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8 Obras 407 Miembros 7 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Charles Adams is the world's leading scholar on the history of taxation.

Obras de Charles Adams

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre canónico
Adams, Charles
Fecha de nacimiento
1930
Fecha de fallecimiento
2013
Género
male
Nacionalidad
USA
Lugares de residencia
Williamsville, New York, USA
Educación
Whittier College
University of California, Los Angeles
Ocupaciones
attorney
Organizaciones
Mises Institute
Cato Institute
University of California, Los Angeles

Miembros

Reseñas

Looking back I was saddened I thought to agree with this book.
 
Denunciada
Aidan767 | 4 reseñas más. | Feb 1, 2024 |
This book does not make it's case for many of it's arguments. In its attempt to counteract the hero-worship surrounding Lincoln it does not provide a balanced view of events. It would make a better magazine article than a book because of all the padding.
 
Denunciada
billycongo | 4 reseñas más. | Jul 22, 2020 |
This is a eye-opening book. The subtitle is misleading. It is much more of an overview of the politics of the WBTS.

If you suffered from a Northern Government Education, you will be wondering whether many of the things that Adams says happened really happened. He has LOTS of footnotes but not enough to keep you from looking up things in your Encyclopedia Britannica (if you have one). The only thing Adams claims that I'm still not certain of is that Lincoln ordered the arrest of Justice Taney. I think he must have referenced Brown's =Baltimore and the Nineteenth of April, 1861=, which is one of the several footnoted books I purchased. Unfortunate Brown, who was Mayor of Baltimore at the time, mostly asserts this supposed fact which isn't quite enough evidence for me.

But you'll learn that Lincoln abandoned the train his wife and children were riding on from Illinois because he feared that the train might be attacked, and he left his family to continue on on that train. NYT microfilm makes this incident seem worse than my recollection of what Adams wrote. I also purchase =Lincoln and the Baltimore Plot= which provides additional details, all confirming Adams.

You'll also learn how events were presented in the European Press which was mostly not kind to Lincoln and the Northern War effort.

Even if you don't buy this book, you can learn quite a bit from some of the reviews at Amazon.
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Denunciada
MLNJ | 4 reseñas más. | Mar 22, 2019 |
My reactions to reading this book in 1999.

Besides further bolstering his claim that Northern tariffs were the root cause, not slavery, of the American Civil War (he quotes from a debate at the time between Charles Dickens, who takes Adams’ side, and John Stuart Mill who gives the traditional slavery argument), Adams does a good job showing how ruthless tax collection has long existed in a land known for liberty. The very beginning of the Constitutional Republic was marked by Federal suppression of the Whiskey Rebellion with Alexander Hamilton leading the effort in 1794 and the Fries Rebellion in 1798 Pennsylvania, a revolt against taxes on doors and windows. Justice Samuel Chase tried to railroad leader John Fries to the gallows and was almost impeached.

The Internal Revenue Service was proceeded by the ruthless, and frequently lethal, Internal Revenue Bureau who collected liquor excise taxes in the South. There were many deaths on both sides. The Ku Klux Klan frequently targeted “revenuers” who were paid piecework style. The fact that their attackers and murderers would be tried in state rather than federal courts would often mean no conviction. Adams goes on to show how the Income tax grew in intrusiveness and the rapacious steps the IRS (Adams rightly blames Congress for its tax laws and lack of oversight) takes in modern times including overseas offices and the disallowing of surrendered citizenship as a tax evasion method. Adams notes the IRS’ ruthlessness is matched, in democracies, only by Germany and Japan.

Adams briefly explains why Swiss banks and the privacy laws their for banking don’t aid crime. (He makes no mention of the controversy of Nazis hiding – allegedly – confiscated Jewish wealth their.) He also digresses into something beyond the quasi-libertarian nature of his thesis when he rants about “radiation poisoning” and environmental destruction as well as the expected targets of budget deficits and the welfare state.
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Denunciada
RandyStafford | Oct 12, 2013 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
8
Miembros
407
Popularidad
#59,758
Valoración
4.1
Reseñas
7
ISBNs
21
Idiomas
1

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