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The End Is Near and It's Going to Be Awesome: How Going Broke Will Leave America Richer, Happier, and More Secure
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The End Is Near and It's Going to Be Awesome: How Going Broke Will Leave America Richer, Happier, and More Secure

3.96  ·  Rating details ·  310 ratings  ·  59 reviews
In The End Is Near and Its Going to Be Awesome, Kevin Williamson, a National Review Online contributor, makes the bold argument that the United States government is disintegratingand that it is a good thing!

Williamson offers a radical re-envisioning of government, a powerful analysis of why it doesnt work, and an exploration of the innovative solutions to various social
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ebook, 240 pages
Published May 7th 2013 by Broadside e-books
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Average rating 3.96  · 
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David Shane
May 11, 2013 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
This is quite a good book - and probably the closest thing to anarchist literature I will ever say that about. The book isn't subdivided this way, but I felt like it went through roughly three movements.

1. Why politics is bad.
2. How politics is failing.
3. What we can do about it.

The arguments made under heading #1 will seem quite familiar to many. First, much of the world around us is simply too complicated to be planned by a few people on high - the recently resurrected "I, Pencil" (
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Patrick Peterson
Nov. 2016 - Very interesting book, especially in light of the lightning fast attack and firing that happened to him at The Atlantic, shortly after he was hired there.

The author is a journalist and I bought the book after hearing him speak (a year or more before the Atlantic debacle). His talk was not the greatest - he did not seem to really enjoy being there and giving a lecture, at least in the beginning, he did warm up a bit later. But his approach to issues, his bias toward or personal
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Douglas Wilson
May 19, 2013 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: politics
Enjoyed this one very much. As one economist put it, anything that can't go on indefinitely, won't.
Todd N
Jul 14, 2013 rated it really liked it
Recommends it for: people who are easily excited

I was visiting my parents and flipping channels in the guest room when I saw this author speak on CSPAN-2. I was intrigued by his talk, so I downloaded and read the book on the strength of that. I'm always up for some nutty libertarianism.

The gist of this book is that government will eventually collapse under the weight of its own obligations (social security, pensions, Medicare, Obamacare). But don't worry about this because government will be replaced with a much smaller government and America
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Russ
May 22, 2013 rated it really liked it
Kevin Williamson has written a political treatise for the 21st century. Teachers, politicians, law enforcement officers and other government employee should avoid this book. You are rightly portrayed as obstacles to a more inclusive and productive society. The first part of the book lays out a foundation for a better system of government. It is not political in the sense of Republicans, Democrats or even Libertarians. Instead, he recognizes the boundary between a less intrusive government and ...more
Krista
Aug 12, 2013 rated it liked it
Shelves: nonfiction, 2013
My 15 year old daughter said to me the other day that she had read an article online that stated if the minimum wage in the US was raised to $15/hr, there would be far less poverty and a more equal distribution of wealth from the rich to the poor. Being cynical by nature, I explained to her that if the Fry Cooks at McDonald's were making $15/hr, a Big Mac would soon cost $9 and this would disproportionately affect the lower income families who might eat out at the chain; the bottom line is, the ...more
Taylodl
Jun 17, 2013 rated it did not like it  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: politics
As a Libertarian I'm wary of those who play with data to make their point. Mr. Williamson's analysis are trite and quite flimsy. For example he claims the amount owed in entitlements is more than all the material wealth in the world. This is a true statement. He follows up that if a family were to invest 10% of their income at 5% rate of return then they will exceed the amount they would have received in entitlements and they could bequeath it to their heirs. Really? Somehow this investment in ...more
Don Incognito
Interesting, but relatively disappointing. Kevin Williamson's thoughts on the state of America and the possible future are much more analytical than prescriptive or predictive; that is, his explanation of what politics really is about is much substantive and deep than the ideas he offers on what the future American society, economy and governmental structures will be like after--as he obviously accepts as a given--the American economy and government collapse after going broke.

Very quotable.

The
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John
Jul 16, 2013 rated it really liked it
Kevin D. Williamson is, for a Gloomy Gus, rather unfashionably upbeat. I recently read Mark Steyn's "After America" which, while trenchant and darkly funny, was resolutely downbeat about the future of the USA. I liked that Williamson saw a light at the end of the tunnel, citing America's long tradition of mutual aid societies like the Elks and the Masons and help from extended families as a possible way forward when the federal government collapses under its own weight.

Local is always more
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Frank Roberts
May 04, 2013 rated it it was amazing
Smart, funny, and highly recommended reading for everyone.

