COMMIES - A Journey the Old Left, the New Left and the Leftover Left $19.95 (list price: $24.95)

Pub. Date 2001
By Ronald Radosh

Filled with anecdote and personality, and also with hard-won insights into the destructive nature of the radical project, Commies is a moving story of growing up in the other America of the Left and finding the way home at last. Ronald Radosh has been called "the Zelig of the American Left – seen everywhere and knowing everyone." Indeed, Commies is filled with memorable portraits of the people who made "the Movement."

Clarence Thomas - A Biography $24.95 (list price: $29.95)

Pub. Date 2001
By Andrew Peyton Thomas

The first full-length biography of Clarence Thomas explores the controversial Supreme Court justice's remarkable rise to the nation's highest court. Andrew Peyton Thomas (no relation) traces Thomas's family roots back to slavery, the Civil War and the long aftermath of Jim Crow. In his attempt to understand what drives the elusive and sometimes the enigmatic justice, the author sheds new light on the important decisions of thomas's youth. This book offers fascinating new material about his vexed relationship with Anita Hill and about the dramatic onfrontation between the two that shook the nation.

The Death of the West - How Dying Populations and Immigrant Invasions Imperil Our Country and Civilization $19.95 (list price: $25.95)

Pub. Date 2002
By Patrick J. Buchanan

Bold, poweful, and persuasive, The Death of the West details how a civilization , culture, and moral order are passing away and foresees a new world that has terrifying implications for our freedom, our faith, and the preeminence of american democracy.In The Death of the West, Buchanan contends that the United states now harbors a "nation withina nation", that europe will be inundated by an Islamic-Arab-African invasion, and that most First world nations, including Japan, have begun slowly to vanish from the earth.

President George W. Bush’s Address to the Nation
Before a Joint Session of Congress, September 20, 2001
Our Mission and Our Moment - President Bush's Address to the Nation
 $4.95 (list price: $6.00)

A commemorative edition of the eloquent speech that defined the 43rd president and bolstered the nation’s resolve after the September 11th attack on America, setting the stage for the war on terror. Relive these dramatic events and re-visit the president’s inspiring prediction that the country would find “our mission and our moment” and his outline of the upcoming battle during which we will “rally the world to this cause by our efforts, by our courage…We will not tire, we will not falter, and we will not fail.”

Bias – A CBS Insider Exposes How the Media Distort the News $21.95 (list price: $27.95)

Pub. Date 2001
By Bernard Goldberg

Emmy-award winning former CBS correspondent Bernard Goldberg blows the whistle on his own industry with this blistering expose that reveals the closed-mindedness of the corporate culture; how journalistic integrity has been sacrificed for liberal opinion; and how the biased media mindset manipulates public opinion and affects how we see and understand our world.

You’ll learn

  • How political correctness in the newsroom puts “sensitivity” ahead of facts
  • The Peter Jennings test for classifying politicians and how all the networks do it
  • One of the biggest stories of all time, and why you probably didn’t see it on the evening news

If you’ve ever suspected that the establishment press is misreporting important stories and ignoring others, you owe it to yourself to read this book.

Coloring the News - How Crusading for Diversity Has Corrupted American Journalism $19.95 (list price: $25.95)

Pub. Date 2001
By William Mcgowan

Coloring the news is a store house of information you can see whenever your friends and coworkers start to insist that the media isn't just a mouthpiece for multiclutural orthodoxy. This book is a stinging rebuke to the media establishment that , now more than ever , needs to drop its pet idealogies and tell the truth to the American people.

Uncivil Wars - The Controversy Over Reparations for Slavery $16.95 (list price: $21.95)

Pub. Date 2002
By David Horowitz

This story is a conservative's dream - not only does David Horowitz completely dismantle the arguments in favor of reparations for slavery (which itself is worth the cover price) but he aims a dagger into the heart of the political correctness movement, exposing it for the lie and act of hypocrisy it is. Horowitz had decided to address what he saw as the dangers in the slavery reparations movement by placing an ad in a series of college papers stating "10 reasons" why slavery reparations is a bad idea. what happens next will rivet you to the pages and delight your conservative sensibilities.

