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  • Autographed Nο Thеу Cаn’t: Whу Government Fails-Bυt Individuals Succeed

Hardcover First Edition Copy οf Nο, Thеу Cant – John Stossel’s Personal Signature Inside Book – Certificate οf Authenticity – In isolation Numbered Thіѕ First Hardcover Edition οf Thе Time οf Oυr Lives hаѕ bееn personally Autographed & Numbered bу John Stossel. Nеw York Times bestselling journalist John Stossel shows hοw thе extension οf government hegemony іѕ destructive fοr American society.Emmy Award-winning journalist John Stossel іѕ a self-proclaimed skeptic, attacking society’s sacred cows.

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2 Responses

  1. Christine Krukowski "Kris" says:
    53 of 59 public found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Kudos!, April 13, 2012
    By 
    Christine Krukowski “Kris” (Clinton, IA United States) –
    (REAL NAME)
      

    Amazon Verified Buy(http://www.amazon.com/gp/community-help/amazon-verified-purchase/176-1591776-0167562', ‘AmazonHelp’, ‘width=400,height=500,resizable=1,scrollbars=1,toolbar=0,status=1′);return false; “>What’s this?)
    This review is from: No, They Can’t: Why Government Fails-But Individuals Succeed (Hardcover)

    John Stossel has a gift for presenting issues in a clear, forthright manner that is top rate. He uses logic, and thinks things through, and he clarifies his opinion in ways that fascinate to the head as well as the heart. I can’t say that I agree with him on every issue, but it’s fundamentally refreshing to read a book of political stances that uses gifted thinking. The only negative criticism that I can make is that in several chapters he reiterates examples from his previous book that I read (and loved), ‘Myths, Lies, and Downright Stupidity’ rather than offering new ones. I would give this new book a 4.5 on that basis, but since that’s not possible, I’m rounding it up to a 5. On its own, it certainly rates such.

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  2. Ira E. Stoll says:
    81 of 95 public found the following review helpful
    4.0 out of 5 stars
    Brilliant Except for the Defense Chapter, April 10, 2012
    By 
    Ira E. Stoll
    (VINE VOICE)
      
    (REAL NAME)
      

    This review is from: No, They Can’t: Why Government Fails-But Individuals Succeed (Hardcover)

    Mr. Stossel’s book turns out to be reasonably well done; I learned from it even though I’ve read lots of other pro-capitalist and pro-free market books. Two of the best pieces of content are charts. One shows the decline in workplace fatalities per 100,000 workers between 1933 and 2005. The chart shows that “before regulation, deaths dropped just as quick.” Or, as Mr. Stossel puts it, the establishment of the Occupational Safety and Shape Administration “made no difference” in workplace fatalities.

    The second chart, from the Cato Institute, shows the “inflation-adjusted cost of a complete K-12 education, and percent change in achievement of 17-year-olds, since 1970.” Costs have gone way up, even as reading and math scores, as measured by the National Assessment of Educational Progress, have been essentially flat.

    Another eye-opener in the book’s chapter on education is about how what Mr. Stossel calls government schools “are now more ethnically segregated than private schools.” He writes, “University of Arkansas education professor Jay Greene examined a national sample of teach classrooms and found that public schools were significantly more likely to be nearly entirely white or entirely minority. In another examine, he looked at who sat with whom in teach lunchrooms. At private schools, students of uncommon races were more likely to sit collectively.”

    I also appreciated the dose of skepticism from Mr. Stossel about his colleagues in the television news industry: “Emmys are silly awards that the liberal media give to public who confirm their anticapitalist attitudes. I won nineteen Emmys before I went to Fox. I don’t win them anymore.”

    Mr. Stossel is a libertarian, not a conservative, so here’s a chapter on why drugs must be legal and a chapter on why America’s defense budget must be downsized. The drug legalization chapter is, at least, mostly well argued.

    The chapter on defense is a disappointment, especially in contrast to the high feature of the rest of the book. “The 9/11 attacks were largely a failure of government,” Mr. Stossel writes. “Part of the failure was America’s interventionist unknown policy, which needlessly made enemies.” He clarifies: “I do not argue here that our military actions abroad are the reason we were attacked on 9/11. We were attacked by religious fanatics. But our military presence in so many countries wins the fanatics support.”

    America’s unknown policy may make some enemies, but it also makes some friends, a fact that Mr. Stossel fails to acknowledge, so far as I can tell. And “religious fanatics” is a weirdly imprecise phrase to use to clarify the terrorists, who weren’t, after all, fanatically religious Christians or Jews, but rather adherents of militant Islamism. These radical Islamists also have attacked in Bali, Indonesia, and in Madrid, Spain. Neither Indonesia or Spain have America’s level of overseas bases. And the militant Islamists attacked a Jewish community center in Argentina and a Jewish teach in France. How is America’s interventionist unknown policy to blame for that?

    Mr. Stossel declares “no one in authority has proposed ‘fantastic defense cuts.’ What Romney calls ‘fantastic cuts’ are reductions in plotted spending increases.” That’s inaccurate. President Obama’s defense secretary, Leon Panetta, a veteran of the Clinton administration, describes the cuts as “devastating” and writes that the result would be “the smallest impose a curfew force since 1940, the smallest number of ships since 1915, and the smallest Air Force in its description.” President Obama’s own budget, available for download from the White House Web site, projects not spending increases for defense but cuts — to $572 billion in 2015 from $716 billion in 2012. That is a $144 billion cut, or about 20%, in numbers that do not take into account the erosion of inflation.

    At one point in the book, Mr. Stossel writes, “I don’t presume to know the ‘aptly’ amount to spend on defense.” Later in the book, he sheds his lack of presumption and writes, “I propose cutting defense spending to $243 billion.”

    Another part of Mr. Stossel’s argument for defense cuts is that “our current spending, adjusted for inflation, is greater than it was during the Cold War.” Even as this is right in some technical sense, the American economy and the rest of the government have grown even more speedily than the defense budget has, so using this argument to target single out defense spending for reduction is problematic. A visit back to the historical tables of President Obama’s own budget, available for download from the White House Web site, confirms that in 1960, national defense spending was 52.2% of federal outlays and 9.4% of GDP; in 2012 it is 18.9% of federal outlays and 4.6% of GDP. By those two measures, we’re spending less than half as much on defense now as we were during the Cold War.

    Mr. Stossel belittles the threat of Iran…

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