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Books > History > History of specific subjects
In this iconoclastic assessment of America's War of Independence,
political scientist Leland G. Stauber presents a fundamental
reinterpretation of the birth and the subsequent development of the
United States. He challenges head-on the prevailing American
national saga, arguing that our independence from Britain was
premature and that the experience of Canada has in many ways been
preferable. Avoiding polemic, Stauber in a calmly analytic tone
lays out both the positive and negative consequences of the
American Revolution.
While recognizing the seminal historic importance of the
Declaration of Independence, the American rejection of titled
nobility and monarchy, and universal white, male suffrage, as well
as the advantages of early economic independence, Stauber points
out four major disadvantages resulting from the American
Revolution:
- The most obvious of these is the dilemma of slavery, which was
left unaddressed by our war with Britain and set the stage for the
American Civil War. Slavery had already been outlawed in several
major parts of the British Empire in 1833.
- Stauber also contends that a "legislative union" along the lines
of the British North America Act of 1867, which created the
Dominion of Canada, is a superior method of national unification to
the purely voluntary federation of the United States.
- The American system of government, based on checks and balances,
is often cumbersome in dealing with contemporary challenges, which
are often not so difficult for parliamentary governments.
- The underlying American mind-set regarding the role of government
contains a deep-seated suspicion of a strong central government,
which dates back to our war against British tyranny. Stauber argues
that this reluctance to use the central government to tackle major
social problems cripples the United States from building a more
decent society.
This challenging historical and political analysis of
long-established American presumptions about our history and
government will be of interest to students and scholars of
political science and American history, as well as all open-minded
citizens.
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