liberalism, both the classical variant underpinning western democracy but also the specific brand of composite ideologies that constitute the left, has morphed into the most aggressively moronic brand of politics, and it makes no attempt to hide it.
Bowden certainly gives a nod to the impossibility of escaping a brand of generic ethics and coded language that just wants to conscript you for the purposes of demoralization. The system and entire sociocultural/media apparatus erected on its behalf is a form of psychological entrapment that serves as a seedbed for the legitimization of idiotic, half-baked contrivances meant to serve a select few, whether they be political or economic elites. It's an onslaught of almost constant gaslighting, hence the emotional exhaustion and mental torment of its political subjects when it is operating most efficiently.
Reasons to reject liberalism:
1) A general distrust of power, of its corrupting influence on the people who possess it, as well as its inherently expansive nature and centralizing tendencies. Power is zero-sum. When they get more, you get less.
2) The cavalier attitude of this power. Its rejection of anything resembling prudence or humility. Evident in the medical sciences, most recently during the pandemic. It's rejection of other human resources like intuition or historical knowledge.
3) Lack of reverence... for anything, really. History, beauty, distinction, values. Everything will be mowed down by neoliberalism or technology. Progress is good.
4) Refusal of limits. This is where it gets satanic. It's a confusion of the animal, human, and divine.
This book is a good intro to Bowden's fundamental ideas and also his personality. Apparently, he was a great orator too.