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Patrick J. Buchanan : The Great Betrayal: How American Sovereignty and Social Justice Are Being Sacrificed to..
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Author: Patrick J. Buchanan
Title: The Great Betrayal: How American Sovereignty and Social Justice Are Being Sacrificed to..
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Published in: English
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 384
Date: 1998-04-01
ISBN: 0316115185
Publisher: Little, Brown
Weight: 1.35 pounds
Size: 1.13 x 6.38 x 9.5 inches
Edition: 1st
Amazon prices:
$0.01used
$19.37new
Previous givers: 2 mary (USA: CA), Hubert (USA: WI)
Previous moochers: 2 Bryan (USA: IA), Elsewhere (USA: MN)
Wishlists:
1Jonathan Moore (USA: MI).
Description: Product Description
Pat Buchanan has written a nationalist manifesto, a ringing call to arms, a declaration of war on the globalists even in his own party.... The Great Betrayal: How American Sovereignty and Social Justice Are Being Sacrificed to the Gods of the Global Economy is vintage Buchanan, full of the cut-and-thrust we've come to expect from "Pitchfork Pat," the populist Prophet of Protectionism.

As unlikely as it would appear for a book devoted to economics, Betrayal is a real page-turner, an historical thriller. Pat goes at revisionism hammer and tong, retrieving the real story of America in the Gilded Age, restoring a balanced view of the robber barons and putting to flight the myth that the Smoot-Hawley tariff brought on the Great Depression, bread lines, Hoovervilles, Hitler and World War II.

The Great Betrayal from Pat Buchanan: Get it and read it!


Amazon.com Review
Political pundit and two-time Republican presidential candidate Pat Buchanan is best known for his sharp-edged cultural conservatism. The Great Betrayal, however, is an economic manifesto that promotes what Buchanan calls "economic nationalism." Buchanan believes that free trade serves the interests of Wall Street, not Main Street. Transnational corporations rake in huge profits, but ordinary Americans see few benefits. Instead, they suffer from free trade's bad consequences: flat wages for workers, increased drug trafficking, and environmental deterioration. Markets should serve people, says Buchanan, not the other way around. "The economy is not the country; the country comes first," he writes. Buchanan offers a protectionist political agenda--one that many modern conservatives may not like, but one that Buchanan says puts him in the fine tradition of Washington, Lincoln, and Theodore Roosevelt. A forceful polemic challenging elite economic opinion. -- John J. Miller

URL: http://bookmooch.com/0316115185
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