Freedom in Chains Freedom in Chains

Freedom in Chains

The Rise of the State and the Demise of the Citizen

    • 11,99 €
    • 11,99 €

Publisher Description

Governments and bureaucracies are bigger and more controlling than ever. A citizen's own ability to control his or her own life has never been less than it has today. How did we get to this point? Jim Bovard, bestselling author of Lost Rights, looks at the development of the State into a behemoth that threatens to destroy the individual at the cost of preserving the idea of "statism"--the belief that government is inherently superior to the citizenry, that progress consists of extending the realm of governmental compulsion, and that vesting more arbitrary power in government officials will eventually make citizens happy. Reading through the history of the state and its war on the citizen, Bovard looks at thinkers as diverse as John Locke, Etienne de la Boetie, James Madison, and Bernard Bosanquet among others. He explores the original version of the idea of the state, the development of the welfare state, the progress of the state's judicial system from the original province of the courts into the lives of men and women and the ultimate fraud that is perpetrated as the state's benevolence. Controversial and essential reading in these times of the Leviathan state, Freedom in Chains is must reading for everyone who took Jim Bovard's Lost Rights to heart as well as anyone trying to understand how far we've come from our eighteenth century roots as a community of impassioned patriots to our sorry positions as wards of the state at the end of the 20th century.

GENRE
Politics & Current Affairs
RELEASED
2015
25 August
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
466
Pages
PUBLISHER
St. Martin's Publishing Group
SIZE
2
MB

More Books by James Bovard

The Fair Trade Fraud The Fair Trade Fraud
2016
Lost Rights Lost Rights
2016
Feeling Your Pain Feeling Your Pain
2015
The Bush Betrayal The Bush Betrayal
2015
Terrorism and Tyranny Terrorism and Tyranny
2015
Attention Deficit Democracy Attention Deficit Democracy
2015