Fabian Freeway
$10.00
What if America’s drift toward collectivism was planned? Fabian Freeway: High Road to Socialism in the U.S.A. exposes how Britain’s Fabian Society exported its slow-motion revolution to America. Rose L. Martin traces its hidden networks — from Turtle Bay salons to Washington offices — naming the groups and operatives who disguised Socialist designs as “liberal reform.” Backed by official records, rosters, and congressional data, the book now includes an updated foreword by Joe Wolverton, II, J.D., reaffirming its relevance in the modern ideological struggle.
Description
They called it progress; Rose L. Martin called it design. Fabian Freeway uncovers how British Fabian Socialism — respectable, patient, and perilously effective — migrated into the bloodstream of American politics. Its motto, festina lente (“make haste slowly”), became the guiding tactic of men who reshaped policy from behind desks, not barricades. With documentation drawn from Fabian pamphlets, membership rolls, and congressional records, Martin reconstructs the route from London parlors to Washington’s policy cores. This new edition includes an updated foreword by Joe Wolverton, II, J.D., whose commentary situates Martin’s findings in today’s accelerating technocratic and globalist environment.
Part I maps the British genesis: a modest society that quietly seized ministries, the Labour Party, and the language of reform. Martin shows how George Bernard Shaw, Sidney Webb, and their heirs normalized state control in the name of benevolence — laying blueprints later echoed in America’s academic and bureaucratic circles. Her evidence runs through Fabian Research Series reports and official Cabinet rosters showing the Society’s penetration of postwar government.
Part II follows the American adoption. Under new names — the League for Industrial Democracy, Americans for Democratic Action, ACLU — Fabian methodology crossed the Atlantic. Martin demonstrates how its adherents avoided open Socialist declarations while steering policy through executive decrees, administrative expansion, and court reinterpretations. Federal payroll data, foundation funding trails, and published ADA rosters become her proof. Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr.’s “process of backing into Socialism” serves as both metaphor and admission.
Martin’s synthesis is neither rumor nor rhetoric — it’s documentation. She links committee reports, grant ledgers, and personal correspondence to a coherent pattern: Socialism softens the ground, Communism seizes it. The result is not theory but timeline, how cultural influence prepared political control. Wolverton’s new foreword underscores this continuity, warning that the same Fabian patience now operates through supranational and “sustainable” frameworks that echo the old gradualist creed.
For readers who value constitutional liberty, this edition is both exposé and alarm bell. It names the architects, decodes the method, and offers a clear choice between drift and defense. Fabian Freeway remains the map of that hidden highway and lights the next mile marker. (2025ed, 582pp, pb)
You may also like…
-
The Federalist
Price range: $9.99 through $25.99 Select options This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page -
How The Communist Manifesto Threatens Our Freedom Today
Price range: $2.99 through $9.95 Select options This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page -
The Communist Manifesto
Price range: $0.99 through $9.95 Select options This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page