Having grown up in the communist Soviet Union, I have read dozens upon dozens of books on socialism, politics and economics. Both from the pro-socialist, anti-socialist and neutral perspectives; both fiction and non fiction, both in Russian and in English.
I have NEVER read a book that is more gripping, better-reasoned, better backed by facts and more inspiring than this one. It's such an easy entertaining read as well, I couldn't put it down!
I loved this book so much that I bought it both in kindle AND in audible, both are excellent.
Bravo, Mr D'Souza!

The United States of Socialism: Who's Behind It. Why It's Evil. How to Stop It.
Audible Audiobook
– Unabridged
Dinesh D'Souza
(Author, Narrator),
Macmillan Audio
(Publisher)
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Product details
Listening Length | 10 hours and 4 minutes |
---|---|
Author | Dinesh D'Souza |
Narrator | Dinesh D'Souza |
Whispersync for Voice | Ready |
Audible.com.au Release Date | 02 June 2020 |
Publisher | Macmillan Audio |
Program Type | Audiobook |
Version | Unabridged |
Language | English |
ASIN | B082VKPZXF |
Best Sellers Rank |
11,770 in Audible Books & Originals (See Top 100 in Audible Books & Originals)
50 in Political Commentary & Opinion 78 in Political Science (Audible Books & Originals) 11,095 in Textbooks & Study Guides |
Customer reviews
4.8 out of 5 stars
4.8 out of 5
4,050 global ratings
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Top reviews from Australia
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5.0 out of 5 stars
Hands down, the best book on socialism in its current manifestation that I've ever read.
Reviewed in Australia on 27 July 2020Verified Purchase
4 people found this helpful
Helpful
Reviewed in Australia on 23 October 2020
Many excellent points are made, and IMHO the vast majority is true. I just want to elaborate a bit on the comment the author made about health care in Australia. It is paid for by a levy on all Australians and is meant to be a safety net so people can get the medical care they require. It is not meant to be a 'Rolls Royce' scheme. If your life is not in danger you can wait quite a while for treatment, even if you are in pain etc. Many such as me think the waiting lists are a bit too long, but it was never designed to be like private insurance where you get nearly immediate care. I will give an example. I recently broke my Distal Femur. I have private health insurance and was operated on the same day. If I used the public system I was told I would have had to wait 3 days in a good deal of discomfort - but my life was not in danger. Australia is a democratic country and Australians, by and large, are happy with it. Of course those that do not take out private health insurance always complain they want better care, most realise to provide 'Rolls Royce' care to everyone would require a levey much more than the majority are willing to pay. It's simply, via the democratic system, what society considers a safety net. Everyone agrees we need a safety net - but the level of that safety net is what people democratically decide.
6 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in Australia on 16 March 2021
This was a good book until the very end. His prescription for turning helicopters, armed squads with machine guns and to contest the left's " domination of the media, academia and Hollywood' made me very suspicious that he admires the tactics of National Socialism he supposedly despises.
Top reviews from other countries

linda galella
5.0 out of 5 stars
A clear and compelling look at contemporary Socialism
Reviewed in the United States on 2 June 2020Verified Purchase
Dinesh D’Souza writes in a style that is refreshingly free from drama and histrionics. That doesn’t mean it’s dry and boring, just not inflammatory and full of unsubstantiated innuendo. He states his agenda is to “make the moral argument against identity socialism and make the moral argument for free market capitalism...debunk the socialist dream and affirm the American dream.”
D’Souza goes in a loose, chronological order to review the failed attempts at Socialism thus far in the world. Russia was the most obvious but I found his information on Hitler and the Nazi impact on Germany to be interesting as well as his personal tho’ts about India.
India falls into the positive side , as well, as it’s now a free market country. China, altho’ government controlled, is in this arena also. These massive successes are hard to ignore against a list of approximately 25 countries with failed attempts at Socialism. Dinesh points out the pitfalls in America, such as F. D. R.’s Social Security plan.
Towards the end of the book, D’Souza takes look at the media and how it has evolved over the last 15+ years. He gives 2 examples, one involving our current president and one involving Obama. They are very similar types of events with extremely different representations. He doesn’t just let it hang there but dives into the details and I found it most enlightening and sad.
D’Souza is no doubt a capitalist and near the end of the book offers an encouragement: “...we need a new generation of leaders who can assimilate the things that Trump does so effectively, fearlessly and gleefully. Trump has made it fun to beat the hell out of leftist and socialist and even when Trump is gone, we must continue to enjoy the Trumpian experience of being a butt-kicking Republican, Christian, right-wing, American capitalist.”
