<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>This book explains how repressive foreign policies can boomerang back home, reshaping domestic affairs. The authors illustrate this startling pattern through four developments in the United States: the rise of government surveillance, the militarization of police, the expanding use of drones, and torture in U.S. prisons.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>This book explains how repressive foreign policies can "boomerang" back home, reshaping domestic affairs. The authors illustrate this startling pattern through four developments in the United States: the rise of government surveillance, the militarization of police, the expanding use of drones, and torture in U.S. prisons.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><i>Tyranny Comes Home</i> argues that a nation cannot act brutally in the world and still respect the rights and liberties of its own people. It is a wonderfully insightful look at the connections between the violence of American foreign policy and our shrinking democracy at home.--Stephen Kinzer "Watson Institute, Brown University, Columnist, <i>The Boston Globe</i>, and author of <i>The True Flag</i>"<br><br>A number of America's founding fathers expressed the view that foreign military ventures would come at a high cost. In <i>Tyranny Comes Home</i>, Christopher J. Coyne and Abigail R. Hall put this warning to the test: How have America's wars of choice and its colonial experiments affected the homeland and the power of the presidency? And what does economic theory have to say about the transformation from state to empire? Their analysis makes for an engrossing read, a remarkably demonstration of the foresight that went into the Constitution, and a stark depiction of the dangers that it faces today.--Scott Horton "Contributing Editor, <i>Harper's Magazine</i>"<br><br>America's disastrous wars have taken a horrendous toll. Yet, Christopher J. Coyne and Abigail R. Hall powerfully demonstrate that the costs are even higher than we have recognized. <i>Tyranny Comes Home</i> is a brilliant and important book that transcends partisanship. The authors' call for anti-militarism and patriotism built on a critical attitude towards the security state can help to rescue America's democracy.--Jeffrey D. Sachs, Center for Sustainable Development "Columbia University"<br><br>An adept and engaging examination of the processes by which militaristic policy abroad can lead to the loss of civil liberties at home.--John Mueller "Ohio State University and Cato Institute"<br><br>An old German saying claims that losing a war is bad, but winning a war is worse. Coyne and Hall document one way in which that is the case: the architecture of social control created by militarism is easily adapted to domestic life. <i>Tyranny Comes Home</i> illustrates this phenomena in the United States, while offering a path to reclaiming the 'Great Republic.'--Michael Munger "Duke University"<br><br>Anyone who believes that decades of thoughtless military interventionism have enhanced America's well-being needs to read <i>Tyranny Comes Home</i>. Coyne and Hall deftly show how incessant foreign meddling undermines the very domestic freedoms it is intended to preserve. A powerful, original indictment of America's warrior state ideology.--Michael J. Glennon "author of <i>National Security and Double Government</i>"<br><br>Christopher J. Coyne and Abigail R. Hall have built a highly original and penetrating argument on a neglected topic that demands attention in the age of endless war. Their thorough analysis, understanding of history, and fresh correlations are insightful and a pleasure to read. We need more of this kind of creative bridge building.--John Tirman "MIT Center for International Studies"<br><br>Clearly and boldly argued, this is an excellent contribution to our understanding of the economics of interventionism.--Joshua Hall "West Virginia University, and coauthor of <i>Economic Freedom of the World</i> Report"<br><br>Coyne and Hall brilliantly reveal that a fatal coarsening comes with the rise of an empire. One can only respond with the cant phrase, heard often in these latter days, which would be better applied to peaceful, intellectual exchanges than to the corrupting enterprise of foreign intervention: 'Thank you for your service.'--Deirdre Nansen McCloskey "University of Illinois at Chicago"<br><br>Coyne's and Hall's book is a great, conceptually holistic investigation into how the state can threaten our liberty. Economists regularly recognize the unintended consequences of domestic policy; Coyne and Hall have explained the unintended consequences of foreign policy, and their costs.--Jerrod A. Laber, <i>The American Conservative</i><br><br>Many people believe that U.S. 'peacekeeping' efforts abroad help to protect American civil liberties at home. Coyne and Hall show just how mistaken that view is. I know of no other work that makes such a clear connection between foreign intervention and the erosion of domestic civil liberties.--Randall Holcombe "Florida State University"<br><br>This is an important and provocative exploration of an overlooked cost of militaristic foreign policy: domestic freedom. This well-researched and lively book is a must read for those concerned with the preservation of individual liberty and the perils of permanent war.-- Daniel Ellsberg, author of <i>Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers</i> and <i>The Doomsday Machine: Confessions of a Nuclear War Planner</i><br><br>This was an excellent expository text that I do believe was one of the most educational I have read in some time, and I thoroughly recommend it to students and practitioners of foreign policy, international relations, intelligence studies and strategic studies.--Courtney J. O'Connor "<i>London School of Economics Review of Books</i>"<br><br>Using cases ranging from militarizing police, using drones for surveillance, and exercising elements of torture in American prisons, Coyne and Hall lend an economic lens to their research to show how foreign interventions and domestic policy decisions are becoming increasingly intertwined--in their eyes at a significant cost to the American public....[T]he authors raise questions about how a country can act violently throughout the world while still claiming to respect the liberties and rights of its own citizens.--W. Miller "<i>Choice</i>"<br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><b>Christopher J. Coyne</b> is Associate Professor of Economics at George Mason University and Associate Director of the F. A. Hayek Program for Advanced Study in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics at the Mercatus Center. He is the author of <i>Doing Bad by Doing Good: Why Humanitarian Action Fails</i> (Stanford, 2013) and <i>After War: The Political Economy of Exporting Democracy</i> (Stanford, 2008). <b>Abigail R. Hall</b> is Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of Tampa.
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