Read Any Good Books Lately???
Submitted by jfarbe1 on Thu, 03/27/2008 - 17:52Hey all, Im about to get surgery and gonna be in bed for a couple days so I figured I would go to the library and take out some books to pass the time. I was wondering if anyone had any great books they know of that they could suggest about ron paul related subjects (the economy (austrian style), the country, free markets, or anything else youd reccomend since "the revolution - a manifesto" hasnt been released yet.
This might also be a good post just to have a general reading list for everyone.
thanks, cheers,
Jason
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A Libertarian Syllabus by
A Libertarian Syllabus
by Daniel McCarthy
A friend of mine who is involved in youth politics asked me to put together a curriculum for Ron Paul libertarians, a four-year course of study that will take students from the basics of free-market economics and the Constitution into the deeper waters where theory, history, and policy meet. Here’s the tentative curriculum I’ve come up with:
http://www.lewrockwell.com/dmccarthy/dmccarthy61.html
DIGG while there!
Trust in God, but tie your camel tight.
"Socialism needs two legs on which to stand; a right and a left. While appearing to be in complete opposition to one another,they both march in the same direction." - Paul Proctor
oh, just wanted to
oh, just wanted to add...hope you're not in bed for 4 years! Here's to a speedy recovery :-)
Trust in God, but tie your camel tight.
"Socialism needs two legs on which to stand; a right and a left. While appearing to be in complete opposition to one another,they both march in the same direction." - Paul Proctor
The 5000 Year Leap
The 5000 Year Leap: The 28 Great Ideas That Changed the World
by W. Cleon Skousen
The Law
by Frederic Bastiat
Killing Sacred Cows: Overcoming the Financial Myths Destroying Your Prosperity
by Garret B. Gunderson
Complete liberty
Complete liberty by Wes Bertrand
about
The Demise of the State
and the Rise of
Voluntary America
Good read Check it out at Completeliberty.coom
"Why Government Doesn't
"Why Government Doesn't Work" by Harry Browne. That was his 1996 Libertarian presidential campaign book. His more optimistic approach to the same message in his 2000 run was "The Great Libertarian Offer". I was fortunate to meet him in person at a campaign rally, where he autographed both of my copies.
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"It is not the abuse of power, it is the power to abuse."
- Michael Cloud, Libertarian
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"It is not the abuse of power, it is the power to abuse."
- Michael Cloud, Libertarian
Liberal Fascism by Jonah
Liberal Fascism by Jonah Goldberg
And for some non-political reading:
Planet Narnia by Michael Ward - argues convincingly that the interpretive key that Lewis used to write the Chronicles of Narnia are the planets from Medieval astrology. I just got it and it grabs you immediately.
The Reason for God by Tim Keller - My former pastor wrote a book that's at the top of several categories of the Amazon best seller list, moving around in the top fifty overall. It wasn't written to combat the new atheists, but it's nontheless offering up reasonable answers from a man who's been ministering succesfully among the secular elite of New York City for the last 20 years.
The Bible.
The Bible is great comfort reading, and takes time to read. Great stories, Psalm and Proverbs prove to me anyway, to be thought provoking.
hard to get
"Constitutional Income: Do You Have Any?" by Phil Hart, Rep. from Idaho who was in "Freedom to Fascism."
Truth exists, and it deserves to be cherished.
Animal Farm
The eternal cycle of power and corruption.
The book I recommend the most is..
The State of Fear, by Micheal Crichton. The guy who wrote Jurassic Park. No idea what it is about but I heard it was great.
Semper Fortis
http://www.jbs.org/
Semper Fortis
Great info on this thread!
I didn't see this mentioned yet ...
"The Creature From Jekyll Island"
It's about the FED and how they control our lives. This should be mandatory reading for all high school seniors!
Murray Rothbard
Anything by Murray Rothbard.
USSA Today
ussatoday.blogspot.com
Absolutely. His "What Has
Absolutely. His "What Has Government Done to Our Money?" really opened my eyes as to what money is, or at least what it ought to be. It also has a beautiful cover, with all those gold coins on it. Makes you wish money was still regularly circulated in those beautiful coins. Also liked his "The Case Against the Fed", which goes into a lot of historical detail, sometimes to a fault. I wanted to get Rothbard's "America's Great Depression", but I don't have more money to spend on books right now.
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"It is not the abuse of power, it is the power to abuse."
- Michael Cloud, Libertarian
------------------------------------------------------------
"It is not the abuse of power, it is the power to abuse."
- Michael Cloud, Libertarian
Thank you all!
I'm so grateful to be in such wise and well-read company! Thank you all for the great suggestions (some of them reminders!). A question--what would be the best way to save this thread for later reference?
New book: "Economics, the Social Order, and the Ron Paul Revolut
Actually... You can read mine :-)
I am one of the many libertarians/RP-supporters looking for ways to spread a better understanding of economics and pushing our intellectual revolution. I have recently published "Economics, the Social Order, and the Ron Paul Revolution" and I'm beginning to get the word out.
The amazon.com product details page has a long post about the book where one can learn more about it.
Here is a 10 minute video that introduces the book
Here is a 40 minute introduction to Austrian Economics that focuses on the special roles that competition, the interest rate, and savings play in society, as well as the inherent inefficiencies in government and the damage caused by government regulations.
Whenever appropriate I've tried to include key quotes from the real intellectuals like Carl Menger(while discussing the evolution of money and social institutions), Mises and Hayek(while discussing the business cycle), and Hayek(in an entire chapter devoted to the evolution of laws/morals/religion, as well as our ignorant road to serfdom/socialism).
