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The End Is Near and It's Going to Be Awesome

How Going Broke Will Leave America Richer, Happier, and More Secure

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
"Quite possibly the best indictment of the State since Our Enemy, the State appeared . . . a lovely, brilliant, humane, and remarkably entertaining work." —National Review
In The End Is Near and It's Going to Be Awesome, Kevin Williamson, a National Review Online contributor, makes the bold argument that the United States government is disintegrating—and that it is a good thing!
Williamson offers a radical re-envisioning of government, a powerful analysis of why it doesn't work, and an exploration of the innovative solutions to various social problems that are spontaneously emerging as a result of the failure of politics and government.
Critical and compelling, The End Is Near and It's Going to Be Awesome: How Going Broke Will Leave America Richer, Happier, and More Secure lays out a thoughtful plan for a new system, one based on success stories from around the country, from those who homeschool their children to others who have successfully created their own currency.
"Mr. Williamson is an astute observer and a talented stylist, and his book is full of vivid images and sharp phrases." —The Washington Times
"At last, a conservative treatise that isn't too bilious to taste—and that is often entertaining even as it is provocative. It's a pleasure to find so even and logical a voice in these pages, which deserve broad airing." —Kirkus Reviews
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    • Kirkus

      April 1, 2013
      At last, a conservative treatise that isn't too bilious to taste--and that is often entertaining even as it is provocative. National Review columnist Williamson, like so many on the political hard right, wants to shrink government to a size, as Grover Norquist infamously said, that it can be drowned in the bathtub. This is not because government has no purpose, but since it has become an essentially criminal enterprise: "It is a monopoly on violence," he writes at one point about the propensity of "men with guns" to arrive on the scene once an official has decided that an enterprise--a protest against corruption, say, or girls selling lemonade to raise money for cancer research--is against its interests. Government, the author writes, is self-perpetuating and self-serving, and its minions, in whom we have entrusted power, "are plainly incompetent...and...cannot be trusted." He adds, using the old libertarian argument, that the mechanism by which power is enshrined in a supposedly democratic society is suspect, even oxymoronic, inasmuch as the social contract is the only one that does not require or even request endorsement from members of society. Williamson is eminently reasonable throughout, even when he's burning down city hall. His calls for privatization of some aspects of the law and of the entitlement system sound much less shrill than those of Rush Limbaugh and his ilk, and he even allows that the rich should properly pay more tax than the poor--though perhaps to the poor directly, in the form of an invested trust, rather than to the state, since "money given to politics gets used for politics, for all of Washington's hollow talk about 'investment.' " It's a pleasure to find so even and logical a voice in these pages, which deserve broad airing.

      COPYRIGHT(2013) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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