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  • Format: ePub

With her novels, The Fountainhead in 1943 and Atlas Shrugged in 1957, Ayn Rand created the philosophy of Objectivism, which continues to influence conservative American politics. Now, after all of these years, a political balance is provided by Sam, an entirely fact-based political philosophy narrated by fictional and real-life characters seeking to establish a nurturing society. Sam provides a nonpartisan, rational path to transform the United States government into finally becoming a truly representative democracy. Sam is a love story, a tragedy, and a practical political and social…mehr

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Produktbeschreibung
With her novels, The Fountainhead in 1943 and Atlas Shrugged in 1957, Ayn Rand created the philosophy of Objectivism, which continues to influence conservative American politics. Now, after all of these years, a political balance is provided by Sam, an entirely fact-based political philosophy narrated by fictional and real-life characters seeking to establish a nurturing society. Sam provides a nonpartisan, rational path to transform the United States government into finally becoming a truly representative democracy. Sam is a love story, a tragedy, and a practical political and social philosophy for the new millennium.
Sam, a young tank driver during the first Gulf War is horrified by his experience of burying thousands of elderly and youthful Iraqi soldiers alive in their trenches. Instead of becoming the teacher he once dreamed of becoming, he is homeless in Los Angeles where he becomes acquainted with a never-named syndicated columnist of the Timesthe book's narrator. When Sam becomes distraught over the second Iraq War and the senseless harm being done to the Iraqi children and the mental and physical suffering of American soldiers, he decides to bite off a finger a day in a protest to force an end to war. The columnist agrees to report his ordeal, and they are joined by a retired Navy nurse, Aileana MacDonald, who cares for Sam and enables him to complete his mission. Writing over a two-week period, the columnist not only reports Sam's progress, but he provides a first-person narrative of what Sam has to say about the stupidity of war and the idiots who glorify it.
Sam becomes a media sensation as his ordeal goes viral, and the three of them decide to write Sam's political philosophy in response to numerous book and movie offers. Covering a variety of contemporary social and political subjects, the columnist presents a journalistic background of issues; Sam narrates his out-of-the-box opinions and solutions; Aileana offers conservative challenges; and the columnist's college-age daughter, Heather, provides the youth view.
Sam takes a philosophical view of the world we live in, and builds on the best to be found within those of us who inhabit it. He believes people want a nurturing government, one in which women have an equal status and make a prominent contribution. He offers practical policies to outlaw war and provide a safe, just, and civil society, which enables and encourages the freedom of speech. Sam offers a way out of the financial and economic crisis by achieving a balance between labor and capital in a truly free enterprise system. He proposes a smart and simple taxwhich reduces the burden on working, middle, and small-business peoplewhile providing ample resources to pay for improved education, health care, and transportation systems. Finally, Sam sets forth a plan for a universal savings system that provides a secure retirement for everyone, while funding an upgrade of the national infrastructure and small business ventures.
Aileana and Sam fall in love, get married and have a daughter, Mei Lynn. Their happiness is shattered with Sam's diagnosis of Lou Gehrig's disease, believed to have resulted from his exposure to nerve gas during the first Gulf War. He survives long enough to complete the book and to experience his daughter's fifth birthday. Set between 2008 and 2015 in Southern California and reflecting the true political, economic, and environmental facts of the era, the story of their lives ties the book together and provides hope and inspiration for the reader.


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Autorenporträt
For more than 45 years, William John Cox has written extensively on law, politics, philosophy, and the human condition. During that time, he vigorously pursued a career in law enforcement, public policy, and the law.

As a police officer, he was an early leader in the "New Breed" movement to professionalize law enforcement. Cox wrote the Policy Manual of the Los Angeles Police Department and the introductory chapters of the Police Task Force Report of the National Advisory Commission on Criminal Justice Standards and Goals, which continues to define the role of the police in America.

As an attorney, Cox worked for the U.S. Department of Justice to implement national standards and goals, prosecuted cases for the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office, and operated a public interest law practice primarily dedicated to the defense of young people.

He wrote notable law review articles and legal briefs in major cases, tried a number of jury trials and argued cases in the superior and appellate courts that made law.

Professionally, Cox volunteered pro bono services in several landmark legal cases. In 1979, he filed a class-action lawsuit on behalf of all citizens directly in the U.S. Supreme Court alleging that the government no longer represented the voters who elected it. As a remedy, Cox urged the Court to require national policy referendums to be held in conjunction with presidential elections.

In 1981, representing a Jewish survivor of Auschwitz, Cox investigated and successfully sued a group of radical right-wing organizations which denied the Holocaust. The case was the subject of the Turner Network Television motion picture, Never Forget.

Cox later represented a secret client and arranged the publication of almost 1,800 photographs of ancient manuscripts that had been kept from the public for more than 40 years. A Facsimile Edition of the Dead Sea Scrolls was published in November 1991. His role in that effort is described by historian Neil Asher Silberman in The Hidden Scrolls: Christianity, Judaism, and the War for the Dead Sea Scrolls.

Cox concluded his legal career as a Supervising Trial Counsel for the State Bar of California. There, he led a team of attorneys and investigators which prosecuted attorneys accused of serious misconduct and criminal gangs engaged in the illegal practice of law. He retired in 2007.

Continuing to concentrate on political and social is...