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AEI Press
(Washington)
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| Publication Date: March 1984 |
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| Paperback |
| ISBN: 068558979X |
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In this new book of essays, Walter Berns give shape to the arena of American government and politics. He contends that "free government is an endangered species in our world," wrought with political passion that at times threaten to overpower our constitutional rules and forms, rendering us unable, or unwilling, to defend liberal democracy in our time.
The author builds his defense with a careful interpretation of liberal democracy's most basic doctrine, that of the Bill of Rights and the Constitution. His startling accounts take us to the theater of semantics in the United Nations to which, he suggests, those who do not believe free democracy is in danger might be sentenced; and to the domestic front, where single-interest groups often fail to distinguish the differences between "wants, rights, and laws of nature," making representational government increasingly difficult.
Walter Berns is a resident scholar at AEI.

Table of Contents

The Constitution
Foreign Politics
Domestic Politics
Racial Politics
Religion and Politics