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The Dixie Daily News Bookstore

Downsizing the U.S.A
by Thomas H. Naylor He is a professor emeritus of economics at Duke
University; Willimon, a professor of Christian ministry at the same
school. Although at first this may seem an unlikely pairing, Naylor
and Willimon have successfully collaborated on several books. The
Search for Meaning (1994) was based on an undergraduate seminar
they, along with Magdalena Naylor, taught at Duke. Here the two move
beyond campus to continue their search for purpose and significance.
Practically everywhere they turn, they see Americans paying a high
price for the bigness and complexity of modern society, and they
warn that imposed unity and universality are false solutions. They
invoke the image of the U.S. as a modern-day Babel and hold out
rural areas as the only possibility of hope, "because in the
countryside farms, villages, towns, schools, churches, and
governments are still small enough to fix." Naylor and Willimon
appropriate the term downsizing for their own use; it becomes
a tool for clearing away the physical and spiritual clutter in our
lives to help us discover that less really can be more. David
Rouse From
Booklist

The Constitution in Exile
- by Andrew P. Napolitano. The Constitution permits Congress to regulate interstate commerce
which, as Fox News analyst Judge Napolitano proves, has opened the
floodgates of federal abuse, as the government trounces on state and
individual rights, expanding its reach far beyond what the Framers
intended. With no-nonsense clarity, Napolitano shows that Congress
has "purchased" regulations by bribing states-giving huge amounts of
taxpayer dollars on condition that states enact regulations of human
behavior that Congress prefers but cannot legislate.

Democracy in America
by Alexis de Tocqueville. In the mid-1800s, a French political
scientist named Alexis de Tocqueville came to the United States to
appraise the meaning and functioning of democracy. This
extraordinary book, written as a result of his visit, contains his
comments and criticisms-many of which are still vital in today's
world-and is a must-read for anyone interested in American politics.
The Articles of Confederation
by Merrill Jensen. I don't suppose one in ten Americans realize
there was a first constitution of the United States before there was
"the" Constitution of the United States. Merrill Jensen is the
definitive historian of that period - up to 1789 when the present
Constitution took effect - and this book is one of several of his
covering the topic. Reading of this period would do much to remind
Americans that the debate over the nature of American government has
been going on since 1776. The debate concerns "weak" central
government (the Articles of Confederation) vs. "strong" central
government (the Constitution). The Federalists (favoring the
Constitution) won politically, but their victory did not settle the
argument. Any American presidential or congressional election
campaign brings out the same themes sounded 200 years ago as the
Constitution faced ratification. In any event, Jensen does much to
rehabilitate the history of the Confederation, clarify the agruments,
and takes care to note the remarkable accomplishments of the
Confederation congress. His writing style is very accessible and the
book is a quick read. The reviewer on Amazon.com is
Russell E Saltzman "saltzman"
Collective Action Under the Articles
- Keith L. Dougherty. "Dougherty provides ample food for
thought in this volume, and gives readers an interesting analysis of
the first dozen years of U.S. politics...thought-provoking and
insightful...For anyone interested in a solid analysis of government
under the Articles, this book is very worthwhile." Public Choice

A Constitutional History of Secession
by John Remington Graham.
My friend Jack does a great job explaining the historical context of
basis for the right of secession, going in depth into the history of
England, where we inherited most of our law. More Americans need to
learn the truth about the right of secession that our founders
reserved to the states.
On Remaking the World Cut Nations Down
To Size
by Harry Schultz. Although
this book was first written a few years ago, Harry was the first to
call for peaceful democratic secession of large nation-states into
smaller more governable entities where citizens could better defend
their liberties and freedoms from out-of-control government
tyrannies. This book is a must-read for all lovers of liberty and
you can subscribe to The International Harry Schultz Letter based in
Monaco by going to our links page.

When in the Course of Human Events
by Charles Adams. Using primary documents from both foreign and
domestic observers, prominent scholar Charles Adams makes a powerful
and convincing case that the Southern states were legitimately
exercising their political rights as expressed in the Declaration of
Independence when they seceded from the United States. Although
conventional histories have taught generations of Americans that
this was a war fought for lofty moral principles, Adams eloquent
history transcends simple Southern partisanship to show how the
American Civil War was primarily a battle over competing commercial
interests, opposing interpretations of constitutional rights, and
what English novelist Charles Dickens described as a fiscal quarrel.

