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Col. Edward Mandell House tried to remain anonymous, but eventually his vision of America, as represented in his novel "Philip Dru: Administrator" became known. Why anonymous? Perhaps because it conveyed precisely what one of his critics said, "Suffice it to know Philip Dru is an autobiography of the colonel himself and solves the conundrum how to get rid of the Constitution." Given House's close working relationship with President Woodrow Wilson and Wilson's own strained relationship with the foundational document of the country, bravely testifying to one's actual views is manifestly politically unwise. Especially when that vision cheers on a progressive-led civil war in America to root out and destroy completely the rugged 'reactionary' revolutionists preventing the arrival of The Administrative State: Utopia. In view of continued progressive disdain for ordinary Americans and the Constitution--which stands in their way today, as it stood in Wilson's way--"Philip Dru: Administrator" provides an important glimpse into the Bureaucratic mind, free from constraints, and allowed to dream big. May it never be free from constraints.
After World War II, investigations were made and trials were held. Today, the most well known of these were the Nuremberg "Doctor's Trial", which probed the various euthanasia programs carried out by the defeated Germans. However, there were other trials, no less important and of continued historic interest, which explored and documented how and why the Nazi's acquired and applied their power. In these trials, "The Nuremberg Trials" men like Wilhelm Goering, Rudolf Hess, and Karl Doenitz, were prosecuted. The generated documents and testimony were then collated by the US Government into a set of publications called "Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression", which were also called "The Red Series" (named after the color of the binding). Out of print for decades, facsimiles of this series is now available in print.This is Volume XII. (Volume 12, Supplemental B, Part 1)Please understand, that as these volumes are FACSIMILES, they contain the flaws and imperfections that were present in the originals. Buyers should understand this in advance, and set their expectations accordingly. Due to their extreme length, the original supplemental volumes have been divided into a 'part 1' and a 'part 2.'The ISBNs of the entire series:Volume I -- 978-1-64594-023-4 Volume II -- 978-1-64594-024-1 Volume III -- 978-1-64594-025-8 Volume IV -- 978-1-64594-026-5 Volume V -- 978-1-64594-027-2 Volume VI -- 978-1-64594-028-9 Volume VII -- 978-1-64594-029-6 Volume VIII -- 978-1-64594-030-2 Opinion and Judgment -- 978-1-64594-031-9 Supplement A [Part 1] -- 978-1-64594-032-6 Supplement A [Part 2] -- 978-1-64594-035-7 Supplement B [Part 1]-- 978-1-64594-033-3 Supplement B [Part 2]-- 978-1-64594-036-4 The ISBN of the entire set -- 978-1-64594-034-0More information can be obtained at http://suzeteo.com/catalog/nazi-conspiracy-and-aggression.
In the "The Nuremberg Trials" men like Wilhelm Goering, Rudolf Hess, and Karl Doenitz, were prosecuted. The generated documents and testimony were then collated by the US Government into a set of publications called "Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression", available now as facsimiles after being out of print for decades.
Charles Dickens was already famous when he wrote "Great Expectations", the story of Pip and his striving against circumstance and poverty and finding himself unexpectedly well off later in life. Set in England in the early 1800s, the backdrop of the stark differences between the rich and the poor and the rise of industrialization, "Great Expectations" is filled with twists and turns that capture the interest of readers still today, more than a hundred years later.
Francis Marion became known as the "Swamp Fox" for his gutsy guerilla warfare conducted against the British during the American Revolution. Marion's knowledge of the woods and swamps of South Carolina were used as a weapon against the hapless Colonel Tarleton, who had been tasked with rooting out Marion's forces; it was Tarleton who is credited with giving Marion his nickname. Marion dogged the British throughout the war, earning himself an enduring legacy within the country he helped found. America's special forces, such as the Rangers and Green Berets, trace their heritage back to men like Marion and the tactics he employed. While some accounts of Marion's life and deeds were exaggerated, this edition, written by William Gilmore Simms in 1844, is regarded by modern historians as generally accurate.
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