"Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." The book, written in 2009, starts with the famous quote from Benjamin Franklin and after running through examples of just such a purchase in 8 countries, it almost seems we've gotten what we deserve. Or maybe it's what we purchased, since the modern sacrifice often exchanges a thriving economy for liberty. The examples in the book include Singapore, "the Disneyland with the death penalty" where the economy is great. The government provides for the basic well being of it's people and has a thriving free market but you can severely punished for dissent, chewing gum, littering or being gay (or at least acting on it). In China, the Singapore model is being mimicked, without the care for the less fortunate, all controlled by communist party leaders. Russia, of course, has gone from being controlled by the oligarchs to having the oligarchs controlled by one man, where instead of being jailed for dissent, you'll probably be poisoned or shot, but of course, the international business community is quite welcome so long as you keep your damn mouth shut. In the UAE, there is no notional democracy, it is still a seemingly kindly monarchy. The market is fully embraced, fundamentalism is kept under the surface, and slave labor serves the worlds elite. In India, the worlds largest democracy, the poor are much worse off and kept behind shiny gates and malls of the rich. Silvio Berlusconi of Italy is an interesting case. A boisterous, womanizing billionaire with a history of shady business dealings and a disdain of the courts and press; he seemed to be the proto-trump. Then, of course, we have the king of surveillance, the UK. CCTV everywhere and libel laws in which the accused have the burden of proof, ensuring that the wealthy cannot be spoken ill of lightly. The grand finale is the USA, my country tis of thee, which quite willingly and fearfully and patriotically with hands on hearts handed over many rights after 9/11 (but being self-respecting Americans, most of the rights we hand over belong to someone not of our tribe). And aside from the governments role, we will gladly self censor in order to not give offense, as evidenced by the press and universities non-critical stance of the post 9/11 military adventures (and after this book, the identity politics of the left and the outrage over black protest on the right, which is really also identity politics). This book contains several case studies and isn't doesn't exactly point to one right way to do things. It does, however, point to many, many wrong ways. From monarchies and democratic republics to communist states and oligarchies, it seems people are more than happy to sacrifice freedom for both security and economic wealth.