he teaches courses in US history, the Civil War, and historiography. McKenzie is the author of two award-winning monographs: One South or Many? Plantation Belt and Upcountry in Civil-War Era Tennessee and Lincolnites and Rebels: A Divided Town in the American Civil War.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Mark

Truly excellent. More to say later, I hope. But it's, in a way, a fairly basic application of the simplest truths of the Christian worldview to past political situations in the U.S., especially the founding and the Jacksonian era. More controversially, Mackenzie applies those same simple truths—now......more

Goodreads review by Greg

While perhaps not the intention of the author, this book could also serve as a rather good primer overview of American from a point of view that is saddened by how far short of our ideals we have often fallen. The principle goal of the author is to help us understand how much our modern views -- or,......more

Goodreads review by Ryan

Really good treatise on the history and current state of our democracy. This book aims to show that we needed democracy, not because we are inherently good, but because we are fallen. The founders believed this, but over time we have embraced the narrative that we the people are virtuous and therefo......more