Who Owns America?: A New Declaration of IndependenceHerbert Agar, Allen Tate ISI Books, 1999 - 450 pages "It was a radical statement in 1936 and remains one at the end of the twentieth century. How should a republic exercise power over its citizens? How may economic goods be justly distributed? What status should the small farm have in the life of a nation? By what means may family life be rendered stable? What is the economic role of women in a free society? These are just some of the issues raised, and answered in unique ways, in this book. |
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Page 18
... profit - making busi- ness , but a public service to be paid for by the public either through rates or through taxes as may appear most convenient . Wages and postal rates can be decided only by the Congress , in accordance with the ...
... profit - making busi- ness , but a public service to be paid for by the public either through rates or through taxes as may appear most convenient . Wages and postal rates can be decided only by the Congress , in accordance with the ...
Page 19
... profit . The moral appears to be that , unless all business whatsoever is to be taken over and the profit system abolished entirely , the greatest efforts should be made to break up mass production into small competing units wherever ...
... profit . The moral appears to be that , unless all business whatsoever is to be taken over and the profit system abolished entirely , the greatest efforts should be made to break up mass production into small competing units wherever ...
Page 98
... profits the larger part of its saving in quantity purchases and sells its goods at a higher average mark- up in prices , yet the independent groups always pay a higher average profit in the combined items of dividends and wages than do ...
... profits the larger part of its saving in quantity purchases and sells its goods at a higher average mark- up in prices , yet the independent groups always pay a higher average profit in the combined items of dividends and wages than do ...
Contents
A FORGOTTEN AMERICAN CLASSIC | ix |
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY | xli |
David Cushman Coyle | 9 |
Copyright | |
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Agar agricultural Allen Tate Ameri American become Big Business capital capitalist cent chain store charters collectivism communist companies competition Constitution corporate cotton Davidson debts decentralization democracy distribution distributist dollars Donald Davidson economic system efficiency enterprise exports factory farm farmer fascism Federal finance-capitalism foreign trade freedom Hamiltonian Herbert Agar human important income individual industrial interests Jeffersonian John Crowe Ransom labor land liberty Liberty League living mass production means ment modern monopoly movement nature nomic Northeast operation organization owners ownership perhaps planter political possible present principles problem profit Protestantism regional regulation religion responsibility self-sufficiency sense Seward Collins small town social society South Southern Agrarians tariff Tate tenant thing tion true United wealth women workers writer