"Conspiracies of the Ruling Class. How to Break Their Grip Forever" by Lawrence B. Lindsey.
Above: "Conspiracies of the Ruling Class. How to Break Their Grip Forever" by Lawrence B. Lindsey. Simon and Schuster
Carry this book with you for an eloquent description of how America is being undermined by its Ruling Class and what can be done to reverse the decline.
I completed reading this book today, 26 June 2016.
A brilliant ready reference handbook for those who understand that America falters today because of the perfidy, guile, greed and power hungry selfishness of members of both parties who form America's ruling class.
Lindsey says:
The Ruling Class have failed in reducing Inequality
The Ruling Class have mismanaged America's finances
The Ruling Class have earned an "F" in education
America's infrastructure is rumbling under the Ruling Class
The Ruling Class threatens America's Second Amendment
The Ruling Class has eroded property rights in America.
Notwithstanding, Lindsey points out when polled, American's opt for liberty. Its just that elections are not framed in terms of liberty. The power hungry ruling class frames the debate in terms of grievance and false promises.
The author sets forth a plan to restore liberty in America: Philosophically populist and operationally libertarian.
America, he says, is a cause... not just a country.
Carry this book with you for an eloquent description of how America is being undermined by its Ruling Class and what can be done to reverse the decline.
It is apropos that my reading of this book has occurred simultaneous with Britain's own throwing off of the bureaucratic shackles of the Europe's own comparably failing, comparably unaccountable EU ruling class. Will American's do the same?
I've had numerous interactions with Larry Lindsey and respect him greatly as an economist. Larry Lindsey was one of the seven members of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Bank when I attended as a member, four times a year, for two years during the early nineties, the Thrift Advisory Board meetings at the Federal Reserve Bank in Washington.
Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered: yet we have this consolation with us, that the harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph.
Thomas Paine,
'The American Crisis,'
December 1776
Introductory quote in Lindsey's book.