There is a brief 10 page chapter that uses economic arguments to counter the usual envirocommie ideas that provide yet another misguided attack on liberty and prosperity.
The final chapter titled "The Ron Paul Revolution" is mostly a discussion on current issues like our foreign policy, war on terror, disastrous military spending and more. Whenever appropriate I try to pinpoint how our sort of tribal human nature and economic ignorance gets in the way of good decisions.
http://www.hayekian.org
Reading list
The Road to Serfdom, Friedrich Hayek
A Classic
'Adam Smith' The Money Game.
I've read it now 3 times and it always amuses me....
How far do you want to pull your head out of the sand?
It's a tough read, but so informative: How Satan Turned America Against God by William Grady available at amazon.com. This book enlightens the reader on the many individuals organizations, societies and groups involved in the destruction/deconstruction of America such as: Free Masonry, Skull and Bones, Illuminati, the Media, The Carlyle Group, CFR, the Royal Institute of International Affairs, and others.
Mr. Grady is kind enough to insert a chapter called Attitude Check, incase you get discouraged with all the bad news. A great read!
Then, of course, the Bible. Best read in large quantities for persepective as it was not written as a novel. God wants us to dig, search and study. (don't bother with anything other than the Authorized King James Bible)
Hope all goes well and your recovery is swift.
Wolf deVoon's "Al Gore Declares World Soap Day"
Its a short essay and a classic, funny as all get out. I dont agree with Wolf on every thing he says, but it is certainly worth a read, a laugh, a "Right on, Brother".
you can find it here.
http://www.geocities.com/dv05131970/soap_day.html
Tolstoy, Weinberg, GEB, Pirsig, Lao Zi, Thoreau, the Bible.
"Writings on Civil disobedience and non-violence." by Tolstoy. It is absolutely awesome and prophetic/universally applicable today as it was 100 years ago.
Its also important to learn how to think not just garner info.
"Introduction to General Systems Thinking" by Gerald M Weinberg. Probably one of the most influential books I ever read.
"Zen and the Art of MotorCycle Maintenance" by Robert Pirsig. and the sequel which is called "LiLa".
"Godel, Escher, Bach" by Hofstadler.
"Dao De Jing [Tao Te Ching]" (Lao Zi [Lao Tzu]) many translations available. Jane English/Jia Fu Feng is very readable and pleasant, but some others are more scholarly/accurate, some translations might be awful. if you want accurate read it in Chinese yourself (ha! some characters are in there even most Chinese dont know) ...The highest good is like water- it nourishes everything without striving - it flows in places that (the masses of) men reject - and so it is like the Dao... ... When men hear about the Dao, they laugh. If they did not laugh, it would not be the Dao. (Paulistas, does any of this sound familiar at all?)
Civil Disobedience (Thoreau)
The Amplified Bible (particularly the gospels and the new testament letters). It is very readable and generally accurate, much more so than some other "modern" translations. The King James version is good for the more serious study. If you are really serious, get a Greek Interlinear New Testament and a Greek Lexicon, more serious yet get a Greek Septuagint and a Hebrew OT.
"The New Wine is Better" by Robert Thom.
Frank Lloyd Wright's Autobiography. Inspiring.
Pat Buchanan's new book
I'm about 60% through Day of Reckoning. In style and length it's an easy read, covering immigration, Iraq & other foreign policy, what's after Pax Americana (my current chapter), and much more. But it's not an easy read in content, given how screwed up the US has become.
Much of it sounds like Dr Paul, consistent with Pat's magazine endorsing our guy. One line about 911 was something like "They came here because we're over there."
http://www.amconmag.com/2008/2008_02_11/feature.html
Free Lunch
Free Lunch is a great book; it just hit the shelves.
Carl Sagan.
Billions and Billions, Thoughts on Life and Death at the Brink of the Millennium.
It will change your outlook forever beyond what you can possibly imagine.
We can all say what needs to be done, but who here lead by example today?
Find out if you have a local militia - http://www.uaff.us/
Real Patriots for 9/11 truth -- http://patriotsquestion911.com/
bump
creature from jeckle island 600 pages G Edward Griffin
a nation of sheep Judge Napolitano
Weather Wars
Deb
Deb
Great Books to Read; If you can find them
He lists over 50 books + great comments!
Check it out...great thread....
Great Books to Read; If you can find them
Posted February 1st, 2008 by Treg
http://www.dailypaul.com/node/32282
Suggestion: You should post this useful thread
in the Books Section of the Forums
Hunter S. Thompson's Kingdom
Hunter S. Thompson's Kingdom of Fear. He is highly critical of the Bush administration and very freedom minded.
Please support local music.
www.myspace.com/realityisperceptionmusic
HST would've supported Ron
HST would've supported Ron Paul, I'd bet money on it.
He was against status quo and he was definitely for freedom.
He might have sided with the Dems when he was younger but he discovered real fast that they were crooked, too.
I just got done reading, Songs of the Doomed : More Notes on the Death of the American Dream, and I honestly got the feeling that he would have been apart of this movement if he was still living....
Geez
how long you gonna be laid-up?
I can't even keep up with these post's ( slow reader )
The DP is proof that the grassroots support for Ron Paul and his peaceful message of individual liberty is large, real, and not going away!
haha, only like 3 days, dont
haha, only like 3 days, dont think ill be able to get through all of these in that span. Its not even a big deal surgery, i had no idea this post was gonna blow up like this (but glad it did).