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How to Be Right: In a World Gone Wrong

How to Be Right: In a World Gone Wrong


Condition remarks:
Book: Good
Jacket: No dust jacket
Pages: Good
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Condition remarks: Condition as shown in image

In an era of "alternative facts" and echo-chamber discourse, runaway talk show sensation James O'Brien provides a provocative and hilarious guide to dismantling small minds and conquering prejudice. Every day on his LBC radio show, O'Brien listens to people blaming immigrants, the EU, or "political correctness" for the world’s problems. In this Sunday Times bestseller, he demonstrates his signature technique for puncturing these assumptions live on air—not by shouting, but by asking the simple, piercing questions that reveal the fallacies and double standards beneath the rhetoric. Covering lightning-rod issues from Brexit to LGBT rights, O'Brien offers a survival guide for anyone who has ever been cornered by a Daily Mail disciple or a corporate crony. It is a brilliant, forensic, and often moving examination of why we believe what we believe and how we can start talking to each other again.

$6.25
How to Be Right: In a World Gone Wrong
$6.25
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Description


Condition remarks:
Book: Good
Jacket: No dust jacket
Pages: Good
Markings: No markings
Condition remarks: Condition as shown in image

In an era of "alternative facts" and echo-chamber discourse, runaway talk show sensation James O'Brien provides a provocative and hilarious guide to dismantling small minds and conquering prejudice. Every day on his LBC radio show, O'Brien listens to people blaming immigrants, the EU, or "political correctness" for the world’s problems. In this Sunday Times bestseller, he demonstrates his signature technique for puncturing these assumptions live on air—not by shouting, but by asking the simple, piercing questions that reveal the fallacies and double standards beneath the rhetoric. Covering lightning-rod issues from Brexit to LGBT rights, O'Brien offers a survival guide for anyone who has ever been cornered by a Daily Mail disciple or a corporate crony. It is a brilliant, forensic, and often moving examination of why we believe what we believe and how we can start talking to each other again.