For Readers New to the Issue of Political Polarization

America’s Final Revolution

Natural rights conservatives know that something has gone terribly wrong in America. What started out as a nation full of potential and opportunity for individuals to achieve economic prosperity has turned into a nightmare of a centralized Marxist tyranny.

Our book offers a historical analysis of when, and how, Jefferson’s version of the American Dream went so wrong.

We argue that the differences between conservatives and Marxist Democrats are irreconcilable because the two visions of the American Dream are incompatible. No cultural or ideological values bind the two sides into a shared common understanding on the mission of the nation.

Rather than continuing to fight with the Democrat Marxists over a hopelessly dysfunctional government and a permanently divided society, we believe that a better idea, for conservatives, is to start over at the point in history of Jefferson’s document of 1776.

Our book is intended to begin the debate on how best to reconstruct Jefferson’s Dream of an Entrepreneurial Capitalist Society.

Read our 4-star review on Reedsy, the British book review website.

View our promotional video on our book.


George Mason’s America

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George Mason’s America: The State Sovereignty Alte ….
Vass, Laurie Thomas

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Both Morris and Pinckney were correct in their opinion, at the 1787 Constitutional Convention, that the two alien cultures should never have been rammed together under a centralized, all-powerful government.

Likewise, today two alien cultures do not co-exist in peace, and do not share  common cultural or philosophical principles on the mission of the national government.

We argue that the ideological differences are irreconcilable, and cannot be remedied by amendments or modifications to Madison’s document.

We agree with Delegate Morris that the time has come for the conservative red states to take friendly leave of the Democrat Marxist blue states.

Preview the book here


Reclaiming the American Democratic Impulse

Citizens have many unanswered questions about what is wrong, and not very clear ideas on how to fix the problems.

Citizens want to know:

  • Why and how did 5 million people enter our country illegally?
  • How did prized natural gas that had granted America’s wishes of energy self-sufficiency, reduced pollution, and inexpensive electricity become almost overnight a pariah fuel whose extraction was a war against nature?
  • Which lawmakers, which laws, which votes of the people declared natural gas development and pipelines near criminal?
  • Since when did Americans create a government Ministry of Truth? When did we assume the FBI had the right to subvert the campaign of a candidate it disliked?
  • When did the nation abruptly decide that theft is not a crime, assault not a felony?

The root of the problems is that the centralized power of the Federal government became unthethered from the democratic consent of the governed.

The agencies of government, and the agents of government, have become an independent power on their own, and citizens have no political mechanism to regain democratic authority over the government.

We explain the history of how the centralized power of government originated in Madison’s flawed constitution.

Our solution for the problems is more democracy, not less. In other words we offer the strategy of Reclaiming the American Democratic Impulse.


The phrase “Equal Rights For All. Special Privileges For None,” originated in the late 1820s and captured the essence of political reforms desired by the supporters of Andrew Jackson.

In the late 1880s, an organization of American citizens, primarily farmers from the South and Southwest, recognized that the existing system of agricultural debt peonage was unfair. Like Andrew Jackson’s followers, the farmers initially focused on a series of political reforms, called the Ocala Platform, which were intended to correct the abuses they saw in both the political and economic systems.

The intent of the reforms were directed at curbing the concentration of political power exercised by financial and industrial corporations by providing for stronger Federal government regulations of market behavior.

One of the leaders of the southern agrarian movement, Tom Watson, of Georgia, revived the phrase “Equal Rights For All. Special Privileges For None,” and placed it in the masthead of his newspaper.

The purpose of this book is to start over in American history, at the point of the anti-federalist arguments, and re-examine the Populist’s legacy of fair political participation, and to explore the question of the relationship between the pursuit of individual self interest, free market economics, and the constitutional public purpose.

The book’s main argument is that the adoption of the anti-federalist/agrarian arguments against centralized government would have been a better pathway to preserve individual freedom than Madison’s constitutional rules of procedure.

 

 

Author: Laurie Vass