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126 – 40 Must-Read Conservative Books – Part 1

Saving Elephants | Millennials defending & expressing conservative values

Release Date: 03/07/2023

Roundtable - 2024 - A Year in Review show art Roundtable - 2024 - A Year in Review

Saving Elephants | Millennials defending & expressing conservative values

As 2024 comes to a close podcasters everywhere will be doing one of those hackneyed and insufferable “a look back at the year’s major events” shows. Not to be outdone, Saving Elephants will be getting in on the action as well with another livestream roundtable to bloviate and pontificate about the numerous twists and turns of our most recent trip around the sun.  Of course, unlike all those other shows, you never know when the panelists will get into an argument about whether Burke, Strauss, Hayek, or Scruton would have had the more insightful outlook were they alive today.

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168 – The Perennial Burke with Daniel Klein show art 168 – The Perennial Burke with Daniel Klein

Saving Elephants | Millennials defending & expressing conservative values

As Saving Elephants host Josh Lewis is wont to do, here is yet another episode exploring the political and philosophical brilliance of Edmund Burke.  But this time he is aided by scholar and professor Daniel Klein to examine the late writings of Burke’s life as Europe was descending into revolutionary chaos.  What was Burke’s understanding of liberty and natural rights, and how did it differ from many of his more radical contemporaries?  How did Burke distinguish between reforms that were constructive or destructive, and why did he seem so reluctant to use them in some...

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167 – The Woke Mind with Ryan Rogers show art 167 – The Woke Mind with Ryan Rogers

Saving Elephants | Millennials defending & expressing conservative values

“I do not believe,” wrote F. A. Hayek in his book , “that the widely held conception of ‘social justice’ either describes a possible state of affairs or is even meaningful.”  Hayek would complain “social” was a sort of “weasel word” that carried a lot of unexamined prescriptions.  To call something “social justice” is to advocate for something without bothering to fully explore what that something might even be.   What are the philosophical underpinnings of social justice?  What does it practically mean, and how could it practically apply.  And...

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Roundtable - Bullish or Bearish on Trump 2.0? show art Roundtable - Bullish or Bearish on Trump 2.0?

Saving Elephants | Millennials defending & expressing conservative values

Should conservatives be bullish or bearish on the incoming Trump administration? Will Trump 2.0 deliver us to the sunlit uplands of a prosperous free market economy, sensible immigration reform, and reductions in wasteful deficit spending and overbearing regulations? Or will America become a dreadful hellscape with an executive branch consistently thwarting its constitutional limits and a GOP-controlled congress refusing to hold them in check, federal departments and agencies run by charlatans and conspiracy theorists, trade wars and industrial policies that would make late 19th century...

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166 – Independent Idiosyncrasies with Brett Loyd show art 166 – Independent Idiosyncrasies with Brett Loyd

Saving Elephants | Millennials defending & expressing conservative values

“The biggest takeaway from the 2024 election,” , is that “independents have officially broken the duopoly and now share the title of America’s largest political group with Republicans.”  But what is an independent, exactly?  What do they want and how are they different from those who proudly affiliate with the Republican or Democratic parties?  And what might this portend for the future of American politics?   Saving Elephants host Josh Lewis is joined by pollster Brett Loyd to make sense of the rise of the independents in the electorate.   About Brett Loyd...

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Roundtable - Election Night - Livestream show art Roundtable - Election Night - Livestream

Saving Elephants | Millennials defending & expressing conservative values

Sure, the major news networks had all the "experts", but how many of them opined on what Buckley, Burke, or Kirk would think of the election results? Listen to Saving Elephants' livestream on election night as results come in from another stellar panel of cross-partisan contributors: , , , , Kent Straith, , John Giokaris, , and Steve Phelps.

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165 – Take Courage show art 165 – Take Courage

Saving Elephants | Millennials defending & expressing conservative values

Saving Elephants host Josh Lewis flies this election day episode solo to offer his thoughts on how your vote is more likely to impact yourself than it is the races, having grace for those who choose to vote differently than we do, and why conservatives should take courage in a profoundly discouraging time.   Special Election Night Livestream   You’re already staying up late to watch the election results.  Why not watch them with another august cross-partisan panel brought to you by Saving Elephants?  Join us, beginning 9PM CST, as we analyze the results in real...