From Union to Empire
by Clyde Wilson. Dr.
Clyde Wilson is a Christian, a Southerner, an American, an
historian, and a conservative. For over three decades he has worked
on the 28-volume definitive edition of
The Papers of John C. Calhoun, has written on Calhoun and
published
a collection of Calhoun’s most important writings. He has also
seen to it that at least a corporal’s guard of younger historians,
whose work he has supervised at the University of South Carolina,
will not fit the standard pattern stamped out nearly everywhere
else. I suppose these are the bare essentials. He is also, as his
essays demonstrate, a teacher and writer of great merit. His
writings – published in Modern Age, Chronicles, Telos, LewRockwell.com, and many other forums – show Professor
Wilson off as the kind of conservative who is a stalwart defender of
federalism and republicanism, and the liberties associated with
them. Such conservatives are few and far between these days. Click
here to read
Joseph Stromberg's book review on LewRockwell.com
The Confederate Constitution of 1861
by Marshall L. Derosa.
This book is perhaps the best I have read
on the Confederate Constitution. The book explains the basis for the
state's rights and tariff issues and how they effected the writing
of the CS Constitution. A large portion of the book talks about John
C. Calhoun and his stance on the issues. Also read to learn the
improvements in the CS Constitution over the US counterpart. I would
recomend this too all Americans, not just Southerners. If you were
ever unsure as to what "state's rights" was, this is the book for
you. Read! and learn the real reason the South seceeded.
The Rise and Fall of the Confederate
Government by
Jefferson Davis. His book should be required
reading for all Americans and others interested in confederations,
the right of secession and create new government jurisdictions. He
was the leader of a new nation and this is the story of the second
attempt at true confederation government in America, an attempt that
lost where two republics were destroyed and replaced by the seeds of
empire now taking hold in the United States today. Davis shows
himself to be a constitutional scholar with his in-depth analysis of
the 10th Amendment and the inherent right of the states to secede
from the union into which they voluntarily entered.
The Hunt for Confederate Gold
by Thomas Moore. A mystery, a thriller, and a love story all in one,
The Hunt for Confederate Gold is based on one of America’s most
intriguing unanswered questions: what happened to the Confederacy’s
gold in 1865? And what might be the consequences if it were
recovered today and returned to its rightful owners? And just who
are the rightful owners, the U.S. Government, claiming it as
contraband of a hundred-and-forty-year-old rebellion; or the
Southern people? The Hunt for Confederate Gold is an exciting
journey into an unsolved mystery of the past and into the crises of
the present. A book of national significance, it strips the veil of
falsehood from officialdom and illuminates the threats to our
liberty and prosperity from those charged with safeguarding them –
our own government. The Hunt for Confederate Gold is written not
just about the South, but for the South; not just by a Southerner,
but for Southerners. Powerfully and beautifully written, it captures
the haunting beauty of the Southland and the ache in Southern hearts
to preserve a proud heritage.
The Making of America
by W. Cleon Skousen. This book is extremely interesting because it
commenced with the development of the constitution, the inspiration
of the founder's. Their total alligence and dedication to a document
so vitally important to the building of a nation deemed for the
freedom of all. Totally interesting and informative to scholars and
lay people alike.

How Capitalism Saved America by Thomas Dilorenzo. Tom has
written a great defense of free-enterprise and capitalism in America
as he debunks many historical myths from a libertarian and freedom
oriented perspective. This books follows his controversial book on
Lincoln which leads the way in showing the economic factors behind
the War Between the States that have been hidden from view by
Lincoln apologists.

How I Found Freedom in an Unfree World
by Harry Browne. Harry wrote
this classic book on freedom way back in 1973 and I still rate it as
my personal favorite on personal freedom. He lived in Switzerland
and published a very successful book on Swiss banks and banking that
help set the stage for my interest in Switzerland, the Swiss Franc
and the Swiss model of limited government through confederation and
citizen direct democracy.

Speaking of Liberty by Llewellyn H. Rockwell. Ludwig von Mises
said that teaching the public was just as important as addressing
scholars — maybe more so. That is what Lew Rockwell specializes in:
history and theory and analysis in defense of the free society,
written in clear prose to reach a broad audience. Rockwell's new
book is as pro-liberty as it is brutally critical of government. It
is relentlessly forthright yet hopeful about the prospects for
liberty. It is rigorous enough to withstand the enemy's closest
scrutiny, and chock full of the energy and enthusiasm that will keep
you reading.
Speaking of Liberty
is a collection of speeches delivered by Rockwell over a period of
ten years. The book begins with economics, and explains why Austrian
economics matters, how the Federal Reserve brings on the business
cycle, why we need private property and free enterprise, the
unrecognized glories of the capitalist economy, and why the gold
standard is still the best monetary system. Other sections deal with
war, Mises and his work, other important thinkers in the libertarian
tradition, and the culture and morality of liberty.
The book is united by a
set of fixed principles: the corruption of politics, the
universality and immutability of the ideas of freedom, the
centrality of sound money and free enterprise, the moral imperative
of peace and trade, the importance of hope and tenacity in the
struggle for liberty, and the need for everyone to join the
intellectual fight. We all have searched for the book we could give
to friends and neighbors, business associates and family members, to
explain why we believe in the cause of liberty. Speaking of
Liberty is that book.

The Politically Incorrect Guide to America
by Thomas E. Woods Jr. Tom
offers this guide as an alternative to "the stale and
predictable platitudes of mainstream texts." Covering the colonial
era through the Clinton administration, he seeks to debunk some
persistent myths about American history.
This is a quick read but with sources for readers interested in more
what I believe to be the true history of America. Remember, the
victors always write the history and this is why the American
Articles of Confederation our first government is so short-changed
in history texts.

Reclaiming Liberty by James Ronald Kennedy. Ron writes that we
can no longer afford to depend upon incumbent politicians, party
hacks, and business-as-usual conservative leaders to defend our
personal freedoms. The past one hundred years have been disastrous
for constitutional rights in America. Direct and indirect taxation
now consume more than 60 percent of our income--we are no longer the
land of the free but have become a land of tax serfs. Government
interference in our social life has grown from almost nothing in
1900 to almost overwhelming today. Over the past century America’s
politicians transformed the U.S.A. from the land of individual
liberty and personal accountability to a land of socialist
feudalism.
Taking
America Back by Joseph Farah. According to Joseph Farah,
Americans are faced with an unresponsive and unaccountable one-party
political system, an establishment propaganda machine posing as a
free press, and cultural institutions—educational, charitable,
entertainment, religious, medical, and others—seduced by the
materialist gods of an all-powerful secular state. Even more
important, the crisis this represents cannot be resolved through the
political system by electing new politicians to office. A much more
profound, long-term, and fundamental shift if needed, one that
rejects the validity of the all-powerful, all-knowing,
all-controlling state and affirms the values upon which the American
nation was founded.
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