Tyranny of the Mind: Self-Rule and the Common American Uprising

Category: Non-Fiction - Government/Politics
Author: Julie A. Fragoules
Publisher: Xaos Publishing
Publication Date: September 23, 2024
Number of Pages: 416
ISBN-10: 0998740373
ISBN-13: 978-0998740379

Julie A. Fragoules’s Tyranny of the Mind: Self-Rule & The Common American Uprising is a sweeping, heavily documented treatise arguing that the United States is surrendering its founding ethos of individual liberty to a new, secular authoritarianism. Interweaving her immigrant family’s story with millennia of Western history, Fragoules traces how religious and state tyrannies—from the Roman Inquisition to feudal Europe—were rejected by the Enlightenment and America’s founders, who built a constitutional republic on liberty of conscience and limited government. She contends that this legacy is now under siege by a modern “progressive globalism” that functions like a state religion, enforcing conformity through censorship, bureaucratic overreach, and what she calls ideological “Tyranny of the Mind.”

The book discusses the eternal struggle between self-rule and domination. Fragoules insists that the true political spectrum is not left versus right, but liberty versus tyranny, and that modern collectivism, climate ideology, and pandemic mandates represent a dangerous leftward lurch into totalitarian control. She rigorously underlines the founders’ original intent—citing extensive primary sources from Jefferson, Madison, and Washington—to show that the separation of church and state was meant to prevent any dogmatic establishment, secular or sacred, from capturing civil power. She further argues that today’s elites have replaced the divine right of kings with an unelected “expert” class that fundamentally despises the common American’s capacity for self-governance. This class manipulates language, institutions, and even elections to consolidate control.

Julie A. Fragoules’s voice is passionate and erudite, and the writing is layered with historical block quotations and primary documents that give the book a scholarly character. The book is timely, and it channels post-pandemic anxieties about censorship, deep-state corruption, and populist uprising into an urgent manifesto. Whether read as history or polemic, Tyranny of the Mind arrives at a moment when debates over freedom, authority, and national identity have reached fever pitch, making it a lightning rod for Americans who believe the republic’s original promise is slipping away. You’ll understand the manipulation, the control, and why the elite succeed in controlling so much power while treating millions of Americans as gullible. It is one of the best political commentaries about contemporary America that I have read in ages. 

Reviewed By: Cristina Prescott

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Date: June 25, 2026

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