Neema Parvini’s penchant for the ‘a priori’ shines through in his concise but informative book, “The Populist Delusion” from Imperium Press. Thoughtful excerpts from world-renowned political minds come quick and organized into this extensive title. Parvini soaks your brain in a rich broth of realpolitik, having boiled down immense volumes of authorship while pulling no intellectual punches.
Parvini begins with an introduction to lay out his premise. He then goes on to batter miserable liberal fairy tales in his Misean-esque critical analysis, flipping boomer-beliefs like equality on its back, where it remains flailing about like a pitiful loggerhead.
There is no quarter for populists, as Parvini flies in from the top rope like an elite crushing popular dissent. Braying hordes of zombified peasants cry out in agony as the cutting realization of their disorganization renders their majority moot.
Managers and Bureaucrats HATE him because of this one cool trick. Parvini highlights throughout the book the evolving nature of Managerialism and its role in legislative malaise and prosecutes a considerable case against so-called “emergent behaviour” and “meritocracy.” All such things are copes for the truth: all these games are games of POWER, and by hook or by crook, Power permits NO rival.
Throughout the ten chapters, composed of some one-hundred forty pages, annotations and sources abound, showing Parvini has done the appropriate research. If reading this book leaves you like many, wanting more, start here.
As an exit from the liberal democratic order, an astute reader can do none better or as quickly as “The Populist Delusion” by Neema Parvini. Though a relatively fast read, Parvini defends his central thesis and positively puts populism in its place: right in the bin.
Some final notes: physically the book is about average, with a quality gloss; the print is nicely done, easing readability; the cover art is meted out well to match the eclectic style and personality of Parvini, reminiscent of Japanese import truck repair manuals from the 1970s. If you want to keep your power level veiled, the cream-coloured cover covertly conceals its dissident details. The hierarchical pyramid can be seen in different ways, but for the liberal egoist it says: “Get Out.”
My, oh my... this is too funny.
145