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The Enemy Within: The Secret War Against the Miners

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Slavery was actually illegal in Virginia Colony in 1619. It did not become legal until a series of laws between 1660-1680s). Horowitz argues that the American left shares the same goals that Marx did in the 19th century, specifically a “totalitarian ambition to remake the world and dominate its inhabitants.” And to this end, it already has powerful cultural and intellectual tools at its disposal: schools, universities, media, and entertainment. Business as usual will only send the country more speedily to destruction and perdition. Instead, the Uniparty must be put out of its misery. This well researched and illuminating biography of the artist John Constable reclaims him from the chocolate-box conservatism to which he has been consigned. James Hamilton’s Constable is, admittedly, no trailblazing radical, but nor is he the grumpy reactionary that he has sometimes seemed when placed alongside Gainsborough and Turner. Instead, Hamilton manages to reshape Constable’s quintessential Englishness (he never left the country) not as the failing of provincialism that others have called it, but as the force behind his art. Not for nothing is Dedham Vale known as Constable country. Wivenhoe The Enemy Within: The McClellan Committee's Crusade Against Jimmy Hoffa and Corrupt Labor Unions is a book by American politician Robert F. Kennedy [1] (assisted by John Seigenthaler) [2] first published in 1960, and republished in 1994. [3] Edwin Guthman, chairman of the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial provided the introduction to the 1994 edition. [3] As Robert Kennedy was intimately involved, the book is somewhat autobiographical.

Why the Obama administration marked a point of no return in the division of America into two irreconcilable political factions The work details events and information uncovered between 1956 and 1959 by the United States Senate Select Committee on Improper Activities in Labor and Management in which Kennedy served as chief counsel. The book focuses on corruption, crime and graft within American labor unions, with an emphasis on International Brotherhood of Teamsters, as well as union busting by employers. Kennedy describes the Teamsters as the most powerful institution in the United States aside the United States Government itself (1994, p.161). According to Robert Kennedy, George Meany, former president of the AFL–CIO, has called Jimmy Hoffa organized labor's No. 1 Enemy (1994, p.161).Uncompromising and outspoken, filled with arguments, real-life experience, necessary truths and possible ways forward for Muslims, politicians and the rest of us, this is a timely and urgent book. If you are a liberal, completely consumed with Trump Derangement Syndrome, unable to tolerate any other view but your own, do not even bother trying to read this book, even though it would probably be the first time your eyes were opened to another truth, another opinion that is valid, but hidden, because ignorance allows the more powerful to control the people. Horowitz, with a clear and concise message, puts all the misinformation sponsored by the left, every single incident, riot, rally, demonstration, etc., is dissected and analyzed to point out that the message from the left is often biased and untrue. He sends their lies out to the pasture where he buries them with facts that prove that their representation and harangues about social justice, are nothing more than racist tactics meant to divide us. Yet while the entire Stasi-governmental infrastructure, plus the corrupted intelligence community, the treasonous Fourth Estate, our tech and indoctrination masters of Big Tech and Big Education, unite to destroy both the voice and livelihood of dissenters, the patriots themselves remain extraordinarily peaceful and patient, trusting in God and our fellow Americans. Truly, there is no better example of love of country and fellow man than their forbearance.

Warsi concludes that in spite of all that is good and right about diversity in Britain, British racism is resistant. Indeed, it continues to reinvent itself, with all the focus now on ‘the Muslim’, who represents a colour, culture and creed seen as problematic for the state, homogenising a vast people and a global faith community, reducing it to all that is loathed about the self but projected on to this predefined other. British racism is, ultimately, ubiquitous and omnipotent. In the end, this is the issue, is it not? Warsi contends that resistance is not futile. Neither is political action. She does concede, however, that the challenges grow faster than the opportunities. In a nod to this tragic truth, Horowitz ends this latest tour-de-force with a coda titled “Love against Hate,” which he borrows from the recovering-journalist Daniel Greenfield’s article “An Election between Love and Hate.” That election steal he correctly terms “the greatest political crime in the history of the country.” [p.200]The Enemy Within is a preeminent political account of the British Muslim experience, focusing on the most pressing concerns facing communities: namely, the twin evils of terrorism and Islamophobia. Warsi’s analysis of the problems facing British Muslims today is frank, and at times quite witty, as she pokes fun at the absurdity of the men around her. It is also a brave book, written by a woman, a northerner and a Muslim. Warsi went to the top of politics and fought for her stated aims as a Conservative, but also as a proud British Muslim. She rose to the position in spite of the wider problems of the Conservative-dominated Coalition. Her achievements are remarkable, making hers a special story. She witnessed it all, amassing a penetrating sense of the social problems, but could she have done more? Leveraging its power in academia, the left has forced books like Robin DiAngelo’s “White Fragility” and Ibram X. Kendi’s “How to be an Antiracist” into the required reading lists for college students. Horowitz does not understate the damage these ideas pose. The Enemy Within is a 1994 American political thriller television film directed by Jonathan Darby and written by Darryl Ponicsan and Ronald Bass. It is a remake of the 1964 film Seven Days in May, itself based on a 1962 novel, and stars Forest Whitaker, Jason Robards, Jr., Dana Delany and Sam Waterston. [1] The film involves a planned military coup to overthrow the President of the United States. The television film remake was originally announced in 1984, while producer Peter Douglas worked for his father's film production company The Bryna Company (which had produced Seven Days in May). [2] The film took ten years to develop and was finally produced in 1994 through Peter Douglas' own film production company, Vincent Pictures. [2] It aired on HBO on August 20, 1994.

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