ABSTRACT

This conclusion presents some closing thoughts of the concepts discussed in the preceding chapters of this book. The book discusses: in all cases, consistent protection of individual rights and establishment of a free market constitute the solution to America's current dilemmas. Related: because the moral is the practical—and the immoral is the impractical—the unbreached protection of individual rights leads to extensive real-life benefits. Similarly, the abrogation of individual rights—to the extent such rights are violated—leads to predictable, at times cataclysmic harm. The nation's choice is, therefore, stark: individual rights and immense intellectual/material prosperity—or abrogation of individual rights and severely diminished intellectual/material prosperity; greater freedom and flourishing life—or less freedom and the diminishment of flourishing life. The choice, in other words, is: the moral and the practical—or the immoral and the impractical. Explained in such terms, the right choice, for any rational individual, is not difficult to discern.