Reclaiming Power: How to Take Back Our Government from Career PoliticiansRECLAIMING POWER is a refreshing grass-roots commentary on in-your-face government & the career Democrats & Republicans in Congress straight from the heart of the middle class America. "What takes this beyond a concise expression of the frustrations of the middle class & much of the rest of America is its road map for doing something about it..."--Gerry Calhoun, Human Resources Manager. "Everyone talks about the proliferation of special interest groups...here (is) why they keep getting more powerful & what alternatives are available to keep this growth in check...term limits, tax reform, balanced budget amendment...are doable & would be giant steps toward getting power back into the hands of the people...(LaVere) blows the lid off income redistribution...how it creates an artificial dependency on big government & can only lead to a weakening of our economic system."--Lou Alexander, stockbroker. Order by check (add $2.00 s/h) to: Bydand Corporation/WWP, P.O Box 3501, Alexandria, VA 22302; 800-584-8721. |
Contents
An Analysis of Power | 11 |
Congress The Most Undemocratic | 47 |
The Federal Bureaucracy | 93 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
actual administration agency American assets balanced budget amendment beneficiaries benefits bers big government bill billion cable capital gains career politicians Chairman citizens Clinton committee congressional Constitution contributions cost course cracy created deficit Democratic disability dollars earnings efficient elected employees ernment example exempt amount federal bureaucracy federal government flat tax fuel fund government's gress groups hearings House ideas implement income redistribution income taxes increased incumbents individual industry investment landfill legislation major Medicare members of Congress ment middle class party payroll tax Pell grants percent personal income policies political appointees president problem programs proposal rate tax reelection reform regulations revenue rules savings Senate Social Security special interest staff subsidies Tax Code tax rate taxpayers term limits things tion trillion two-party system viduals vote voters wages Washington Post waste wealth workers