At Any Cost : How Al Gore Tried to Steal the Election: $19.95

By Bill Sammon

Washington Times reporter Bill Sammon has written the definitive account of the most contentious presidential election in U.S. history. At Any Cost is a breathtaking examination of Vice President Al Gore’s audacious and unprecedented effort to overturn the presidential election. Desperate to forestall the spectacular collapse of his political career and determined to inflict as much damage as possible on George W. Bush, Gore pulled out all the stops in an extraordinary, thirty-six-day campaign of scorched-earth political warfare that propelled the nation to the brink of a constitutional crisis.

Age and Guile Beat Youth, Innocence…(paperback):  $7.95 (list price: $12.00)

Pub. Date 1995
By P.J. O'Rourke

A collection of 25 years work, starting when the witster wore his politics to the left-a raving pinko, with the scab on his bleeding heart to prove it.  Somewhere along the way, a light went off in O'Rourke's then misguided head, and he now has his greatest sport with leftists: "Communists worship Stan, Socialists think perdition is a good system run by bad men, and liberals all want us to go to hell because it's warm there in the winter."  O'Rourke gives the special warmth of reassurance that things can change.

Age and Guile Beat Youth, Innocence…(hardcover):  $11.95 (list price: $23.00)

Pub. Date 1995
By P.J. O'Rourke

A collection of 25 years work, starting when the witster wore his politics to the left-a raving pinko, with the scab on his bleeding heart to prove it.  Somewhere along the way, a light went off in O'Rourke's then misguided head, and he now has his greatest sport with leftists: "Communists worship Stan, Socialists think perdition is a good system run by bad men, and liberals all want us to go to hell because it's warm there in the winter."  O'Rourke gives the special warmth of reassurance that things can change.

All the Trouble in the World (paperback):  $6.95 (list price: $12.00)

Pub. Date 1994
By P.J. O'Rourke

Wherein the guy who started his career writing for sloppily printed underground papers surges to the bestseller lists.  In this book, O'Rourke explores "the lighter side of overpopulation, famine, ecological disaster, ethnic hatred, plague, and poverty."" What are the benefits of communing with nature? ""Ticks, lice fleas, mites, poison ivy, poison oak, mosquitoes, black flies, deerflies…sunburn, prickly heat."  O'Rourke prefers the comfort of a schooner of beer and a nice fact non-PC cigar.  For some material he thanks Vice President Al Gore: "a fascist twinkie and intellectual dolt.  It's nothing personal.  I just think you have repulsive totalitarian inclinations and the brains of a King Charles Spaniel."

Willful Injustice:  $12.95 (list price: $24.95)

Pub. Date 1996
By Robert Deitz

Deitz, who writes from Dallas, helped LA Police Sgt. Stacey King with Presumed Guilty, the inside story of the Rodney King Affair.  Now he revisits the kangaroo-court trial that put Kin and Officer Lawrence Powell in Federal prison for years, while the thug they arrested after a high-speed chase walked away with millions of dollars of taxpayer money.  The media averted their collective eyes from prosecutorial abuses and outside mob pressures that denied the officers anything approaching a fair trial.  A warning: Willful Injustice will leave you infuriated with what passes itself off as the "American system of justice."

 

Murder in Brentwood:  $9.95 (list price: $24.95)

Pub. Date 1997

The much-maligned LA police officer who was a central figure in the O. J. Simpson trial gives his side of the story for the first time, and it is a shocker.  As his publisher states, Furhman "refutes, candidly but convincingly, the allegations against him of racism and evidence-tempering."  Furhman also reveals key evidence that went unmentioned in the trial or news reportage - for example, an empty knife box that police found in Simpson's bedroom, and a wrapping for a gauze bandage found near the famed "bloody glove."  One of the most intriguing sections deals with his recreation of just how the murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman happened, based on this expert analysis of the evidence, starting with his initial visit to the crime scene.

