For many years, I have spent my morning commute with Mark Davis, a presence on Dallas/Fort Worth talk radio since 1994. If you have heard him on the radio, on his local show or when he fills in for Rush or other shows, you know he is consistently conservative, averse to hyperbole, courteous to people whether or not they agree with him, insightful and knowledgeable, and a pleasure to listen to.
All of that can be said about his book, Upside Down: How the Left Turned Right into Wrong, Truth into Lies, and Good into Bad. In short essays, about the length of a newspaper editorial or opening show monologue, Davis skewers liberal talking points on a wide variety of topics, giving conservative rejoinders to topics on which liberals are wrong.
Upside Down is timely, reasonable, and almost always right. On topics in the news today like immigration, guns, terrorism, foreign policy and many others, bring your questions to Mark and he'll set you straight, and he'll do so without making you feel like an idiot or belittling you if you happen to disagree with him. For Mark, you can like someone and think they're wrong at the same time.
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