American Solutions Without Sacrifice: An End to Special Interests A Return to American Middle-Class Interests
Title | American Solutions Without Sacrifice: An End to Special Interests A Return to American Middle-Class Interests |
Year for Search | 1996 |
Authors | Drum, Ronald A. |
Pagination | 448 pp |
Date Published | 1996 |
Publisher | Pitbull Press |
Place Published | Palm Beach, FL |
Keywords | Male author, US author |
Annotation | Mostly a diatribe against the then-current U. S. economic and political system with a special focus on health care. At the end of the book the author proposes a series of changes to the system that are designed to produce a much better life. The most important of these are a National Health Insurance Program, a radical downsizing of government at all levels, national and state referenda, recall, elimination of seniority in legislatures, eliminating the electoral college, a single progressive tax, greater regulation of the economy, changes in the way judges are chosen, eliminating donations to candidates for office from “special interest groups, legalizing drugs, eliminating coeducation, changes in social security. |
Holding Institutions | PSt |
Author Note | The author earned a BS and a MBA from New York University and a JD from Southwestern University School of Law in Los Angeles |
Full Text | 1996 Drum, Ronald A. American Solutions Without Sacrifice: An End to Special Interests A Return to American Middle-Class Interests. Palm Beach, FL: Pitbull Press. 448 pp. PSt Mostly a diatribe against the then-current U. S. economic and political system with a special focus on health care. At the end of the book the author proposes a series of changes to the system that are designed to produce a much better life. The most important of these are a National Health Insurance Program, a radical downsizing of government at all levels, national and state referenda, recall, elimination of seniority in legislatures, eliminating the electoral college, a single progressive tax, greater regulation of the economy, changes in the way judges are chosen, eliminating donations to candidates for office from “special interest groups, legalizing drugs, eliminating coeducation, changes in social security. The author earned a BS and a MBA from New York University and a JD from Southwestern University School of Law in Los Angeles. |