Well written, professionally published, sure to anger many and educate & motivate others; above all, “United States of Socialism” deserves to be read📚
D’Souza goes in a loose, chronological order to review the failed attempts at Socialism thus far in the world. Russia was the most obvious but I found his information on Hitler and the Nazi impact on Germany to be interesting as well as his personal tho’ts about India.
India falls into the positive side , as well, as it’s now a free market country. China, altho’ government controlled, is in this arena also. These massive successes are hard to ignore against a list of approximately 25 countries with failed attempts at Socialism. Dinesh points out the pitfalls in America, such as F. D. R.’s Social Security plan.
Towards the end of the book, D’Souza takes look at the media and how it has evolved over the last 15+ years. He gives 2 examples, one involving our current president and one involving Obama. They are very similar types of events with extremely different representations. He doesn’t just let it hang there but dives into the details and I found it most enlightening and sad.
D’Souza is no doubt a capitalist and near the end of the book offers an encouragement: “...we need a new generation of leaders who can assimilate the things that Trump does so effectively, fearlessly and gleefully. Trump has made it fun to beat the hell out of leftist and socialist and even when Trump is gone, we must continue to enjoy the Trumpian experience of being a butt-kicking Republican, Christian, right-wing, American capitalist.”
Well written, professionally published, sure to anger many and educate & motivate others; above all, “United States of Socialism” deserves to be read📚
754 people found this helpful
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Pseudo D
4.0 out of 5 stars
I'm generous with your money
Reviewed in the United States on 4 June 2020Verified Purchase
Dinesh d'Souza is like an old friend from his articles when I first read politics in college. Along with others like
Tom Sowell and Michelle Malkin, they helped me to develop an American identity as a Filipino and Canadian.
This week as we struggle with racial justice and tension, it was helpful to review his perspective as an immigrant
from India who embraced American culture and identity. D'Souza has previously written books about Obama
and Hillary, with the Obama book showing his father's anti-colonial resentment. By contrast, d'Souza is aware
of the benefits that England gave to India as well as the bad points. He also made the movie America, and is somewhat like the Michael Moore of the right.
As the picture on the cover shows, there is a lot about Bernie, AOC, and two other members of the Squad,
Rashida Tlaib and Ilhan Omar. But there are others who are progressive but don't call themselves socialist,
like Elizabeth Warren, Bill de Blasio and Beto O'Rourke. Progressivism is on a scale that leads to socialism.
Glenn Beck showed this about a decade ago with regard to the events of a century ago. The key progressives
were Woodrow Wilson and FDR, but some of the ideas had come from Eugene Debs, who was out of the
mainstream. What's remarkable is that someone like Bernie who identifies with Debs now is the mainstream.
I remember Beck saying, no Obama's not socialist, he's progressive, and then explained the parallels with
the professorial Wilson. Socialism has been thoroughly discredited in over 25 countries, including Russia under Stalin and China with Chairman Mao. China has remained totalitarian, but economically has made capitalist reforms.
One of the most recent countries to deteriorate into socialism has been Venezuela, where d'Souza's wife
Debbie was from. He has a great deal of knowledge of the corruption where the friends of Chavez and
Maduro have gotten rich with their power. And Chavez was loved by various celebrities like Michael Moore
and Oliver Stone. The democratic socialists say their model is not Venezuela but Scandinavia. And yet, while
Sanders is the most flamboyant with his history with Marxist regimes, someone like Bill de Blasio also views himself as a part of the Castro revolution.
The main idea of the book is that of identity socialism. America is not Denmark, because they don't
have the social divisions. They have a majority white culture and are mostly post-Christian and sexually
liberated. In America all those things are subject to division. Here d'Souza echoes arguments from the
professor Paul Gottfried in books such as Multiculturalism and the Politics of Guilt. D'Souza shows
the influence of Herbert Marcuse and the Frankfurt School (as did Gottfried who studied under Marcuse).
Others involved might include Antonio Gramsci or Michel Foucault. The point is, this isn't the old
Marxism that depended on economics. Marx himself knew that America wouldn't embrace socialism
as quickly because the workers are bourgeois. D'Souza reviews the Founding Fathers and Lincoln and
shows the ingenuity of Ben Franklin. He then gives examples like Henry Ford (after Wilson was opposed
to the idea of cars), Ray Kroc and McDonald's, right up to Jeff Bezos and figuring out the delivery process.
