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Elementary Catechism on the Constitution of the United States
By Arthur J. Stansbury, 1828. Revised Edition by William H. Huff, 1993. Want to know the Constitution? Then get this book! By 1839 this book was the standard textbook for learning the Constitution in American classrooms. Written as a "catechism" in question and answer format, this new larger edition is complete with notes and excerpts from Madison's Notes on the Constitutional Convention.
The Catechism was first used in the early 1800's for school children but should be required reading in every school today. It is an excellent way to re-acquaint yourself with the nature and benefit of strict constitutional government. Those who are discovering their true heritage for the first time have asked for such material to begin their own studies.
Bill of Rights Exposed
Variously compiled, edited, and written by William H. Huff - 1998. This text will prove ideal for any citizen who is old enough to start learning how to assert his/her rights under the law and according to our American political philosophy - where the citizen is Sovereign and the government is servant. Children should be introduced to a study of their great American heritage not long after they have started reading. How else will they know all about the great body of God-given rights that We the People reserve to ourselves under the Constitution and Bill of Rights forged on our behalf by our great patriot forefathers? A middle school reading level will suffice in most cases for independent study, provided that the Original 1828 Webster's Dictionary is nearby for reference.
War Is A Racket
Major General Smedley D. Butler, USMC, Retired, a marine's marine tells the whole truth about the real costs of war in this 1930's classic.
The Law by Frederic Bastiat
Since The Law was originally published it has been used to persuade millions of sincere seekers of truth, that socialism - in all of its forms - cannot peacefully coexist with liberty or its most important support - private property.
First published in 1850 after Frederic Bastiat had spent more than twenty years fine-tuning his refutation of socialism, The Law represents his dying effort to save France from plunging further into this fatally flawed system of government.
The text is broken down into well-ordered sections that Mr. Bastiat perfected as he argued constantly for individualism and voluntary association, and against collectivist and utopian schemes that were to be funded by having the government ‘rob Peter’ in order to subsidize some planner’s concept of how he would like to spend the people’s substance after taking it from them by force.
Own this audio book on CD today and teach your children to be free – to comprehend liberty – and how to expose all counterfeits and substitutes. Bastiat will give you the rhetorical tools you need to show “Thou Shalt Not Steal” applies to government as much as to each of us.
“Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience." - C. S. Lewis
Frederick Bastiat's The Law. Two CD’s, 91 minutes total
This package with media rate shipping will be approximately $60.
By Arthur J. Stansbury, 1828. Revised Edition by William H. Huff, 1993. Want to know the Constitution? Then get this book! By 1839 this book was the standard textbook for learning the Constitution in American classrooms. Written as a "catechism" in question and answer format, this new larger edition is complete with notes and excerpts from Madison's Notes on the Constitutional Convention.
The Catechism was first used in the early 1800's for school children but should be required reading in every school today. It is an excellent way to re-acquaint yourself with the nature and benefit of strict constitutional government. Those who are discovering their true heritage for the first time have asked for such material to begin their own studies.
Bill of Rights Exposed
Variously compiled, edited, and written by William H. Huff - 1998. This text will prove ideal for any citizen who is old enough to start learning how to assert his/her rights under the law and according to our American political philosophy - where the citizen is Sovereign and the government is servant. Children should be introduced to a study of their great American heritage not long after they have started reading. How else will they know all about the great body of God-given rights that We the People reserve to ourselves under the Constitution and Bill of Rights forged on our behalf by our great patriot forefathers? A middle school reading level will suffice in most cases for independent study, provided that the Original 1828 Webster's Dictionary is nearby for reference.
War Is A Racket
Major General Smedley D. Butler, USMC, Retired, a marine's marine tells the whole truth about the real costs of war in this 1930's classic.
The Law by Frederic Bastiat
Since The Law was originally published it has been used to persuade millions of sincere seekers of truth, that socialism - in all of its forms - cannot peacefully coexist with liberty or its most important support - private property.
First published in 1850 after Frederic Bastiat had spent more than twenty years fine-tuning his refutation of socialism, The Law represents his dying effort to save France from plunging further into this fatally flawed system of government.
The text is broken down into well-ordered sections that Mr. Bastiat perfected as he argued constantly for individualism and voluntary association, and against collectivist and utopian schemes that were to be funded by having the government ‘rob Peter’ in order to subsidize some planner’s concept of how he would like to spend the people’s substance after taking it from them by force.
Own this audio book on CD today and teach your children to be free – to comprehend liberty – and how to expose all counterfeits and substitutes. Bastiat will give you the rhetorical tools you need to show “Thou Shalt Not Steal” applies to government as much as to each of us.
“Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience." - C. S. Lewis
Frederick Bastiat's The Law. Two CD’s, 91 minutes total
This package with media rate shipping will be approximately $60.
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