A decent book. Morris, a former Clinton White House advisor turned to conservatism after witnessing the shameful deeds done by the Clinton administration. This book got shrill though. It has a lot of good information in it, good bi-partisan criticism of our elected officials on both sides of the isle, and shows how both parties are compromised by corruption, underhanded dealings, and so forth (Bush and Cheney funneled money into their oil buddies - but Obama's doing the same thing, etc.). Lots of good information on how most of Obama's staff and the leaders of the current congress have been in bed for years with the same financial institutions that they are now deriding. They're all in bed with them. And in the case of the homosexual Barny Frank, this is literal. He had a ten-year relationship with one of the head guys over at Freddie and Fannie, who funneled money to one another for favors. That sort of thing. A really disturbing chapter on major American corporations being funded by radical Islamics through Muslim pressures to create "Sharia compliant" company indexes - companies who are Islamic "kosher".
Morris has some problems, however, but they are not unusual problems. He derides "classical economics" as being "daft," and then defines classical economics as Milton Friedman's Chicago School (26). Friedman might be influential in our economic system, but he essentially compromised on the Federal Reserve and other bad things we're doing. Which means that his economics are neither "free market" nor "classical." Other than that and the shrillness of places (mostly the introduction and conclusion) the book was a solid, though not a favorite, read.