Thought Choice Power pulled me in harder than I expected from a political philosophy book. But Plebeius writes with genuine urgency, and that urgency is contagious.
The argument builds carefully from historical foundations — Aristotle to Eisenhower, with Madison and the Roosevelts doing significant work along the way — toward a present-tense argument about concentrated power, democratic erosion, and the specific responsibility of ordinary citizens to do something about it.
The book closes with a line that stopped me cold: “I am Plebeius. And, like it or not, I suspect you are too.” Yeah. That hit.
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