D'Souza makes a strong case for America, arguing that it is a free and prosperous society with unlimited opportunity for those seeking a better life. Yet despite his enthusiasm for America, his treatment of America's "sins" is unsatisfactory, one-sided and does not result in the vindication of America from the claims of her critics.
In his response to Dinesh D'Souza's What's So Great About America, Harold Palmer highlights America's three great sins: (i) the oppression of the Native Americans; (ii) slavery; and (iii) historic discrimination of African Americans and other minorities. Mr. Palmer argues that D'Souza fails to adequately respond to the accounts of America's critics with respect to any of these great sins or to the views of cultural conservatives who deplore America as "culturally decadent and morally degenerate."
Finally, in this volume, Mr. Palmer argues that D'Souza fundamentally misunderstands the meaning of "greatness." In his constant repetition of the fact that America permits for economic opportunity, D'Souza forgets that greatness is not about material prosperity, but about virtue, temperance and justice. Notwithstanding D'Souza's incessant focus on wealth, greatness can only ever be an attribute of a virtuous and upright society, regardless of its material prosperity.
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