The government is not a neutral arbiter of truth. It never has been. It never will be. Doubt everything. John Stossel does. A self-described skeptic, he has dismantled society's sacred cows with unerring common sense. Now he debunks the most sacred of them all: our intuition and belief that government can solve our problems. In No, They Can't, the New York Times best-selling author and Fox News commentator insists that we discard that idea of the "perfect" government - left or right - and retrain our brain to look only at the facts, to rethink our lives as independent individuals -and fast.
With characteristic tenacity, John Stossel outlines and exposes the fallacies and facts of the most pressing issues of today's social and political climate - and shows how our intuitions about them are, frankly, wrong:
- The unreliable marriage between big business, the media, and unions
- The myth of tax breaks and the ignorance of their advocates
- Why "central planners" never create more jobs and how government never really will
- Why free trade works - without government interference
- Federal regulations and the trouble they create for consumers
- The harm caused to the disabled by government protection of the disabled
- The problems (social and economic) generated by minimum-wage laws
- The destructive daydreams of "health insurance for everyone"
- Bad food vs. good food and the government
- Intrusive, unwelcome nanny sensibilities
- The dumbing down of public education and teachers' unions
- How gun control actually increases crime
. . . and more myth-busting realities of why the American people must wrest our lives back from a government stranglehold.
Stossel also reveals how his unyielding desire to educate the public with the truth caused an irreparable rift with ABC (nobody wanted to hear the point-by-point facts of ObamaCare), and why he ...