"Of course I don't agree with it 100% (specifically the obscenities, the Marxist anti-banker, anti-Federalist, pro-IRA, and [especially] anti-Israel bias, as well as his being an atheist, which renders all his causes groundless). But no cracker can read it without feeling exactly the same righteous rage that all members of victimized groups do when awakened for the first time."
I felt the same, I disagreed with him on some things, but there was so much good in it, and it is something of a one of a kind.
Absolutely. I wish more people would read it.
The thing is, as a Theonomic Positivist I reject the idea of any morality independent of G-d, and Goad makes it clear (in between all his righteous indignation) that he is an atheist and doesn't know why he's here. The whole problem with the Left is that it doesn't know why we're here but still insists on imposing a non-Theistic moral code on the world.
When I say that the book is anti-Israel, I don't mean it is flagrantly so, but Goad obviously considers the Palestinians (along with the Irish) as victims rather than beneficiaries of political correctness, which requires the Israelis (and the British) to be portrayed as villains. He's also extremely naive to see a connection between the Irish Catholics decimated by Cromwell and the white Protestants of the American Heartland. America's Irish Catholics are an urban historically liberal community and they have historically been quite hostile to the people Goad is championing.
Goad's attacking the fractional reserve banking system while simultaneously advocating the US government "circumvent" the "central bankers" by printing paper money backed by absolutely nothing whatsoever is a bit of stupidity a great many "palaeos" share, for some crazy reason.