http://www.amazon.com/Shattered-Consensus-Decline-America%C2%92s
Political/dp/1594036713/ref=sr_1_1s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1437187111&sr=1-1&keywords=shattered+consensus
http://www.wsj.com/articles/americas...ion-1436918113
"In perhaps the greatest irony of the dying era, the massive programs demanded by today’s statists require that the rich they love to deprecate get richer. With the most progressive tax system in the entire OECD—in which the fabled 1% pay 29% of all taxes and the top 10% provide 53% (in the bluest of states, such as California, the burden is even more lopsided)—only more inequality can keep this unsustainable system going a while longer."
"A system failure is only a matter of time. At some point, what Democrat Erskine Bowleshas aptly labeled “the most predictable crisis in American history” will be upon us, as the federal government defaults by one means or another on its unpayable promises. A revolt of the betrayed elderly, or of the plundered young, could be the catalyst for Mr. Piereson’s revolution. Perhaps even sooner, one state rendered destitute by reckless government spending and public pensions will attempt to dump its hopeless debt problem on the rest of the union. Which of these scenarios is most likely? Which most dangerous? Could the fourth revolution manifest itself in a separatist movement by states where majorities feel culturally estranged and disinclined to pick up the tab for the extravagance of less responsible states? Could the growing number of citizens professing economic conservatism coupled with libertarian social views be the front edge of a new consensus? No doubt this insightful author can help the rest of us think through these possibilities, but it appears that we will have to await his next book."
Political/dp/1594036713/ref=sr_1_1s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1437187111&sr=1-1&keywords=shattered+consensus
http://www.wsj.com/articles/americas...ion-1436918113
"In perhaps the greatest irony of the dying era, the massive programs demanded by today’s statists require that the rich they love to deprecate get richer. With the most progressive tax system in the entire OECD—in which the fabled 1% pay 29% of all taxes and the top 10% provide 53% (in the bluest of states, such as California, the burden is even more lopsided)—only more inequality can keep this unsustainable system going a while longer."
"A system failure is only a matter of time. At some point, what Democrat Erskine Bowleshas aptly labeled “the most predictable crisis in American history” will be upon us, as the federal government defaults by one means or another on its unpayable promises. A revolt of the betrayed elderly, or of the plundered young, could be the catalyst for Mr. Piereson’s revolution. Perhaps even sooner, one state rendered destitute by reckless government spending and public pensions will attempt to dump its hopeless debt problem on the rest of the union. Which of these scenarios is most likely? Which most dangerous? Could the fourth revolution manifest itself in a separatist movement by states where majorities feel culturally estranged and disinclined to pick up the tab for the extravagance of less responsible states? Could the growing number of citizens professing economic conservatism coupled with libertarian social views be the front edge of a new consensus? No doubt this insightful author can help the rest of us think through these possibilities, but it appears that we will have to await his next book."
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