<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>In 1979, Christopher Lasch published the epochal <i>The Culture of Narcissism</i> warning of the normalizing of narcissism in our society. Lasch may have understated it. 35 years later, in the Obama era with its parade of endless, often inexplicable, scandals we have a full blown epidemic of what has recently been called Moral Narcissism. <p/>Forget Narcissus and his reflection, Moral Narcissism the almost schizophrenic divide between intentions and results now pervading our culture is the new method for feeling good about yourself. It no longer matters how anything turns out as long as your intentions were good, that you were moral. And, just as importantly, the only determinant of those intentions, the only one who defines that morality, is you. <p/> <i>I Know Best</i> goes beyond Lasch to lay bare how this moral narcissism is behind all those scandals from Obamacare to the Veteran's Administration to the IRS, Benghazi, Bergdahl, Syria and beyond. Everything the Obama administration did and does was about making them feel good about themselves, the results be damned. <p/>And they have as their allies those supreme moral narcissists in the academy, media and Hollywood, ever willing to ratify those good intentions and ignore those same results. <p/>But <i>I Know Best</i> is not just about the Left. Moral Narcissism affects the right as well, even when they don't realize it. It is a true epidemic that must be cured in order to save our democratic republic and our futures.<p/><br></br><p><b> From the Back Cover </b></p></br></br><br>Do you want to know who is largely responsible for the decline of America in the last half century? And do you want to know why? Roger Simon has written the answer in an original and significant book. He may have even coined a term that will become part of the American lexicon: Moral Narcissism. Few will agree with everything he has written. But so what? He forces you to think--not just feel. This is precisely what we need. <p/>Dennis Prager, nationally syndicated talk radio host, columnist, and <i>New York Times</i>bestselling author <p/> <br>Roger L. Simon's riveting <i>I Know Best</i> fires a bullet into the heart of political correctness. In his inimitable style, he exposes the insufferable Moral Narcissism that is tearing our society apart. <p/>David Limbaugh, political commentator and author of <i>The Emmaus Code</i> <p/> <br>The race card players and hustlers don't want a color-blind society, they want a color coordinated one as long as they do the coordinating. Roger's book offers a welcome and needed perspective on the game that hurts the very people these leftists-hustlers claim to care about. <p/>Larry Elder, national talk show host with the Salem Radio Network and author of <i>What's Race Got to Do with It?</i> <p/> <br>Simon perceptively shows how elite self-regard drives today's destructive race politics, among other contemporary pathologies. His fresh analysis of President Barack Obama's response to the Trayvon Martin case was a revelation. <p/>Heather Mac Donald, Thomas W. Smith Fellow at the Manhattan Institute<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Roger L. Simon made his living writing novels and screenplays before he took the New Media plunge as co-founder and CEO of the pioneering blog aggregation and news and opinion website PJ Media (formerly Pajamas Media) in 2005. In books, he is best known for his series of the eight <i>Moses Wine</i> detective novels, which have been translated into over a dozen languages and won prizes from the Mystery Writers of America and the Crime Writers of Great Britain. The first <i>Moses Wine</i> novel was <i>The Big Fix</i>, made into a film starring Richard Dreyfuss for which Simon wrote the screenplay, bringing him to Hollywood. <p/>Among his many screenplays are <i>Bustin' Loose</i> (with Richard Pryor), <i>Scenes from a Mall</i> (with Bette Midler and Woody Allen) and the Paul Mazursky-directed <i>Enemies, A Love Story</i>, for which Simon was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay. <i>A Better Life</i>, for which Roger wrote the story, was released in 2011 with its lead actor, Damien Bichir, also nominated for the Best Actor Academy Award. Simon also directed the independent feature <i>Prague Duet</i>, starring Gina Gershon and based on a screenplay he wrote with his wife Sheryl Longin (<i>Dick</i>). <p/>He has taught screenwriting at Robert Redford's Sundance Institute and at the American Film Institute. He has also written for the <i>New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Washington Post, Commentary</i> and the <i>New York Post</i>, among many other publications. He is a former president of the PEN Center USA West, former vice-president of the International Association of Crime Writers and a former member of the board of the Writers Guild of America. His first non-fiction book <i>Turning Right at Hollywood and Vine: The Perils of Coming Out Conservative in Tinseltown</i> was published by Encounter Books in February 2009. <i>The Party Line</i>, a stage play also written in collaboration with Sheryl Longin and set in Stalinist Russia and contemporary Amsterdam was just published by <i>The New Criterion</i> in November 2012. <p/>Simon, the only person to be profiled favorably in one lifetime by <i>Mother Jones</i> and <i>National Review</i> has also been a public speaker, speaking on the topics of the effects of political change on people's lives, Hollywood and politics, and the rise of New Media. He has appeared on television on the Larry Kudlow Show, Fox and Friends, CNBC, Fox Business and others and is a frequent guest on the Hugh Hewitt Radio Show. <p/>Simon blogs at www.pjmedia.com/rogerlsimon. He is a graduate of Dartmouth College and the Yale School of Drama.
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