Furhman also levels tough criticism of other key figures, including Judge Lance Ito, the prosecution, the defense, even fellow officers in the LAPD.

Furhman deals with the irony of the trial: how media bias and defense slanders combines to make him a villain of the murder case, while the accused killer was lionized as a "victim."  In essence, the destruction of an innocent man in order to save a guilty one.

Critics, including former collegues in the LAPD, have slashed Furhman as a cop who "writes knowingly of things of which he was ignorant," and as a man who ruined the O. J. criminal prosecution.  We do not know the truth - but here is the other side of the story.

Guns, Crime, and Freedom:  $7.95 (list price: $12.50)

Pub. Date 1994
By Wayne LaPierre

The Definitive Manual For Preserving Your Right to Keep And Bear Arms.  Despite the fact that millions of Americans use firearms every year to prevent violent crime, and despite the clear intent of our Founding Fathers, there are those in America who believe you do not have the right to own a gun.  In Guns, Crime, and Freedom, Wayne LaPierre, CEO and National Spokesperson for the NRA, has written the first single source that provides the facts about the agenda of those who want to ban guns. LaPierre vigorously challenges the media and their claim that private gun ownership is the cause of the spiraling crime rate that has made American streets and communities unsafe.  He explains - with detailed facts - how the freedom guaranteed in our Constitution is called into question when legislation is proposed to ban guns and impose waiting periods and limitations on gun purchases. At a time when crime rates are soaring, when the "revolving door" criminal justice system turns convicts loose to murder, rob, and rape again, and when police seem helpless to protect innocent citizens, it is urgent, says LaPierre, that our right of self-defense not be put in jeopardy.

Twilight of Liberty - The Legacy of the ACLU:  $19.95 (list price: $34.95)

Pub. Date 1994
By William A. Donohue

This is the first book to critically analyze contemporary ACLU policy and to challenge its reputation as the preeminent voice of freedom in the United States.  It aims to move beyond the idea that freedom is best served by pushing individual right to extremes.  Twilight of Liberty will appeal to scholars in the fields of law, social policy, and culture.  Students in civil liberties courses will also find this book a valuable resource.  Donohue, who served as an advisor on the ACLU to George Bush in 1988 is the only scholar who has had access to the ACLU archives.  To this day the ACLU refuses to debate him due to his extensive knowledge of their organization.  This is the best book written on the ACLU and a must for every activists library.

 

Prime Time - How TV Portrays American Culture:  $7.95 (list price: $22.95)

Pub. Date 1994
By S. Robert Lichter, Linda S. Lichter and Stanley Rothman

Prime Time provides the first comprehensive guide to the meanings and messages of entertainment television. From the 1950s to the 1990s, it examines how the world of TV depicts American society in the home, at work, and in popular culture. Prime Time offers much needed insight into America's changing image of itself, refracted through the lens of the "American dream machine" -  prime time television.  A great follow-up to their groundbreaking book "The Media Elite".

Out of America - A Black Man Confronts Africa:  $12.95 (list price: $24.00)

Pub. Date 1997
By Keith B. Richburg

Before his arrival as the Washington Post correspondent in Africa, Richburg had assumed that Africa's troubles were the legacy of colonialism and the Cold War, and that if the African nations were given a level playing field, they too would take their place on the escalator to prosperity that had lifted so many other formerly backward nations. But what he finds instead is senseless cruelty and repressive dictators, which have not emerged from the sins of the West but are homegrown. Inhumanity in Africa wears a black face. Are these really my people? Richburg wonders. Am I truly an African American? Out of America is a transformative personal journey, and once you see the world through Keith Richburg's eyes, you'll never think of Africa, America, or African Americans in the same way again.

