Mark Winters
The False Promise: The Myth of Democracy, Globalist Agendas, and the Case for Anarcho-Capitalism
The False Promise: The Myth of Democracy, Globalist Agendas, and the Case for Anarcho-Capitalism
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The False Promise: The Myth of Democracy, Globalist Agendas, and the Case for Anarcho-Capitalism
Democracy is the least questioned assumption of modern political life. We are told it is the best system available — the end of history, the final form of legitimate government. The False Promise challenges that assumption directly, arguing that liberal democracy has failed on its own terms and that the case for a radically different political and economic order — anarcho-capitalism — deserves serious consideration.
Who This Book Is For
This book is for radical independent thinkers who are not satisfied with the conventional political spectrum — who see through the theatre of electoral politics and want to engage with genuinely alternative frameworks for organising human society. It is for those who believe that the most important political questions are the ones that mainstream debate refuses to ask.
What You Will Learn
- The philosophical and practical failures of liberal democracy
- How globalist institutions and agendas undermine national sovereignty and individual freedom
- The principles of anarcho-capitalism and its intellectual foundations
- The case against the state as a necessary institution
- How voluntary exchange and market mechanisms can replace coercive government
- The history and key thinkers of libertarian and anarcho-capitalist thought
- Objections to anarcho-capitalism and how its proponents respond to them
Why This Argument Deserves Serious Engagement
The political mainstream offers a narrow range of options within a framework that is rarely questioned. The False Promise steps outside that framework entirely — not to be provocative, but because the questions it raises are genuinely important and genuinely unanswered by conventional politics.
What Makes This Book Different
This is not a manifesto or a polemic. It is a serious intellectual engagement with radical political ideas — one that takes both the arguments and the objections seriously, and invites readers to think rather than simply to agree.
Ideal For Readers Interested In
- Anarcho-capitalism and libertarian philosophy
- Political philosophy and theory
- Critique of democracy and the state
- Globalism and national sovereignty
- Independent political thought
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