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ویرایش:
نویسندگان: Paul Craig Roberts & Lawrence M. Stratton
سری:
ISBN (شابک) : 9780307410153
ناشر: Crown
سال نشر: 2008
تعداد صفحات: 0
زبان: English
فرمت فایل : EPUB (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود)
حجم فایل: 451 کیلوبایت
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب The Tyranny of Good Intentions: How Prosecutors and Law Enforcement Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name of Justice به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب ظلم و نیت نیک: چگونه دادستان و اجرای قانون در حال زیر پا گذاشتن قانون اساسی به نام عدالت هستند نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
A thousand years of legal protections against tyranny are
being stolen right before our eyes. Under the guise of good
intentions, personal liberties as old as the Magna Carta have
become casualties in the wars being waged on pollution,
drugs, white-collar crime, and all of the other real and
imagined social ills. The result: innocent people caught up
in a bureaucratic web that destroys lives and livelihoods;
businesses shuttered because of victimless infractions; a
justice system that values coerced pleas over the search for
truth; bullying police agencies empowered to confiscate
property without due process.
"A devastating indictment of our current system of justice."
Milton Friedman
In this provocative book, Paul Craig Roberts and Lawrence M.
Stratton show how the law, which once shielded us from the
government, has now become a powerful weapon in the hands of
overzealous prosecutors and bureaucrats. Lost is the
foundation upon which our freedom restthe intricate framework
of Constitutional limits that protect our property, our
liberty, and our lives. Roberts and Stratton convincingly
argue that this abuse of government power doesn't have
ideological boundaries. Indeed, conservatives and liberals
alike use prosecutors, regulators, and courts to chase after
their own favorite "devils," to seek punishment over justice
and expediency over freedom. The authors present harrowing
accounts of people both rich and poor, of CEOs and
blue-collar workers who have fallen victim to the tyranny of
good intentions, who have lost possessions, careers, loved
ones, and sometimes even their lives.
This book is a sobering wake-up call to reclaim that which is
rightly oursliberty protected by the rule of law.
From the Hardcover edition.
The authors of The New Color Line return with another libertarian polemic, this time taking aim at a justice system that has lost sight of its most important goals. Paul Craig Roberts and LawrenceM. Stratton warn of a "police state that is creeping up on us from many directions." There's the war on drugs, which makes it possible for federal agents to investigate people simply for carrying large amounts of cash. There's the crusade against white-collar crime, which has turned the plea bargain into an enemy of the truth. And there's outright misconduct, abetted by prosecutors more interested in compiling long lists of indictments than ensuring the fair treatment of all suspects. The Tyranny of Good Intentions is replete with examples of how government treads on freedom through ill-willed prosecution and faceless bureaucracy. The book's overpowering sense of disaffection sometimes leads to alarmist prose: "We the People have vanished. Our place has been taken by wise men and anointed elites." The authors are swift to suggest that America, barring "an intellectual rebirth," may yet go the way of "German Nazis and Soviet communists."
Yet The Tyranny of Good Intentions is nothing if not well intended; it is full of passion and always on the attack, whether the writers are taking on racial quotas, wetland regulations, or any number of policies they find objectionable. In a jacket blurb, libertarian icon Milton Friedman calls it "a devastating indictment of our current system of justice." Roberts and Stratton, although right-leaning in many of their political sympathies, will probably find plenty of fans on ACLU-left--and anybody who cringes at the thought of unbridled state power. If the road to hell is indeed paved with good intentions, consider this book an atlas. --JohnJ. Miller
According to Roberts and Stratton (both fellows at the
Institute for Political Economy), our cherished individual
rights are going to hell in a handbasket, delivered by
politically ambitious prosecutors, misguided or malevolent
bureaucrats, law enforcement agents run amok and pandering
politicians. This book has odd heroes/victims: Charles
Keating of the Savings and Loan scandal, Exxon Corporation
(owner of the Exxon Valdez), hotelier Leona Helmsley, Michael
Milken and even agri-business giant Archer Daniels Midland.
The arch-villain is odder still, Jeremy Bentham, the
19th-century philosopher who popularized the theory of
utilitarianism, which can be simply described as a belief in
formulating public policies that result in "the greatest good
for the greatest number." Bentham's villainy, the authors
say, is rooted in utilitarian philosophy's role in
undermining the Rights of Englishmen traceable to the Magna
Carta and the Glorious Revolution of 1688 and now embodied in
the Bill of Rights. Perhaps oddest of all is the
characterization of J. Edgar Hoover as a paragon of morality
and law enforcement restraint, qualities the authors feel are
utterly lacking in today's American leadership. Roberts and
Stratton will strike a nerve with this book; the government
abuses they colorfully rail at--the unrestrained powers of
police and prosecutors, unfair forfeiture laws, unreasonable
bureaucratic regulations and police profiling, to name a
few--mark a frightening departure from what most Americans
consider the fair exercise of government authority.
Unfortunately, in the end, the book comes off as primarily an
incendiary polemic. Lost in the rhetoric of the authors' call
to arms is a useful analysis of how to balance competing
individual and societal interests without sacrificing
fundamental rights. (Apr.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.