 

In the Arena - An Autobiography:  $9.95 (list price: $27.00)

Pub. Date 1995
By Charlton Heston

He is known by millions worldwide for his magnificent portrayals of remarkable men. As an actor, he has received a level of success and recognition few have achieved and been accorded an acclaim few have received. Charlton Heston would be the first to say that he has been blessed - to have a wife and family he adores, to be granted the God-given talent that has enabled him to enjoy so phenomenal a career, and to be born into a country that allowed him the freedom to follow whatever path he chose. In In the Arena, he celebrates those blessings. It is a powerful statement, eloquently rendered.

Beyond Blame - How We Can Succeed by Breaking the Dependency Barrier:  $6.95 (list price: $18.00)

Pub. Date 1995
By Armstrong Williams

The book is the direct result of a hard-headed dialogue of Armstrong Williams, a nationally-syndicated radio and television host, with a young man, "Brad Howard", a twenty-seven-year-old drug dealer, murderer, and father of three small daughters. Beyond Blame's greatest lesson is that each of us has the duty to get his hands dirty - not as a social experiment, but because we are, indeed, our brother's keeper.

Renewing American Compassion - How compassion for the needy can turn ordinary citizens into heroes:  $10.95 (list price: $21.00)

Pub. Date 1996
By Marvin Olasky

Only in recent decades have we relegated compassion to the government and lost touch with the poor, points out Dr. Marvin Olasky, a professor of journalism, author of books of history and cultural analysis and the editor of World, a weekly Christian newsmagazine. The good news is that radical transformations of individual lives do occur, and in abundance. Furthermore, we should realize that the amount of compassion in a society is not fixed. Some will have more time to give; some will have more dollars; but everyone can do something that will help and not hurt. Everyone can do something.

From Rage To Responsibility: Black Conservative Jesse Lee Peterson and America Today  $15.95 (list price: $19.95)

by Jesse Lee Peterson with Brad Stetson

Through the prism of Jesse Lee Peterson's fascinating life experience and his history of grassroots community work on streets of riot-torn south-central Los Angeles, Peterson and Stetson examine the violations of common sense and sound thinking that the civil rights establishment and its amen chorus of liberal lobbies constantly perpetrate against the American public. Peterson and Stetson point the way out of the statist mentality steadily overtaking our public life, advocating a new culture of self-responsibility and moral renewal able to resuscitate the sagging spirits of an American public accustomed to looking everywhere but within themselves for the solutions to their personal and political problems.

 

The Art of Political War and Other Radical Pursuits  $18.95 (list price: $24.95)

by David Horowitz

Politics is war, but in America the left is doing all the shooting. Shell-shocked conservatives blame their failures on the media or unscrupulous opponents, but they refuse to name the real culprit - themselves. In a book that will shatter the complacency of establishment conservatives, David Horowitz shows how Bill Clinton's generation, having mastered the art of political war, has spent the last ten years clobbering conservatives in and out of government. The Democratic Party's recent electoral dominance is due not to its theft of Republican issue, but to its superior grasp of the nature of political war. Horowitz opens his book with the six principles of politics that the left understands and conservatives do not. He next warns against the essentially liberal inclination to supervise the lives of a "helpless" citizenry. This "Puritan impulse" promises shipwreck for conservatives who fail to keep liberty as their watchword.

 

Hating Whitey and Other Progressive Causes  $18.95 (list price: $24.95)

by David Horowitz

Ideological hatred of whites is now a growth industry, boosted by "civil rights" activists and liberal academics. Those once-youthful radicals, now entrenched in positions of power and influence, peddle a warmed-over version of the Marxist creed that supported the communist empire and excuses in tolerance to the point of thuggery. Betraying the legacy of Martin Luther King, this alliance of black civil rights leaders and white radicals threatens to undermine America's moral, political and economic institutions.

