In this book, Lévy argues that in the wake of the failure of
communism, the
Western left has lost its ideals. It now fails to uphold universal ideas of justice, fails to sympathize with the oppressed, and has lost its commitment to truth. The left, according to Levy, has replaced those ideals with a pathological hatred of America, of Jews and Israel, and of freedom and liberty itself. Levy also attempts to debunk what he identifies as the six chief claims of the contemporary European and American left. Liberalism is not merely the free market, it is also about democracy and human rights. Europe is about more than capitalism. America is not a fascist nation. Humanitarian intervention is humanitarian, not an imperialist ploy. Israel is not the cause of anti-Semitism.
Islamism is homegrown, not caused by the West, and it threatens the West just as seriously as fascism once did. The contemporary left, according to Levy, believes that any opponent of America or capitalism is good by definition. It is this reasoning that has led the left to support the dictatorship of
Saddam Hussein; to turn the
World Conference against Racism 2001 into a forum for
anti-Semitic hatred, and the Sudanese government's attacks first on southern Sudan and now on the people of
Darfur because that government is anti-American and no anti-American government is to be criticized. == Genesis ==