Marx himself wouldn't recognize socialism as it exists today. Since the Constitution and the working
class aren't favorable to it here, it depends upon identity politics. The divisions of black and white,
women and men, gay and straight, immigrant and native born are key to overturning the social
hierarchies, just as the economic divisions were in the old Marxism. Rather than class struggle, there's
the cultural war. Wait until Roe v. Wade and abortion is sent back to the states and the democratic
process, and we'll see how democratic the champions of democracy are. D'Souza gives a wealth of
examples such as the cake baker in Indiana who went to court for five years over gay marriage,
only to have the same demand to celebrate a change in gender. There's also the actor Mario Lopez,
who talked about the sexual indoctrination of toddlers and had to take back his comments. The
cultural submission is relentless. D'Souza is intense at times but it varies, and there's always as much
light as heat. He talks about Orwell's 1984 (while acknowledging that Orwell himself was a socialist),
Macbeth and Paradise Lost.
D'Souza goes back to thinkers like John Stuart Mill and Adam Smith. Smith was a moral philosopher,
and yet The Wealth of Nations is usually interpreted as a pragmatic argument that this is how things
work, rather than that it's the best way for human flourishing and creativity. There are also more recent
thinkers like Ludwig von Mises, Friedrich Hayek, John Rawls and Milton Friedman.
He closes with familiar critiques of academia, entertainment and most importantly, the media. Imagine
the Ukraine story if Hunter Biden and Don Jr. were in each other's place. He also looks at the Stormy
Daniels story and a similar story about Obama. He doesn't know whether the Obama story is true, the
point is the media interest or lack thereof.
Then there's Trump. Donald is another entrepreneur. The comeback of the early 90s shows when he
was in debt and he was poorer than the man in the street. It's a frequent criticism that Trump isn't
reflective, and it's true. As an entrepreneur, he just keeps going with action. D'Souza was pardoned
by Trump. He doesn't contest that he was guilty. He was pardoned by a president, and he was prosecuted
only because he was critical of the previous President. The point about Trump is that he fights back
against identity socialism. D'Souza is still more of a free-trader than Trump, but tries to spin the
motivation of the protectionism. I don't agree with everything in this book, but it's readable and
intelligent.
While Reagan's optimistic populism was appropriate then, Trump's pessimistic populism is appropriate
now. The point is that he fights back. Reagan got by on his charisma, but the Bushes were more
vulnerable. If Trump loses the left, will punish his supporters and these years will be an aberration. If
he wins he can change the country for a quarter century. Reagan's revolution survived even the Clinton
years, and lasted until Obama in 2008.
Tom Sowell and Michelle Malkin, they helped me to develop an American identity as a Filipino and Canadian.
This week as we struggle with racial justice and tension, it was helpful to review his perspective as an immigrant
from India who embraced American culture and identity. D'Souza has previously written books about Obama
and Hillary, with the Obama book showing his father's anti-colonial resentment. By contrast, d'Souza is aware
of the benefits that England gave to India as well as the bad points. He also made the movie America, and is somewhat like the Michael Moore of the right.
As the picture on the cover shows, there is a lot about Bernie, AOC, and two other members of the Squad,
Rashida Tlaib and Ilhan Omar. But there are others who are progressive but don't call themselves socialist,
like Elizabeth Warren, Bill de Blasio and Beto O'Rourke. Progressivism is on a scale that leads to socialism.
Glenn Beck showed this about a decade ago with regard to the events of a century ago. The key progressives
were Woodrow Wilson and FDR, but some of the ideas had come from Eugene Debs, who was out of the
mainstream. What's remarkable is that someone like Bernie who identifies with Debs now is the mainstream.
I remember Beck saying, no Obama's not socialist, he's progressive, and then explained the parallels with
the professorial Wilson. Socialism has been thoroughly discredited in over 25 countries, including Russia under Stalin and China with Chairman Mao. China has remained totalitarian, but economically has made capitalist reforms.
One of the most recent countries to deteriorate into socialism has been Venezuela, where d'Souza's wife
Debbie was from. He has a great deal of knowledge of the corruption where the friends of Chavez and
Maduro have gotten rich with their power. And Chavez was loved by various celebrities like Michael Moore
and Oliver Stone. The democratic socialists say their model is not Venezuela but Scandinavia. And yet, while
Sanders is the most flamboyant with his history with Marxist regimes, someone like Bill de Blasio also views himself as a part of the Castro revolution.
