A Plea for Direct Democracy

The Democracy that Never Was. is a story of how common American farmers and workers were thwarted in their desires for true democracy by wealthy, privileged Americans during the Constitutional Congress of 1787. It is also a documentary of vicious class warfare during the following two hundred and nineteen years, a one-sided war in which common working Americans refused to fight. Today in the year 2006, it's a war they had better acknowledge and fight to win, for they are under attack by a devious enemy who is determined to rule with a strict hand.

The Malfunctioning Animal, is a theory of humanity: a logical viewpoint of what we humans truly are, as opposed to what we believe we are. It attempts to explain why people do the same foolish or stupid things generation after generation, and listen and follow only rogues, liars, and opportunists. It's about understanding human natures better, and recognizing that we aren't the superior creature we believe we are. By explaining the cultural and institutional chains that mold habits of thought and behavior, it explains how common Americans are conditioned to accept subordinate citizenship in their own country.

The Democracy That Could Be is a description of a fictional society called "America." It's a logical next step for citizens of the U.S. who are tired of corrupt government. It's about Americans who finally have understood the only way to eliminate the corruption and abuse of their political leaders is to take upon themselves the obligations and responsibilities of maintaining their own governemnt—as mature people should do. It describes their new political system and its many benefits; benefits that have never before been enjoyed by commoners of any other Earth society.

The Theory of Subversion presents the argument that the deterioration of American values and the removal of the republic's productive capabilites since the end of WWII are the results of a well designed strategy by wealthy Americans—who secretly partnered with the Nazis' failed military attempt to conquer the world in the 1930s and '40s—to make certain the U.S. never becomes a true, functioning democracy, and that common working Americans never get the opportunity to challenge their lifestyles.
It's about recognizing "Globalization" and "Free Trade" as economic warfare upon the people of planet Earth by a small group of wealthy men and their giant conglomerates; men striving to replace all of Earth's political governments with their economic rule. It's an appeal to Americans to save their country and put it back on the track of true democracy. It's an appeal to all Earth people to unite and stop this maniacal drive for absolute power. At one time these four books were actually one very large book. They tell a single, continuing story of humanity. If you are so inclined, they should be read from left to right


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