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by Mark A. Monoscalco (Author)
Some ideas are forbidden not because they are false-but because they threaten the foundations of power.
A foreword by Dr. Ron Paul sets the tone. Drawing on political philosophy, natural law, economics, and history, Mark A. Monoscalco presents a rigorous yet accessible defense of individual liberty grounded in consent, moral agency, and voluntary cooperation. Rather than framing individual liberty as merely a policy preference or cultural slogan, this book argues that it is a moral necessity for any just society.
Unlike conventional political books that argue about what government should do, The Forbidden Idea examines whether government has the moral right to do it at all.
Most discussions of individual liberty stop at policy. This one begins with first principles.
This book explains why societies built on coercion, even when well-intentioned, inevitably undermine both prosperity and human dignity. You will be invited to rethink what individual liberty actually requires and what is lost when it is compromised.
The Forbidden Idea is written for readers who are new to the philosophy and history of individual liberty. This book will also resonate with readers of The Law, The Road to Serfdom, and The Ethics of Liberty.
This is not a call to outrage. It is a call to clarity-about what individual liberty truly requires, what coercion destroys, and why the belief that human beings are not owned remains the most dangerous idea in politics.
If you are ready to understand individual liberty not as a slogan but as a coherent moral philosophy, The Forbidden Idea will permanently change how you see power, society, government, and yourself.