ABSTRACT

The Politics of Envy is a fit and proper sequel to the author's previous book, The Politics of Plunder. But beyond the previous collection, Doug Bandow herein offers a theoretical rationale for the current malaise in central government in the United States. He sees the core problem as the immense increase in government spending combined with regulatory machinery that extends to every area of life - from the uses of private property, occupational choices, to issues of employment, trade, and taxation.Bandow sees these centrifugal forces as gaining ground over personal virtue and freedom without much regard to party labels. Indeed, he is at pains to point out that spending and regulation rose particularly dramatically during the previous Bush Administration; and shows few signs of abetting during the current Clinton Administration. But the work emphasizes not simply federal government initiatives to curb freedom of choice, but how this extends to sociological and ideological trends in which extremists pit the values of liberty and virtue against each other. While the book covers familiar ground; issues of abortion, environment, collective security and national defense, international debt, health and welfare, it does so with a unified theory of a morally centered approach to political questions of the times. Written with his customary verve, the book beckons to become a benchmark of libertarian thought - one that will appeal to people for whom questions of political morality remain unsettled as well as unsettling.

part I|36 pages

The Transcendent Questions

part II|14 pages

Abortion The Irreconcilable Conflict

chapter 5|4 pages

The Real Meaning of Choice

chapter 6|4 pages

From Pro-Choice to Pro-Coercion

chapter 7|4 pages

The Escalating Abortion Wars

part III|38 pages

Earth Keeping or Earth Worship?

part IV|40 pages

Republic or Empire: The New Wilsonism

chapter 10|16 pages

Keep the Troops and the Money at Home

chapter 11|22 pages

The Pitfalls of Collective Security

part V|46 pages

International Debt or Development?

chapter 12|18 pages

The Misdeeds of International Aid

part VI|120 pages

The Regulatory State

chapter 14|18 pages

America’s Regulatory Dirty Dozen

chapter 15|20 pages

Whither Health Care in the Age of Clinton?

chapter 17|14 pages

National Service: Utopias Revisited

chapter 19|50 pages

War on Drugs or America?

part VII|40 pages

Redistribution without End

chapter 20|4 pages

Still Paying for Government

chapter 21|4 pages

The Decade of Envy

chapter 22|4 pages

Not Theirs to Give

chapter 23|6 pages

Tax Fairness, Clinton-Style

chapter 25|6 pages

A Coast-to-Coast Federal Dole

chapter 26|4 pages

The Time of the Political Locusts

chapter 27|4 pages

The NEA: They Still Don’t Get It