The Right Way.The Right Way Charles A. Salter salt·er n. 1. One that manufactures or sells salt. 2. One that treats meat, fish, or other foods with salt. Noun 1. Xulon Press 6947 Fox Chase Road, New Market, MD 21774 1594675317 $12.99 www.amazon.com The Right Way: Why The Left Is Wrong And The Right Is "Right" by Charles A. Salter (holder of five earned university degrees, including Tulane University History Founding/early history The University dates from 1834 as the Medical College of Louisiana.<ref name="facts" /> With the addition of a law department, it became The University of Louisiana , the University of Pennsylvania (body, education) University of Pennsylvania - The home of ENIAC and Machiavelli. http://upenn.edu/. Address: Philadelphia, PA, USA. , and Harvard University Harvard University, mainly at Cambridge, Mass., including Harvard College, the oldest American college. Harvard College Harvard College, originally for men, was founded in 1636 with a grant from the General Court of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. ) is a sharply conservative manifesto The Conservative Manifesto was a position statement drafted in 1937 by a bi-partisan group of New Deal critics. Those involved in its creation included opponents of President Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal as well as erstwhile supporters who had come to believe its programs were , that discusses a wide variety of social topics including abortion to gun control, poverty, sexuality, the first and second amendments, and global terrorism. Each topic is treated succinctly suc·cinct adj. suc·cinct·er, suc·cinct·est 1. Characterized by clear, precise expression in few words; concise and terse: a succinct reply; a succinct style. 2. , over the course of a couple pages, presenting first what the author views as the "liberal" point of view, then what the author views as the "conservative" point of view (though oddly enough, the author tends to claim that all or the majority of "liberals" hold an extreme left-wing position on many issues, while simultaneously claiming that "conservatives" hold a wide gamut of ideals and perspectives, from moderate to hard-line right-wing). Though hardly impartial, and also strongly influenced by the author's devout Christian faith and beliefs, The Right Way does present thought-provoking issues and probes basic flaws, both theoretical and observed, in past policies pursued by the American government. A thought-provoking book, offering passionately charged arguments that should not be ignored, although it is unfortunately not long enough to give each difficult subject an appropriately in-depth complex analysis. |
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