The Five Thousand Year Leap boldly claims that America’s founding unleashed a revolutionary 5,000-year advance in human freedom, technology, and prosperity after millennia of stagnation—from ancient Babylon’s stick plows and bloodletting medicine to Jamestown’s similar hardships. Author W. Cleon Skousen attributes this “leap” to 28 foundational principles drawn from the Founders’ synthesis of Judeo-Christian ethics, natural law, and classical wisdom, including that only virtuous people sustain good government, equal rights (not outcomes) are divine, and private property is sacred. Key ideas emphasize limited government to protect life, liberty, and property; separation of powers to curb tyranny; and sound money, free enterprise, and education to fuel progress. Skousen warns that abandoning these—through debt, centralization, or moral decay—invites “soft despotism” and reverse progress, echoing the Founders’ fears of complacency eroding liberty. The book portrays America as a divine experiment in self-rule, not a perpetual machine but a conditional framework demanding vigilance. This inspiring manifesto challenges: if these principles propelled unprecedented advancement, why have we strayed, and can rediscovering them restore the leap? A must-listen for anyone questioning America’s path and seeking timeless wisdom on liberty’s foundations.
The Myth of the Robber Barons: A New Look at the Rise of Big Business in America
The Myth of the Robber Barons dismantles the long-held narrative that America’s Gilded Age titans like Vanderbilt, Rockefeller, and Carnegie were ruthless villains exploiting workers and crushing competition. Historian Burton Folsom distinguishes between “market entrepreneurs,” who innovated to lower prices and create value (e.g., Vanderbilt slashing steamship fares by 90% through efficiency), and “political entrepreneurs,” who relied on government subsidies and failed spectacularly (e.g., Collins’ subsidized lines collapsing). Market giants like James J. Hill built superior railroads without handouts, outlasting wasteful, corrupt subsidized rivals, while Carnegie and Rockefeller revolutionized steel and oil by focusing on quality and cost-cutting. Folsom argues true capitalism thrives on voluntary cooperation and consumer service, not cronyism, where political favors breed inefficiency and higher costs for all. This distinction reveals how the “robber baron” label smears innovators while ignoring real parasites using state power. The book warns that today’s crony capitalism echoes those failures, urging a return to free-market principles for genuine progress. Provocative and eye-opening, it challenges: in an era of bailouts and regulations, are we rewarding true creators or just modern political entrepreneurs?



