A splendidly illuminating book. —The New York Times Like it or not, George W. Bush has launched a revolution in American foreign policy. He has redefined how America engages the world, shedding the constraints that friends, allies, and international institutions once imposed on its freedom of action. In America Unbound, Ivo Daalder and James Lindsay caution that the Bush revolution comes with serious risks–and, at some point, we may find that America’s friends and allies will refuse to follow his lead, leaving the U.S. unable to achieve its goals. This edition has been extensively revised and updated to include major policy changes and developments since the book’s original publication.
America Unbound: The Bush Revolution in Foreign Policy
According to the 1870 census figures, that year Chinese made up about 25 percent of all miners in California and Washington and nearly 60 percent in Idaho and Oregon. Like other miners, the Chinese moved from one gold rush to another, ...
America Unbound
America Unbound Media Guide
Other nations had long recognized the potential of the United States. They had seen its power exercised regularly in economics, if only sparodically in politics.
In this brilliant essay, he considers point by point the events and actions that have led America down the path of imperialism, becoming a power at once arrogant, victorious, and unilateral.
Politics in America, Unbound (for Books a la Carte Plus)
Andrew "Andy" Pepper is a pharmaceutical scientist and part time political blogger who inadvertently becomes the Guy Fawkes of America.Due to his anti-government bombast he is deported to a deserted Icelandic island where he survives for ...
Now in his mid-thirties, Nathan Zuckerman, a would-be recluse despite his newfound fame as a bestselling author, ventures onto the streets of Manhattan in the final year of the turbulent sixties.
Thomas Willing to William Philips , Isaac Smith , Jonathan Mason , Thomas Russell , J. Lowell , J. Higginson of Boston ... 13 February 1807 , John R. Carpenter to Simon N. Dexter , Providence , 11 July 1807 , Reel 2 , Simon Newton ...