This book was not what I expected. Williamson explains why politics is a poor provider of health insurance, education, and other public goods, and discusses alternative ways that people can freely associate together to provide those things, especially in light of new information technologies. Essentially, this book is a libertarian manifesto for America's future, after "the end." The only problem is that Williamson gives no suggestion how
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Amy
May 30, 2013 rated it really liked it
I really enjoyed this book. Even if you are not a political/economics geek you should read it for a fresh look at the intersection of politics and economics and what our "choices" will be when the country's overwhelming overspending comes crashing to a halt.
Daniel Manske
Aug 03, 2013 rated it it was amazing
Just reviewed a part of this book related to Medicare and our healthcare system in general. I've copied some pages worth reading, here as well as Facebook since Facebook will probably delete or edit my post:
CHAPTER 5

Health Care Is a Pencil
The Buddhas teachings were founded on the awareness of the three impediments of old age, sickness, and death. The Enlightened One, if he had meditated on it, would not necessarily have rejected a technical solution.
MICHEL HOUELLEBECQ, THE ELEMENTARY PARTICLES

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Ari
Feb 21, 2019 rated it it was ok  ·  review of another edition
I'm fond of Williamson, but this book disappointed. It largely summarizes standard libertarian talking points., without any particularly deep analysis at any point. I would have hoped in a book-length work the author would engage more thoughtfully with all the obvious points against.

See my highlights for examples and details.
Paul Bassett
Sep 29, 2013 rated it it was ok
A Review: The End Is Near and It's Going to Be Awesome: How Going Broke Will Leave America Richer, Happier, and More Secure by Kevin D. Williamson

This book came to my attention when I heard the author being interviewed on the radio. The title intrigued me and he seemed an erudite enough fellow so I was persuaded to purchase his work. I am glad to have learned from the more interesting parts of this book but will have to give it an overall poor rating
.
Lets begin with what I found to be positive
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Matthew
Jan 22, 2014 rated it really liked it
Recommends it for: Armchair Economists
Shelves: politics
First, the good. Kevin D. Williamson has written an accessible, insightful book on politics and economics and how if we could free the latter from the former we would all be better off.

He starts by laying out the basic argument that government is a form of coercion hardly different from a mafia-style protection racket and that the so-called "social contract" is one of the only binding contracts for which consent is not required. He adeptly explains why this form of providing goods and services
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Karl
Jul 31, 2013 rated it really liked it
Kevin Williamson is one of my favorite bloggers on the National Review Online site. He focuses on one of my main worries--the horrible expanding deficit--and provides useful facts and analysis. So when he came out with a book (The End Is Near And It's Going To Be Awesome) I was immediately interested. I read the Kindle sample, liked it, and bought the whole thing.

Now I've finished it and I'm very disappointed. The book has three main points:
1. There's no way the US government can keep the
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Charles Berteau
Jul 21, 2014 rated it it was amazing
I doubt that anyone who does not fancy themselves a libertarian, or at least is not willing to contemplate a philosophy of minimal government interference (in all domains: economic, social, etc), would like this book as much as I did.

But I wish those people would choose to read it anyway, because it presents a strong case for: (a) a libertarian philosophy; and (b) the inevitability that government WILL shrink, because we can't afford for it to do otherwise, at some point.

Much of the book is
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Curtis Edmonds
May 06, 2013 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
I think that the book can be summarized more in terms of the first four words of its title than it can be by the rest of it. Is the end near? Well, the end has already happened in Detroit, which filed for bankruptcy--in part because it could not pay its bills, but in large part because it could not raise the taxes needed to pay its bills. Williamson argues that governments fail because they don't have enough information to be responsive to consumer needs, the way that big businesses are. (Not ...more
E
May 25, 2014 rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Accepting the premise that the United States is going to go broke sooner rather than later, causing it to default on many of its obligations, this book examines how other entities beside the federal government could do a better job of accomplishing the tasks that a insolvent government couldn't.

He begins by pointing out a simple fact: the difference between government and the Mafia is littler than you think. Both enforce their diktats ultimately at the endpoint of a gun. Both assumed power
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Sarah
May 16, 2013 rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Politics is broken. But you knew that. If you think about politics or follow politics or look at politics out of the corner of your eye, you might have gotten the impression that finding the right politics will somehow fix things, for various values of "fix" and "things." Williamson is here to say, "Not so much."

Not only is politics broken, Williamson writes, but the system and moreover, the metasystem, is broken and incapable if being fixed. Politics cannot learn and therefore will always do
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Kevin Pace
Jun 24, 2013 rated it it was amazing
An incredibly sagacious book which from the very beginning wants to rack your brain with the question, "Just what do we need a government for anyways?" Williamson is by no means an anarchist but someone who wants people everywhere to sit back and think about why things are the way they are, and just how much better they would be if we just took care of our problems ourselves.

