Difference between revisions of "Essay:Greatest Conservative Non-fiction Books"

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#'''[[The Bible]]''' - ''the infallible Word of [[God]] contains innumerable conservative values including [[Christian values]]''
 
#'''[[The Bible]]''' - ''the infallible Word of [[God]] contains innumerable conservative values including [[Christian values]]''
#'''The Wealth of Nations''' by [[Adam Smith]] - ''The classic guide to [[capitalism]] and an explanation of the necessity of [[free trade]]''
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#'''[[The Wealth of Nations]]''' by [[Adam Smith]] - ''The classic guide to [[capitalism]] and an explanation of the necessity of [[free trade]]''
 
#'''The Conscience of a Conservative''' by [[Barry Goldwater]] -  
 
#'''The Conscience of a Conservative''' by [[Barry Goldwater]] -  
 
#'''Feminist Fantasies''' by [[Phyllis Schlafly]] -  
 
#'''Feminist Fantasies''' by [[Phyllis Schlafly]] -  

Revision as of 05:12, September 22, 2011

Despite many of today's non-fiction books being overrun by liberal bias, deceit, and distortion, there are still some great conservative non-fiction books that promote true conservative values.


  1. The Bible - the infallible Word of God contains innumerable conservative values including Christian values
  2. The Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith - The classic guide to capitalism and an explanation of the necessity of free trade
  3. The Conscience of a Conservative by Barry Goldwater -
  4. Feminist Fantasies by Phyllis Schlafly -
  5. A Choice Not An Echo by Phyllis Schlafly -
  6. The Burden of Bad Ideas by Heather MacDonald -
  7. McCarthy and His Enemies by William F. Buckley, Jr. and L. Brent Bozell Jr. -
  8. Eat the Rich by PJ O'Rourke - An examination of the relative merits of capitalism and socialism through four case studies: "Good Capitalism" (USA), "Bad Capitalism" (Albania), "Good socialism" (Sweden) and "Bad socialism" (Cuba)