 

Joseph McCarthy: Reexamining The Life and Legacy of America's Most Hated Senator  $19.95 (list price: $26.00)

by Arthur Herman

Joseph McCarthy explains how this farm boy from Wisconsin sprang up from a newly confident postwar America, and how he embodied the hopes and anxieties of a generation caught in the toils of the Cold War. It shows how McCarthy used the explosive issue of Communist spying in the thirties and forties to challenge the Washington political establishment and catapult himself into the headlines. Above all, it gives us a picture of the red scare far different from and more accurate than the one typically portrayed in the news media and the movies.

 

The Ten Things You Can't Say in America:  $18.95 (list price: $23.95)

to see the book review, click here

Pub. Date 2000
by Larry Elder

Larry Elder punctures pretension, topples scared cows, and puts us all on notice that the status quo needs to be shaken up.  His subjects include, Blacks are more racist than whites, media bias, the glass ceiling, the welfare state, gun control and many others.

Published September 2000

PBS: Behind the Screen (hardcover):  $12.95 (list price: $25.00)

Pub. Date 1997
by Laurence Jarvik

A skilled investigative writer and critic unleashed his considerable talents on the public broadcasting conglomerate, a world that is both cozy (for the liberal inhabitues) and costly (for taxpayers who pick up much of the tab).  Jarvik is Washington's foremost PBS-watcher, and he shows how public TV has grown from a minute Great Society program into a money-churning monster whose profits swell the pockets of insiders.  One critic states, "Jarvik does an autopsy of the Rev. Billy Don Moyers and his holy water schemes of the sort that is seldom performed on a living creature." Scholarly incisive—and enough red meat politics to make it a fun read.

Nixon - A Life (hardcover):  $15.95 (list price: $28.00)

Pub. Date 1993
by Jonathan Aitken

Aitken met Nixon in 1966, when he was first starting his political rebirth.  They subsequently became close.  Professor Stephen Ambrose, a previous Nixon Biographer, writes of the book, "Nixon trusted Aitken, so he has had access to the man as well as to the private diaries and memos of advice to Republican successors...Vivid and fascinating.

Lost Trumpets - A Conservative Map to America's Destiny (hardcover):  $16.95 (list price: $27.50)

Pub. Date 1994
by Bruce Herschensohn

This book on Political Science and Government states that "The 20th Century will be known as the Century of America. If it wasn't for the United States, the Twentieth Century would be known as the Century of Nazism or the Century of Communism, whichever would have won the final battle."

 

Stolen Valor - How the Vietnam Generation Was Robbed of Its Heroes and Its History (hardcover):  $21.95 (list price: $31.95)

by B.G. Burkett and Glenna Whitley

The men and women of the Vietnam War deserved more than America was willing to give.

Three decades later, the war, which never left our collective consciousness, still ignites passion among its participants.

Slowly, the war has come back to haunt us. Legions of homeless Vietnam veterans are in the street, hundreds of thousands of them are suffering from Agent Orange or Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, and more of them have died from suicide than died in the war...or so the social advocates and the media tell us.

B.G. Burkett, in over ten years of research in the National Archives, filing hundreds of requests for military documents under the Freedom of Information Act, uncovered a massive distortion of history, a distortion that has cost the U.S. taxpayers billions of dollars. Mr. Burkett's work has toppled national political leaders and put criminals in jail.

The authors show killers who have fooled the most astute prosecutors and gotten away with murder, phony heroes who have become the object of award-winning documentaries on national network television, and liars and fabricators who have flooded major publishing houses with false tales of heroism which have become best-selling biographies.

Not only do Burkett and Whitley show the price of the myth has been enormous for society, but they spotlight how it has severely denigrated the service, patriotism, and gallantry of the best warriors America ever produced.

Gore - A Political Life (hardcover):  $7.95 (list price: $29.95)

Pub. Date 1999
by Bob Zelnick

In this first authoritative biography of Al Gore, based on more than two years of research and extensive interviews, award-winning former ABC News reporter Bob Zelnick reveals the real Al Gore. The result? A detailed portrait of a man torn between the old-fashioned virtues of agrarian Tennessee, where his senator-father set him to hard manual labor on the family farm, and the amoral corridors of Washington power, which he was trained to navigate from the beginning.

