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| Molon Labe! | 
enlarge | Authors: Boston T. Party, Kenneth W. Royce Publisher: Javelin Press Category: Book
List Price: $27.00 Buy New: $17.82 You Save: $9.18 (34%)
New (15) Used (4) from $17.82
Avg. Customer Rating: 56 reviews Sales Rank: 41052
Media: Paperback Pages: 454 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 8.4 x 5.5 x 1.1
ISBN: 1888766077 Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9781888766073 ASIN: 1888766077
Publication Date: January 30, 2004 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Product Description After a decade of retaking their stolen freedoms, the people of Wyoming (many of them newcomers) are forced to finally confront their jealous masters in the U.S. Government. Can a lone, courageous state successfully resist federal tyranny, or has the Bill of Rights been reduced to a myth? Can an allegedly free people act free, or is our liberty just a 4th of July farce? These issues weigh heavily on the shoulders of Governor James Wayne Preston, a decorated Desert Storm Marine helo pilot. Elected in 2014 on the Laissez-Faire Party ticket, he enjoys nearly full support of the legislature to return Wyoming to a long-lost era of liberty. But how far can he and the people of his state go before Washington, D.C. feels compelled to act? Will Wyoming's free and independent course reach actual secession? Will President Melvin Connor suppress the maverick Western state with federal troops? Will anybody come to Wyoming's aid? Molon Labe! is a fictional account of a real-world blueprint for a free state initiative focused on Wyoming. If enough freedom-loving individuals will relocate there under a useful pattern, they can "liberate" the Cowboy State on many levels. In Wyoming we could truly enjoy our rights of gun ownership, privacy, schooling, health and diet, unrestricted travel, and property. Boston shows us how it actually can be done!
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| Customer Reviews: Read 51 more reviews...
Alas Liberty November 22, 2008 It is refreshing to see someone who cares about their liberty and freedom. This book is not just a good read (for i could not put it down and now it is much worse for wear) but a great inspiration and tribute to true patriotism in its greatest form. I want to thank Boston for writting something that reminds us we have a voice and that if we try we can be loud enough to cause an earthquake!
First rate gun fiction! September 28, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
A solid story with excellent factoids placed through out the novel.
Anti-gunners and Euro weenies hate this book, so buy an extra one to loan for a friend to help spread the word.
This Aint no novel August 30, 2008 1 out of 8 found this review helpful
This is barely a novel, propaganda lazyly disguised in a story. The story is Boring most of the time, I'm not an American and this book is for gun crazed Americans, I think I'll leave it to them
Live free or die August 15, 2008 What a fun novel - every 2nd Amendment supporter's dream come true. I read it twice through, back to back. In two days. Ten stars for Ken Royce!
The premise of the novel is that Libertarians, especially those who recognize that freedom can only be maintained when citizens can match the force (firepower) of government, a truth first learned at Runnymede and relearned many times there after. Unfortunately, there are few Americans with the courage of their convictions, and Wyoming, where I was resident from '68 to '98, and where this novel takes place, is a tough row to hoe for most Americans, who are now soft, flabby, and totally dependent on the welfare state, government handouts, and accepting of intrusion into their personal affairs.
At times, the novel is a bit preachy. I suspect this is on purpose. The novel is laced with historical quotes (and fictional quotes) whose sole purpose is to remind the reader of where our nation once stood, where it stood in the great march of time. This would be a great "text book" novel for high schools to use in their English classes, except that I doubt many HS teachers would be able to come to terms with our nation's actual history, the philosophy which supported our nation's creation, and many of the historical practices of our country, which have died out in the past 50 years.
Some reviewers have noted that this is a blueprint for regaining our freedoms. A quick check of Free State Wyoming shows that somewhere around 1,000 Americans have decided that the goal of restoring our freedoms is worthwhile, and have moved to Wyoming (or shortly will). That's 1,000 out of 300,000,000. That figure truly mocks our National Anthem's final phrase, "Home of the free, and the land of the brave."
Read the book, make sure you call your local library and they have it on the shelf (most don't), and ask book sellers to stock it as well.
Most eye opening and a must read for all citizens (as a balance) August 3, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I wasn't sure how to pronouce the title, until most of the way through (if their was an earlier reference than page 355 then I missed it) Despite my mis-pronounciation (as I told many about the book) for most of the couple months reading, I thought it eye opening. At first it was difficult to distinquish fact (those things I checked out were factual) from the story, but I soon found it free flowing (After the first 100-150 pages and unlike this review;). This book should be a must read for all, as it helps balance all the pro-United States messages we receive through our lives. There is so much information in this book you will have to re-read to fully appreciate and understand. Ken (if I may call you), you really did do an excellent job incorporating fact and novel story along with much wisdom in quotes from those key historical figures from this country. I really did get entangled in the story and hope that (for the most part) such a place could exist for those that have a better understanding of freedom. THIS BOOK WILL TEACH YOU MUCH. You don't have to accept everything, but you will accept most (after through investigation).
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