A Simple Government: Twelve Things We Really Need From Washington (and a Trillion That We Don’t!) Audiobook
A Simple Government: Twelve Things We Really Need From Washington (and a Trillion That We Don’t!) Audiobook
- Mike Huckabee
- Penguin Audio
- 2011-02-22
- 6 h 33 min
Summary:
‘We need a straightforward government. Don’t get me wrong; I know that lots of of the nation’s problems are highly complicated. But I also understand that the regulating principles that can solve them, if we work together, are basic.’
Armed with small money but a lot of common sense, previous Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee amazed the nation by to arrive second during the 2008 Republican presidential primaries. He connected with millions of voters by contacting for a smaller sized, simpler government that would get about A Simple Authorities: Twelve Things We ACTUALLY NEED From Washington (and a Trillion That We Don’t!) out of the way when appropriate. (Unfortunately, there weren’t quite enough of these voters to prevent the election of Barack Obama.)
Since then, President Obama’s message offers morphed from ‘hope and modification’ to ‘taxes and spend’ and ‘borrow and spend’ and ‘over-regulate and spend.’ The stimulus failed to stop the tough economy, the deficit exploded to unimaginable levels, and the Democrats jammed through Congress a economic ‘reform’ expenses that didn’t actually reform anything and a health care monstrosity that gave the federal government more power over our personal lives than ever before.
Meanwhile, Huckabee has stayed the tone of voice of good sense conservatism, through his tv talk display, his radio commentaries, and his lectures around the united states. Now he’s created a book that sums in the twelve points we actually need from Washington to get the country back on the right course.
These twelve important truths will have you nodding in contract, whether you’re a Republican, an unbiased, as well as an open-minded Democrat. They are able to help us put aside our differences, shade down the partisan rancor, and go back to the simple principles of the Founding Fathers: liberty, justice, personal freedom, and civic virtue. Plus they might help us deal with actually the most seemingly complicated of today’s problems. For instance:
* You can’t spend what you don’t possess; you can’t borrow what you can’t pay back. Families, businesses, towns, cities, and states all have to balance their costs or encounter dire implications. Why shouldn’t the government be held to the same regular? And if that means producing some hard options now, it’s a much better substitute than saddling our children and grandkids. * The further you drift from shoreline, the much more likely you are to be lost at sea. The Founders anticipated the federal government to be subordinate to convey and local governments. How do politicians in DC understand the best way to help farmers in Iowa, autoworkers in Michigan, or instructors in California? They can not. So every problem should be solved at most regional level capable of solving it.
* Bullies in the playground only understand a very important factor. There’s a period and place for diplomacy, but we can not protect the united states just by negotiating with our enemies. We are in need of a strong nationwide defense and a counterterrorism plan that focuses on effectiveness, not political correctness.
* The main form of government is the family. Over time, the only path to ensure wealth, safety, and equal opportunity is to make sure we raise our children to become ethical and productive people. No bureaucracy can change parents for the reason that important role, so we have to do everything feasible to help parents do their job.
A Simple Federal government will inspire any American getting excited about a better future.