The main idea of the book is that of identity socialism. America is not Denmark, because they don't
have the social divisions. They have a majority white culture and are mostly post-Christian and sexually
liberated. In America all those things are subject to division. Here d'Souza echoes arguments from the
professor Paul Gottfried in books such as Multiculturalism and the Politics of Guilt. D'Souza shows
the influence of Herbert Marcuse and the Frankfurt School (as did Gottfried who studied under Marcuse).
Others involved might include Antonio Gramsci or Michel Foucault. The point is, this isn't the old
Marxism that depended on economics. Marx himself knew that America wouldn't embrace socialism
as quickly because the workers are bourgeois. D'Souza reviews the Founding Fathers and Lincoln and
shows the ingenuity of Ben Franklin. He then gives examples like Henry Ford (after Wilson was opposed
to the idea of cars), Ray Kroc and McDonald's, right up to Jeff Bezos and figuring out the delivery process.
Marx himself wouldn't recognize socialism as it exists today. Since the Constitution and the working
class aren't favorable to it here, it depends upon identity politics. The divisions of black and white,
women and men, gay and straight, immigrant and native born are key to overturning the social
hierarchies, just as the economic divisions were in the old Marxism. Rather than class struggle, there's
the cultural war. Wait until Roe v. Wade and abortion is sent back to the states and the democratic
process, and we'll see how democratic the champions of democracy are. D'Souza gives a wealth of
examples such as the cake baker in Indiana who went to court for five years over gay marriage,
only to have the same demand to celebrate a change in gender. There's also the actor Mario Lopez,
who talked about the sexual indoctrination of toddlers and had to take back his comments. The
cultural submission is relentless. D'Souza is intense at times but it varies, and there's always as much
light as heat. He talks about Orwell's 1984 (while acknowledging that Orwell himself was a socialist),
Macbeth and Paradise Lost.
D'Souza goes back to thinkers like John Stuart Mill and Adam Smith. Smith was a moral philosopher,
and yet The Wealth of Nations is usually interpreted as a pragmatic argument that this is how things
work, rather than that it's the best way for human flourishing and creativity. There are also more recent
thinkers like Ludwig von Mises, Friedrich Hayek, John Rawls and Milton Friedman.
He closes with familiar critiques of academia, entertainment and most importantly, the media. Imagine
the Ukraine story if Hunter Biden and Don Jr. were in each other's place. He also looks at the Stormy
Daniels story and a similar story about Obama. He doesn't know whether the Obama story is true, the
point is the media interest or lack thereof.
Then there's Trump. Donald is another entrepreneur. The comeback of the early 90s shows when he
was in debt and he was poorer than the man in the street. It's a frequent criticism that Trump isn't
reflective, and it's true. As an entrepreneur, he just keeps going with action. D'Souza was pardoned
by Trump. He doesn't contest that he was guilty. He was pardoned by a president, and he was prosecuted
only because he was critical of the previous President. The point about Trump is that he fights back
against identity socialism. D'Souza is still more of a free-trader than Trump, but tries to spin the
motivation of the protectionism. I don't agree with everything in this book, but it's readable and
intelligent.
While Reagan's optimistic populism was appropriate then, Trump's pessimistic populism is appropriate
now. The point is that he fights back. Reagan got by on his charisma, but the Bushes were more
vulnerable. If Trump loses the left, will punish his supporters and these years will be an aberration. If
he wins he can change the country for a quarter century. Reagan's revolution survived even the Clinton
years, and lasted until Obama in 2008.
603 people found this helpful
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Luca De Simone
5.0 out of 5 stars
Amazon, why are you letting trolls write reviews?
Reviewed in the United States on 5 June 2020Verified Purchase
I just bought this book and read few pages. Seems very well researched. Obviously it is somehow partisan.
What I do not understand, though, is why Amazon lets people that did not buy and read a political book write reviews.
Get smart!
What I do not understand, though, is why Amazon lets people that did not buy and read a political book write reviews.
Get smart!
505 people found this helpful
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Dominic Maurais
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Must
Reviewed in Canada on 7 June 2020Verified Purchase
Great summary and analysis of what the Left has become. Relevant, well informed. Of course, AOC fans won’t like it but who cares?
If you want to know about the perils of the radical identity left, you need that book!
If you want to know about the perils of the radical identity left, you need that book!
55 people found this helpful
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Stephen Menfi
5.0 out of 5 stars
What a Book!!
Reviewed in the United States on 3 June 2020Verified Purchase
Dinesh is one of the greatest minds of our generation! He needs to sit down with Peterson, if they put their minds together we could solve a lot of our problems.
380 people found this helpful
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