Gore: A Political Life sheds revealing light on Al Gore's years at St. Albans, the prep school for Washington's power elite, and Harvard, where he roomed with actor Tommy Lee Jones; his service in Vietnam for the sake of his father's political career; and his attending divinity school to "atone for his sins."

Here we see Al Gore, the plodding journalist-turned-investigative-reporter, suddenly catapulted into Congress by his political inheritance. We also see his relentless battle for the spotlight on Capitol Hill and the driving ambition that led to his first presidential campaign before he was forty. 

And we see the Al Gore who - until now - has been masked by his famous wooden exterior.  It is an emotional - his critics would say hysterical - Al Gore who has written that America is a "dysfunctional civilization" whose abuse of the environment is comparable to the Nazi's genocide against the Jews, and who has, like an Old Testament prophet, visited homeless victims of natural disasters, only to lecture them on the vengeance of global warming.
Who's Covering Washington - On-Air, In-Print & Behind-The-Scenes (paperback):  $8.95 (list price: $16.95)

Pub. Date 1999

The sheer increase in the volume of information being reported has resulted in two unavoidable developments: the shortening of the "news cycle" for a given story and vastly increased competition among those with stories to tell. While time and other constraints prevent many stories from ever being widely reported, those that are have a radically decreased "shelf life" because of the sheer volume of "new" news coming along on their heels.

This book focuses on only one subset of the news industry, but one we feel is arguably the most important.  By looking at the news organizations which report on "Washington," we've attempted to identify the key reporters and news managers who, on a daily basis, keep us informed on what our government is doing, what public policies are being debated and who's ahead in the great game of politics.

If you are a citizen or group that wants to get involved in the public arena, this volume will tell you which reporters, editors and producers you are likely to be dealing with and will help you to get in touch with them.

You Don't Say - Sometimes liberals show their true colors (paperback):  $12.95 (list price: $16.00)

Pub. Date 1999
by Fred Gielow

In this book prominent, influential liberals reveal with their own words they are anti-religion, anti-family, anti-truth, anti-freedom even anti-civilization! If you think liberals are compassionate, you'll be shocked. "You Don't Say" exposes their hidden agenda. Read this book and you'll never again consider politics a periodic trip to the voting booth. You'll find it's a fundamental fight for morality and freedom!

The liberal agenda includes world government (which will tolerate little to no U.S. interference), a world military (which will enter the U.S. at whim to quell a disturbance), a world court (which will impose law without U.S. Constitutional protections), world taxes (which will seize our money to redistribute to Third-World countries), and a world religion (Gaia be praised).

Besides shattering our sovereignty, the liberal agenda includes dumbing down our kids, violating our right to own handguns, confiscating private property, encouraging deviant sexual behavior, imposing population controls, favoring plants and animals over humans, justifying moral relativism, and strengthening oppressive central-government control.

This is the "utopia" liberals describe with their own words in "You Don't Say."

Tragic Mountains - The Hmong, the Americans, and the Secret Wars for Laos, 1942 - 1992 (hardcover):  $14.95 (list price: $29.95)

Pub. Date 1993
by Jane Hamilton-Merritt

The name Hmong means "free people" or "those who must have their freedom and independence". Tragic Mountains tell the story of the Lao Hmong struggle for freedom and survival, from their siding with the French against the Japanese to their siding with the Americans against the North Vietnamese. This is a story of courage, tenacity, brutality, and incredible heroism by Hmong and Americans alike. With photographs.

That Every Man be Armed - The Evolution of a Constitutional Right (paperback):  $9.95 (list price: $19.95)

Pub. Date 1994
by Stephen P. Halbrook

The power of firearms has stirred passion over the right of the citizenry to own and bear weapons throughout Western Civilization…That Every Man Be Armed is the Authoritative book on the ideas, history, and legal precedent that the citizen's right to possess arms is essential to democracy as is freedom of speech.

