Privileged Populists: Populism in the Conservative and Libertarian Working Class
Intro -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Contents -- Figures -- Preface -- Introduction: Of Realizations and Distortions -- Part I: Populism in Theory and Practice: (Theoretical Frameworks) -- Chapter 1: Who Are the Privileged Populists? -- The Movements of Interest -- Right-Libertarianism -- Paleo-Conservatism -- The Alt-Light ("Red-Pilled" Conservatism) -- Chapter 2: Populist Logic and Anti-Politics -- Populist Rationale Spectrum Theory's Competition -- The Populist Rationale Spectrum in Summary -- PRS Theory's Promise for Better Visualization -- Evidence of PRS Theory's Veracity -- Limited, Yet Specific Working-Class Support Made the Difference in 2016 -- Chapter 3: The Manufactured Antagonist -- Chapter 4: When Populism Meets Ideology -- Part II: Inducing an Organic False Consciousness: (Historical Contexts) -- Chapter 5: From Radical to Classical to Neo: The Great Liberal Distortion -- Chapter 6: The Original Libertarianism versus Right-Libertarianism -- Chapter 7: Selfishness: Making Noble a Sinister Concept -- Chapter 8: Systemic Deadfalls -- Part III: How Privileged Populism Prevails: (Modern Analyses) -- Chapter 9: When Ideology Meets Reality -- Chapter 10: Ignorance as Intellectualism: Confirmation Bias in the Lecture Hall -- Chapter 11: New Spins on Old, Misguided Hatreds -- Conclusion: Redirecting the Revolutionary Urge -- Revolutionary Rightists Are Largely Unwitting Players in a Larger Hegemonic Game -- Many Revolutionaries on the Right Have Legitimate Initial Class-Based Grievances -- Liberalism Is a Narrowed, Elitist, Multi-Stage Distortion of Its Former Self -- Modern Right-Wing Revolutionary Sentiment Shares Common Ancestry with Socialism -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Introduction -- Chapter 1 -- Chapter 2 -- Chapter 3 -- Chapter 4 -- Chapter 5 -- Chapter 6 -- Chapter 7 -- Chapter 8.