"In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act." George Orwell. In seventy-eight essays, seven prominent social critics question everything from government authority to COVID-19 in what has been called, "the most dangerous book ever published." This thought-provoking and empowering, even "criminal," anthology is a major challenge to the establishment, the ruling oligarchy, or whatever we choose to call the deep state, central planners, and mega-criminals who set and control global narratives. Readers are presented with an array of "forbidden" subjects and in-depth analyses that pull the rug underneath the elite and expose the lies that constitute the matrix. Among others, this book documents and casts light on: - Washington's deadly pursuit of hegemony camouflaged as the "War on Terror" and "spreading democracy." - The erosion of legal principles and elimination of civil and human rights under the pretext of making us safe from terrorists and a global pandemic. - The push to enslave humanity in a one world digital dictatorship. - False flag attacks. - World War I & II. - The dangers of smart meters, fluoridation, and artificial intelligence. - The truth behind Bill Gates' purported "humanitarian" activities and plans to vaccinate the world. - The horrors of the War on Drugs and how it is a lucrative business. - Britain's systematic robbery of India and resulting genocide. - The crimes of Winston Churchill and Apartheid Israel. - The false reasoning behind "gun control." - The dangers of scientism and how science is being used for social control. - The most overrated concept in human history, i.e. government. - The legitimacy of taxation. - The truth of how George Floyd died. It is not a question of if but when this book will be censored, shadow-banned, or else how rendered invisible as have happened to numerous works of social criticism and anti-establishment content. "I swore never to be silent whenever and wherever human beings endure suffering and humiliation. We must take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented." Elie Wiesel Read more
Download NowThis is a huge book to get through and I’m the “ocd” type who needs to begin on page one and proceed to the end. I’ve finished reading the essays of both Korsgaard and Jerry Day. I found myself in agreement with them both. I must admit I’d never heard of Jerry Day before reading his essays in this book and am now somewhat of an admirer although he does seem sort of a mystery. Sometimes it’s really hard to tell what someone’s politics are and as a lifelong socialist friend of mine concurred, it’s as though our society has turned upside down and we discover more honesty on the right than the so-called left. Now getting on to Paul Craig Roberts. I have, in the past, been an admirer of his writing. I read his entire book of essays several years ago and started following him on You Tube as a result. However, I find him to be increasingly an enigma. I don’t know if his problem is age-related or if he’s secretly a member in good standing of the KKK. First, there’s his sad complaint about how unfair life is for white men. Really? And apparently even moreso for rich, well-connected white men. I admired him because I felt he told the truth about our completely broken and corrupt government despite, not just being a part of it, but a part of the administration of the man who completely destroyed any semblance of a government by, for and of the people. But now he’s crying about the unfairness of life for the group most responsible for the injustice and criminality with which we live. What really shocked me was an essay included in this book that is basically an apologia for Adolf Hitler and overtly anti-semitic. I am no member of the “cancel culture” and definitely believe in free speech. However, that does not mean I have any interest at all in reading the ravings of hate cults such as the KKK. He even throws in a mention of Zionism in explaining Nazism, as though trying to blame the Jews for their own genocide. He justifies the slave labor initiated by I.G. Farben, the German version of our own Big Pharma crime family because the Germans were in “dire need of workers”. I am quite familiar with the fact that the so-called “elite” families of the U.S. were very much behind and supportive of Nazism to the point that they attempted a Mussolini-style coup in 1934. Even so, writing an apologia for Hitler, that he never meant for the Jews to be exterminated while murdering six million of them in cold blood along with other “unacceptable” non-white groups. He claims in this essay it was the actions of underlings. This one essay, had I known it was contained in a book that is supposedly progressive, that is blatant anti-semitism, would have meant I would never have purchased this book. Nor will I ever read anything by this man again – or his editor who I must assume is one of those who are very progressive – except when it comes to the Jews.
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