Regarding the title, Williamson is speaking primarily of the Social Security and Medicare systems whose combined
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Jacob
Jan 04, 2014 rated it liked it
2.5 stars, barely edging up to 3. If the book had delivered on what the title promised, it could well have been 4. They key promise of the title is "How", showing us how the end might come and how things might turn out better afterwards. Instead of that, we get long diatribes about why current systems are broken and descriptions of what *should* be done instead, presumably arising naturally somehow from the end. Although some effort is made to remain party neutral in these solutions, they are ...more
Tim Gordon
Mar 23, 2016 rated it liked it
I enjoy reading Williamson's work, even though he often takes a bit of a condescending look at the opposition. He's also got a pretty good sense of humor to go along with that. I suppose that's something you have to develop as a defense mechanism when you get the same unfounded insults hurled at you again and again.

The last book I read from Williamson was about the failing of Socialism, kind of a Socialism 101. This one is designed more as to why Classical Liberalism is pretty darn decent.

His
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Jonathan Palfrey
May 12, 2013 rated it really liked it
This very readable and persuasive book makes a case that the provision of various services to the public by governments in general (and the US government in particular) is not merely inefficient, incompetent, and undesirable; but is destined to be drastically curtailed fairly soon, as these services become unsustainable.

The author believes this will be a Good Thing in the long run, because those services can then be provided in better ways.

He's pretty good at describing the awfulness of the
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Jamie
Nov 17, 2016 rated it liked it
Recommends it for: political junkies (particularly conservatives)
Shelves: political, prophetic
A good number of ideas, mostly conservative (i.e., free market, non-governmental) solutions to existing problems: health care, social security, education, and other things that have too much government interference are getting more expensive to the point of being unsustainable and less accessible to all but the elite (even while hi-tech items get cheaper and more egalitarian by the year). Indeed, it will be most interesting to see, not just *if* these doomsday scenarios (as the title implies) ...more
Kevin Baker
Jul 08, 2013 rated it really liked it
The End is Near is an interesting book, written for popular consumption. It contained quite a bit of information I was unaware of, such as an early purpose of fraternal orders such as the Elks to provide a form of medical insurance for their members prior to WWII, or the percentage of public school teachers in large urban areas who prefer to put their own children into private schools. My only disappointment was in Williamson's conclusions, which, to be honest, I expected going into the book.

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Lee Ann
Aug 10, 2013 rated it really liked it
Just finished a great book called The End is Near and It's Going to be Awesome by Kevin D. Williamson. You should check it out. It DID help me to look at things from a third perspective - not left or right, very much Constitutionally, but with ideas that need to be brought forward. We need to work harder to present these and other options - because lets face it - the Republican party has become Democrat Light. They have revealed themselves to be just as BIG GOVERNMENT as the other side. ...more
Erin
Yuck. This book is just rubbish. My favorite passage about libraries below from pgs. 90-91:

"Privately funded and volunteer-staffed public libraries were the norm fro many years, from magnificent ones such as the New York Public Library... to modest ones throughout suburbs and small towns across the country. At the apogee of WASP society-lady culture, volunteering at the local library was practically a rite of passage, an entrée into more prestigious charitable work... Somehow, as library budgets
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Denise
Sep 23, 2015 rated it liked it
Williamson is one of my favorite columnists because he's smart, he knows a lot, and when he makes a point he uses a rapier. This book is full of content (the unfunded liabilities of the US are greater than all the wealth IN THE WORLD, the MEDIAN income in the Fabulous Fifties was $10,000 in today's dollars) and full of good stories and I wish I could get some of my nearest and dearest to read it, but like most people he's better at seeing the flaws in things than coming up with alternate ...more
Greg
Jun 11, 2013 rated it liked it
Shelves: poli-sci
Kevin Williamson's book establishes the failures of the welfare state as we know it, but fully underestimates the way the collapse of the welfare state will play out. His idea that a libertarian smaller state will emerge is totally flawed. Instead an authoritarian dystopia is what is likely to happen with falling standards of living, generations pitted against one another, and perhaps violence between rent-seeking groups fighting over a shrinking pie. There are some interesting policy ...more
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Kevin D. Williamson is National Review's roving correspondent. He is the author of The End Is Near and It's Going To Be Awesome: How Going Broke Will Leave America Richer, Happier, and More Secure, The Dependency Agenda, and The Politically Incorrect Guide to Socialism, and contributed chapters to The New Leviathan: The State Vs. the Individual in the 21st Century and Future Tense: Lessons of ...more

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