Here's the official book summary:
Is the Government Legally Killing Us? represents Scott Schara’s relentless search for the truth after the death of his daughter, Grace Schara, in a Wisconsin hospital. Framed as both a
legal and moral reckoning, Schara draws on court filings, regulatory history, and firsthand experience to uncover an agenda that you have to be sitting down to believe. It establishes that the medical system we’ve been programmed to trust is killing us and that the legal system protects the guilty—what the author calls “the crime of the millennium.”
Through rigorous analysis and the lens of Scripture, Schara exposes the spiritual and
societal implications of state-sanctioned harm that isn’t simply negligence, but a systemic inversion of justice, accountability, and medical ethics. He walks the reader through the anatomy of a system that claims “science” and “safety” while operating under policies and incentives that reward compliance, punish dissent, and shield wrongdoing behind layers of bureaucracy and thoroughly documents how protocols and institutional policy frame actions that would otherwise be unthinkable as
necessary, justified, and untouchable.
This isn’t merely a personal story nor is it a grievance against one hospital or one set of administrators. It’s a forensic examination of how modern medicine, regulatory capture, legal immunity, and institutional self-protection converge—especially in moments of crisis—to create a system where the public isn’t informed, harms are silenced, and accountability is
obstructed.
This book is for the parent who wants to understand what can happen inside a hospital when you’re not in control, the citizen who still believes the courts exist to protect the innocent, and anyone who’s watched the last several years unfold and wondered: How is this legal? And why is no one stopping it?
Ultimately, Is the Government Legally Killing Us? is a battle over truth, conscience, and the value of human life. Schara makes the case that what’s being normalized isn’t simply malpractice, but an inversion of ethics so all-encompassing that it can only be described as a form of institutionalized evil that’s packaged as professionalism, policy, and public health.
This is a difficult
book. But reading it will help awaken you, protect you and your family, and guide you to the only way out of this mess.