Official Review: Ominiarchy by Chuck Hanrahan
- Oyedeji Okikioluwa
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Official Review: Ominiarchy by Chuck Hanrahan
Will having equal protection and the pursuit of happiness as enumerated in the declaration of independence be enough to solve the problem of restricted liberty? Ominiarchy: A Collection of Essays Concerning American Public Policy Issues by Chuck Hanrahan is a non-fiction book centered on American governance, unity, freedom, democracy, and incessant preemptive vengeance.
The book is divided into two parts and has eighteen chapters. The first section is about the domestic policies of the United States. It includes various variables affecting the government of today. Examples include taxation, the economy, government operations on healthcare, public education, policed brutality, genetic discrimination, abortion, amongst others. In the second section, the author discussed the United States' international policies alongside variables affecting the policies. He referred to the North American Union, the global economic confederation, and foreign aid. Will the United States choose to reaffirm those values? Or will they follow the footsteps of the Babylonians by becoming victims of their success? Read Ominiarchy: A Collection of Essays Concerning American Public Policy Issues to find out more.
I love the sub-sectioning of the book and how each chapter begins with quotes. It made the book well structured and thought-provoking. Also, I believe the book's structuring emanates from the author's strong problem-solving skills, which is excellent. Furthermore, the ideal solutions proffered in chapter eighteen kept me at the edge of my seat and kept me thinking. And the endnote made the book easy to understand.
Chuck Hanrahan dishes out practical steps of governance and how the government should permit its constituents to enjoy their lives, liberties, and opportunities. I believe the book can rightly be termed as the guiding light on the combined effects of both socio-economics stratification and income inequality in the United States.
There is nothing I dislike about this book. It is impeccably researched, and the way of life in the United States was not overlooked. Based on these reasons, I rate Ominiarchy: A Collection of Essays Concerning American Public Policy Issues 4 out of 4 stars. Also, I found no grammatical or punctuation errors in the book. I completed the book with loads of ideas on American public policy issues and the importance of a purposeful government.
I recommend this book to all political science students, politicians, and anyone seeking to know more about the American political sphere. On a final note, according to President Obama's statement, "Change will not come if we wait for some other person or some other time. We are the ones we have been waiting for. We are the change that we seek." We need to adapt to change.
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Ominiarchy
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