Disabling America : The Unintended Consequences of the Government's Protection of the Handicapped
(2012)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : HarperCollins Christian Publishing, 2012
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource (252 pages)

ISBN/ISSN
9781418565367 MWT15804813, 1418565369 15804813
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Despite what many politicians would like you to believe, the Americans with Disabilities Act is a travesty of government regulation-it actually harms businesses, taxpayers, and, ironically, the people it's supposed to help: disabled Americans. In fact, it is such a disaster that Greg Perry, a man who himself was born disabled, declares in this eye-opening book, "I am so very grateful that I was born long before the ADA was put into law." Feisty and frank, Perry exposes the dangerous consequences of this supposedly compassionate law and shows through personal accounts and sobering statistics that quality of public life for the disabled hasn't been improved since the ADA was signed into law; instead, the liberties of all Americans have been diminished considerably. Citing alarming, outrageous examples of frivolous lawsuits, unnecessary reliance on government intervention, reams of bureaucratic red tape, and stifled economic growth for all, Perry boldly contends that the Americans with Disabilities Act has fostered a culture of dependence, dangerously convincing many people that they can't make it without the government's help. Told with the passion and conviction of a man who has seen firsthand the many ways such intrusive government threatens our freedom, this book finally exposes how the ADA is a legislative disaster that, in effect, disables all Americans

Mode of access: World Wide Web

Additional Credits