Description
The American Republic’s Demise is a comprehensive examination of how the United States evolved from a decentralized constitutional republic into an increasingly centralized administrative state. Rather than focusing on personalities, political parties, or conspiracy theories, the book analyzes the structural forces that have transformed American governance through taxation, monetary policy, education, healthcare, criminal justice, regulation, media, and administrative expansion.
Using the Liberty Dialogues Framework as an analytical tool, the book explores how authority, jurisdiction, status, standing, and obligation have been affected by decades of lawful but cumulative institutional growth. Through historical analysis, constitutional examination, and public policy review, it traces the mechanisms by which power became centralized through funding, regulation, delegation, compliance systems, and dependency structures.Â
Rather than merely identifying problems, the book challenges readers to understand the architecture of modern governance and asks a profound question: Has the practical balance envisioned by the Constitution been displaced by administrative management, and if so, how can informed citizens restore constitutional equilibrium without abandoning lawful government?