 

 

Phoenix and the Birds of Prey - The CIA's Secret Campaign to Destroy the Viet Cong (hardcover):  $22.95 (list price: $34.95)

Pub. Date 1997
by Mark Moyar

For more than thirty years the mere mention of the Phoenix Program, the CIA's top-secret effort to destroy the Viet Cong by neutralizing its "civilian" leaders, has conjured up dark images of secret assassinations, kidnappings, and the torture of civilians by the South Vietnamese and their U.S. advisers.  This study explodes many of the prevailing myths and perceptions of the program and the myriad efforts that until now have been mistakenly lumped together under the term Phoenix.

Drawing on recently declassified documents and interviews with more than one hundred U.S., South Vietnamese, and North Vietnamese sources, Mark Moyar dissects the various attempts to eradicate the Viet Cong infrastructure and analyzes the effectiveness of each.  With balance and full documentation, he addresses serious misconceptions about these efforts and provides the most accurate and complete picture available of the allies' decapitation of the Viet Cong shadow government.

Combing social and political history with a study of military operations, Moyar offers a new interpretation of the rise of the Viet Cong and the crucial role the shadow government played in its ascent. Discussed here for the first time are the effects of Phoenix on South Vietnamese villagers.  Detailed accounts of sensitive intelligence operations - provided by the CIA officers who conceived and conducted them, the SEALs and Green Berets who led them, and the South Vietnamese mercenaries who carried them out - offer the reader an insider's view of how these operations were developed and what really happened in the villages and safe havens of the Viet Cong.

 

Creating Equal - My Fight Against Race Preferences :  $18.95 (list price: $24.95)

Pub. Date 2000
by Ward Connerly

From his impoverished childhood in segregated pre-war Louisiana to his audience with Bill Clinton at the White House, Ward Connerly's panoramic book spans a civil rights story that's making headlines from coast to coast. Since 1995, when Connerly first burst onto the American scene in as the University of California Regent who forced the nation's largest public university to become color blind in its admissions policies, Connerly has led a national campaign to end race preference. In 1996, he passed Proposition 209 in California, and, a two years led I-200, an identical measure, to victory in Washington state. He is now battling Governor Jeb Bush in Florida as he attempts to put a Florida Civil Rights Initiative on the ballot there. A personal book that gives the inside story of Connerly's battle against race preferences, Creating Equal names names and tells it like it is. It is destined to provoke debate from the dining room table to the halls of Congress. Connerly's encounters with the great and near great ranging from Jesse Jackson and Al Gore to Bill Clinton and Rupert Murdoch illuminate this book that has been praised by writers such as Shelby Steele. Illustrated with family and political photographs.

 

The Venona Secrets - Exposing Soviet Espionage and America's Traitors:  $21.95 (list price: $29.95)

Pub. Date 2000
by Herbert Romerstein and Eric Breindel

U.S. security jeopardized during the Cold War.
The Venona Files are several intercepted communiques between the Soviet Union and American Communists following World War II. Called the most important intelligent intercepts of the post War era, these documents were recently released to the public. Authors Herb Romerstein and the late Eric Breindel plumbed the Venona files to find a pattern of espionage and betrayal. Their report implicates leading scientists, aides to the President, and well known journalists in a web of deceit and spying that endangered the security of the United States and the safety of the Western World.

 

The Venona Secrets - Exposing Soviet Espionage and America's Traitors (Autographed):  $26.95

Pub. Date 2000
by Herbert Romerstein and Eric Breindel

 

The Year in Verse - A Politickles Retrospective:  $12.95 (list price: $14.95)

Pub. Date 2000
by F.R.Duplantier

Politickles are the verbal equivalent of editorial cartoons. They make a point quickly, forcefully, and humorously. Throughout the year 2000 F.R.Duplantier chronicled the latest liberal lunacies with the unique political limericks. The latest Politickles demonstrates that he did not suffer from a shortage of material. Collected together, Duplantier offers a wry retrospective on the year gone by.

 

  

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