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Throughout history, personal liberty, free markets, and peaceable,
voluntary exchanges have been roundly denounced by tyrants and
often greeted with suspicion by the general public. Unfortunately,
Americans have increasingly accepted the tyrannical ideas of
reduced private property rights and reduced rights to profits, and
have become enamored with restrictions on personal liberty and
control by government. In this latest collection of essays selected
from his syndicated newspaper columns, Walter E. Williams takes on
a range of controversial issues surrounding race, education, the
environment, the Constitution, health care, foreign policy, and
more. Skewering the self-righteous and self-important forces
throughout society, he makes the case for what he calls the "the
moral superiority of personal liberty and its main ingredient -
limited government." With his usual straightforward insights and
honesty, Williams reveals the loss of liberty in nearly every
important aspect of our lives, the massive decline in our values,
and the moral tragedy that has befallen Americans today: our belief
that it is acceptable for the government to forcibly use one
American to serve the purposes of another.
Nationally syndicated columnist Walter E. Williams is chairmain of
the economic department at George Mason University. This
thought-provoking book contains nearly one hundred of William's
most popular essays on race and sex, government, education,
environment and health, law and society, international politics,
and other controversial topics.
Walter E. Williams applies an economic analysis to the problems
black Americans have faced in the past and still face in the
present to show that that free-market resource allocation, as
opposed to political allocation, is in the best interests of
minorities. He debunks many common labor market myths and reveals
how excessive government regulation and the minimum-wage law have
imposed incalculable harm on the most disadvantaged members of our
society.
In this collection of thoughtful, hard-hitting essays, Walter E.
Williams once again takes on the left wing's most sacred cows with
provocative insights, brutal candor, and an uncompromising
reverence for personal liberty and the principles laid out in our
Declaration of Independence and Constitution. He challenges the
assumptions of contemporary liberalism with ruthless honesty,
presenting an impressive array of powerful ideas and substantive
information to frame his perspectives on the issues facing America
in such critical areas as race, sex, government, law, education,
the environment, and international relations.
This paper discusses how 'wars of ideas' can be waged, using the
author's extensive experience, both as director general of the
Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA) and at other classical liberal
think tanks. John Blundell begins his stimulating collection of
published essays, reviews and introductions by showing how the
founders of the IEA successfully fought the conventional 'planning'
wisdom of the 1960s and 1970s, providing the ideas which, by the
1980s and 1990s, had brought about increased freedom and a revival
in the use of markets. He draws lessons from those days and then
surveys the contemporary scene, showing how the anti-liberal ideas
emerging now are different from those which prevailed in the early
years of the IEA. As well as giving a valuable view of the IEA's
development in the past, these essays also offer advice on how to
continue winning in the new circumstances of the present. "Waging
the War of ldeas" has been constantly in demand since it was first
published in 2001. This new and expanded edition contains three new
chapters and is introduced by Professor Walter Williams.
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