Popular misgovernment in the United States

audiobook

Popular misgovernment in the United States

by Alfred Byron Cruikshank

EN·~16 hours·34 chapters

Chapters

34 total

POPULAR MISGOVERNMENT IN THE UNITED STATES

0:10

POPULAR MISGOVERNMENT IN THE UNITED STATES - CHAPTER I

59:25

CHAPTER II

24:31

CHAPTER III

21:17

CHAPTER IV

18:25

CHAPTER V

42:27

CHAPTER VI

10:35

CHAPTER VII

9:49

CHAPTER VIII

44:47

CHAPTER IX

55:51

Description

This early‑twentieth‑century essay surveys a period of intense political anxiety in the United States, arguing that the nation faces a serious danger from radical movements such as Bolshevism and socialism. The author traces the roots of that unease to a long‑standing distrust of political institutions and to the legacy of the Civil‑War era, suggesting that the current climate is ripe for subversive ideas to gain traction.

To counter the perceived threat, the writer proposes a radical restructuring of the electorate, limiting the vote to male private‑property owners of at least twenty‑five years of age. He contends that such a qualification would safeguard private‑property rights, preserve the republic’s foundational values, and restore confidence in democratic processes. The pamphlet blends historical references with a call for concrete legislative action, inviting readers to consider how the shape of the voting franchise might influence the nation’s future stability.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~16 hours (932K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Bryan Ness, Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

Release date

2018-09-07

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Alfred Byron Cruikshank

Alfred Byron Cruikshank

1847–1933

A Civil War veteran and lawyer who turned his sharp eye to politics and literature, he wrote forcefully about government, voting, and Shakespeare. His surviving work offers a strong glimpse of early 20th-century debate in America.

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