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Roundtable - Election 2024 - Home Stretch show art Roundtable - Election 2024 - Home Stretch

Saving Elephants | Millennials defending & expressing conservative values

The most [assuredly not] important election of our lifetime is a little more than two weeks away. The candidates are in the home stretch as each of them make their final pitch to the dwindling undecided voter. Join another venerable group of panelists as we share our thoughts on the state of the race and our hopes and fears with a coming Harris or another Trump administration. Panelists include: Brooke Medina, Eric Kohn, Mike Taylor, and Nate Honorè

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164 – What is a Woman with Kimberly Ross show art 164 – What is a Woman with Kimberly Ross

Saving Elephants | Millennials defending & expressing conservative values

Saving Elephants meticulously avoids many cringeworthy tropes in today’s “conservative” media and opts instead for deeper conversations on the conservative worldview and what it can offer Millennials.  As such, there is much low-hanging-fruit among the fruitier parts of the Left that isn’t as vigorously explored as it is in the aforementioned “conservative” media.  But that doesn’t mean these topics are off limits—just that they’re to be approached with conviction and clarity.   Josh Lewis welcomes Kimberly Ross back to the podcast for a wide-ranging discussion...

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Roundtable - Vice Vice Baby show art Roundtable - Vice Vice Baby

Saving Elephants | Millennials defending & expressing conservative values

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and Ohio Senator JD Vance square off for the first—and likely only—vice presidential debate that’s sure to leave pundits chattering, social media accounts fighting, and late economists spinning in their graves. The debate begins at 9PM ET. Join us immediately following the debate for another livestream roundtable to restore some inkling of sanity back to this election. Panelists include Scott Howard, Jeffery Tyler Syck, and John Giokaris.

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More Episodes

The conservative tradition embodies centuries of accumulated wisdom from some of the brightest and most inspiring thinkers you’ll find.  Yet for the young conservative eager to learn more about this tradition, choosing which books to read can be a daunting task.

 

Most online lists of top conservative books contain familiar titles of classic tomes that inspire and challenge readers to this day.  Yet far too often such lists also include authors such as Charlie Kirk, Ann Coulter, Sebastian Gorka, Dinesh D’Souza, Dan Bongino, and Mike Lindell who, while they may be gifted at inflicting liberal tears, have nothing of value to say on behalf of their supposed conservative convictions.  There is so much more to conservatism than owning the libs and brandishing firearms in your social media profile picture.  What’s more, many lists are inflated with works on libertarian, patriotic, religious, or cultural topics that, important though they may be, are only tangential to conservatism.

 

It is particularly challenging for us younger conservatives to cut through the noise on the Right today to explore the deeper, auspicious truths of our rich heritage.  As such, I’ve compiled a list of 40 must-read conservative books worth your time and attention for this episode.  Whether you read all, some, or only one below, you will be getting a healthy dose of conservative thought that cuts through the banality of most political discourse and gain a deeper understanding of what it means to be a conservative.

 

It would be an impossibility to rank these books in order of importance, relevance, insightfulness, readability, etc.  As such, I have opted to list the titles alphabetically.  There is no perfect place to start; just find a book that strikes your interest and dive in!

 

In this episode I cover the first twenty books in the list:

 

A Conflict of Visions – Thomas Sowell

 

A Time to Build – Yuval Levin

 

The Abolition of Man – C. S Lewis

 

Basic Economics – Thomas Sowell

 

Black Rednecks and White Liberals – Thomas Sowell

 

Coming Apart – Charles Murray

 

The Conscience of a Conservative – Barry Goldwater

 

The Conservative Affirmation – Willmoore Kendall

 

The Conservative Intellectual Movement in America Since 1945 – George H. Nash

 

The Conservative Mind – Russell Kirk

 

The Constitution of Liberty – F. A. Hayek

 

Democracy in America – Alexis de Tocqueville

 

Edmund Burke: A Genius Reconsidered – Russell Kirk

 

The Fatal Conceit – F.A. Hayek

 

The Federalist Papers – Alexander Hamilton, James Madison and John Jay

 

Fools, Frauds and Firebrands – Roger Scruton

 

Free to Choose – Milton Friedman and Rose Friedman

 

God and Man at Yale – William F. Buckley Jr.

 

The Great Debate – Yuval Levin

 

The Gulag Archipelago – Aleksandr I. Solzhenitsyn