The Right to Exceptionalism Every Man's Place in Politics |
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Author:
| Miskimen, Robert |
ISBN: | 978-1-4681-9848-5 |
Publication Date: | Mar 2012 |
Publisher: | CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform
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Book Format: | Paperback |
List Price: | USD $9.99 |
Book Description:
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America.The land of the free. The home of the brave.And a country in peril.
Our country is at a crossroads. Its cultural foundation isshifting, the demographics are changing, and the governmentalunderpinnings are beginning to abrade between the pressures ofpluralism and the fears instilled by political correctness. Wherehave we gone wrong-and more importantly, how do we returnto the fundamentals upon which this great republic stands? Onenation indivisible, with liberty and justice...
More Description
America.The land of the free. The home of the brave.And a country in peril.
Our country is at a crossroads. Its cultural foundation isshifting, the demographics are changing, and the governmentalunderpinnings are beginning to abrade between the pressures ofpluralism and the fears instilled by political correctness. Wherehave we gone wrong-and more importantly, how do we returnto the fundamentals upon which this great republic stands? Onenation indivisible, with liberty and justice for all? The answerlies in the two words that for decades were a part of this briefquotation from the beloved pledge of allegiance but once againfind themselves omitted under misguided perception of the rolesof church and state: under God.
The Founding Fathers were, to a man, Christians. And thedocuments they created and government they founded wasrooted in their religious beliefs. But somehow, over the courseof over two hundred years, the core values of that religion, andits connection to the constructs of government have been lost. Itis time to return to the words those great men first put forth inour Declaration of Independence-and the stirring words of somany that followed, including perhaps the greatest statesman inour country's history: Abraham Lincoln. The United States canno longer acquiesce to those who would see its constructs bentand beleaguered to accommodate and must rather return to theExceptionalism upon which it is founded.