Washington Times Reviews Ron Paul’s Manifesto Magnificently

July 2nd, 2008 1:14 am  |  by Marc Gallagher  |  Published in Activism, Constitution, Election, Federal Reserve, Foreign Policy, Liberty, Media, Philosophy, Politics, Ron Paul  |  1 Comment

Thanks to George Dewey who sent along this review of Ron Paul’s book, “The Revolution: A Manifesto” from Mark Grattis in the Washington Times.

Most presidential campaign books come at the beginning of the campaign season. This gives even a bad campaign book undeserved relevance. But the increased relevance is generally offset by discernable reductions in candor and specificity, so as not to provide one’s opponent with too many inviting targets.

Ron Paul’s “The Revolution: A Manifesto” defies this convention. Writing at the end of his campaign, and therefore knowing he will not be the next president, Mr. Paul forcefully articulates our bedrock constitutional principles and energetically advances his argument that these principles can restore American greatness for years to come ,if we will only return to them now.

And although Mr. Paul’s presidential campaign is over, this is indeed a manifesto, not a memoir. These are political principles for our future, things Mr. Paul wants us to remember after he has left the rostrum.

Mr. Paul’s central thesis is that we have departed from the principles of our nation’s Founding in ways that systematically make us less free. Consequently, we now have a much larger, more powerful national government, one our Founders would not recognize - or might recognize as an empire doomed to the fate of all previous empires.

Such a thesis could easily become unbearably dark and tedious. But Mr. Paul, a medical doctor, makes his diagnosis in seven concise and lucid chapters that never lose the thread of hope for recovery.

Read the full article here.

Responses

  1. mike montagne says:

    July 2nd, 2008 at 1:39 pm (#)

    Mr. Paul’s greatest weakness is his alliance with the Austrian School, which not only has no solution for the terminal faults of our monetary system, but which sustains interest and unearned profit, which are the very things which make solution of inflation/deflation, or the “sound money” Mr. Paul appeals for itself… impossible:

    http://perfecteconomy.com/wp/2008/06/30/response-to-liberty-maven-article-charlie-wilsons-war-and-ron-paul-economics/

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