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Feeling Your Pain: The Explosion and Abuse of Government Power in the Clinton-Gore Years
Feeling Your Pain The Explosion and Abuse of Government Power in the ClintonGore Years
Author: James Bovard
James Bovard is no fan of Big Government in the US and under the Clinton-Gore administration. In his new book, Bovard looks at Clinton and Gore's record on such abuses and absurdities as taxes, gun control, the Waco fiasco, AmeriCorps, and federal funding of every program from those dealing with disaster relief to those that put on puppet shows...  more »
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ISBN-13: 9780312230821
ISBN-10: 0312230826
Publication Date: 9/2000
Pages: 426
Rating:
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3 stars, based on 2 ratings
Publisher: St. Martin's Press
Book Type: Hardcover
Other Versions: Paperback
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Another of Bovard's harangues against the power of the federal government, this time focusing primarily on the Clinton administration's domestic policies and programs.Washington journalist Bovard (Freedom in Chains, not reviewed, etc.) charges fervidly that President Clinton has "exploited and expanded the dictatorial potential of the U.S. presidency." To back up this assertion, the author examines numerous government agencies (DOJ, FBI, HUD, EEOC, FEMA, EPA, ATF), programs (AmeriCorps), and policies (farm subsidies, the war on drugs, gun control, affirmative action, trade agreements)-and finds evidence of bad thinking and abuse of power everywhere he looks. AmeriCorps, he claims, is "little more than social work tinged with messianic delusions," and FEMA's "lackeys throw federal checks at everyone they see." Bovard's use of name-calling, exaggeration, loaded language, and colorful images-he describes the DOJ and the FBI as "competing for the best imitation of the Keystone Kops" and Clinton's trade policy as "slave to almost any pressure group that caterwauled on the White House steps"-are designed to stir emotions, not to promote reasonable discussion of controversial issues. While Clinton is seen as the worst abuser of government power, Republicans are also criticized, with the hapless Newt Gingrich receiving the brunt of Bovard's ire for his inability to deliver the goods that were ordered in the elections of 1994. The various news media are also heavily criticized for complicity and cowardice. But the author sees the problem going much deeper-and we are all part of it. Americans, Bovard says, must stop being subjects and become the self-reliant citizens the Founding Fathers envisioned.


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