New Book by Jerry McDaniel
|
338 pages packed with information every
patriot should know. Covers the spread of
socialism in America from its founding in 1607
to present.
Learn about experiments with socialism in the
colonies, the Utopian communes of the
nineteenth century, the Progressive Era, the
Square Deal, the New Deal, and the Great
Society.
Discover new facts about America's struggle
for independence, the Philadelphia Convent-
ion, the rise of political party power, the
turmoil of the sixties and Barack Obama's
election to the presidency.
"...Socialists should definitely hide from the book “Philosophy of Evil” ....In
deliberate and easy to understand language, Jerry McDaniel traces the historical
impact of socialism on United States history. He shows clearly how socialism
failed in the colonial era. He demonstrates how the absence of socialism allowed
the United States to flourish and become the envy of the world. He emphatically
shows how socialism has worked its way into the American system and how it
has negatively affected the American economy, the American government and
American culture. He addresses socialism not just on economic and historical
grounds but also on moral grounds."
~Dr Phil Stringer
Subject Index
Administration of Justice Act
All-Progressive Election Year
American Exceptionalism
America's Genesis
America’s Sacred Text
Annapolis Convention
Antiwar Movement
Articles of Confederation
Barack Obama, Background
Barack Obama, Political Career
Barack Obama, Senate Campaign
Barack Obama, U.S. Senator
Bill of Rights
Black Regiment, The
Blue Eagle Campaign
Boston Massacre, The
Boston Port Act
Civil War
Cold War, Aftermath
Colonial Expansion
Colonial Government
Commissioner of Customs Act of
1767
Communist
Congressional Progressive Caucus
Connecticut Colony
Conservative Coalition, Depression Era
Constitution Amendments
Constitution Fundamentals
Constitution, Amendment Process
Constitution, Article I, Section 1
Constitution, Commerce Clause
Constitution, Electoral College
Constitution, Enumerated Powers
Constitution, House of Rep.
Constitution, Senate Majority Leader
Constitution, Preamble
Constitution, President of The Senate
Const., Supreme Law of the Land
Crash of 1929
Currency Act of 1764
Declaratory Act of 1766
Democracy
Dictatorship of The Proletariat
Discord, Storm Clouds of
Dominion of New England
Eighteenth Amendment
Electoral College
Expression of the American Mind
First Amendment
Founding Principles, Equality
Founding Principles, Faith
Founding Principles, Republicanism
Founding Principles, Unalienable
Rights
Gilded Age, The
Great Awakening
Great Society, The
Hamilton Plan, The
Indemnity Act of 1767
Jeffersonian Democracy
Lexington and Concord, Battles
London Company, The
Managing Government
Maryland Colony
Massachusetts Bay Colony
Massachusetts Government Act
National Socialism
New Amsterdam Colony
New Deal
New Deal Agenda
New Jersey Plan, The
New York Colony
Nineteenth Amendment
Pennsylvania Colony
Philadelphia Convention
Political Parties, Federalist
Political Parties, Democratic-
Republican
Political Parties, Growth of
Political Parties, National Republicans
Political Parties, Peoples (Populist)
Political Parties, Republican
Political Parties, Rise of
Political Parties, Whig
Political Parties, American
Prelude to Revolution
Proclamation of 1763
Progressive Era
Progressivism
Quartering Act
Quebec Act of 1774
Radical Reconstruction
Ratification of Constitution
Religion in Jamestown Colony
Religion in Colonies
Religious Liberty, Seeds of
Revenue Act of 1767
Rhode Island Colony
Roaring Twenties
Senate Majority Leader
Seventeenth Amendment
Shadow Party, The
Shay’s Rebellion
Sixteenth Amendment
Slave Question, The
Social Gospel
Social Justice
Socialism, Spread of
Socialists and Progressives
Square Deal, The
Stamp Act of 1765
Stock Market Crash of 1929
Sugar Act of 1764
Supreme Court Jurisdiction
Tea Act of 1764
The Federation
Third Parties
Townshend Acts
Utopian Socialism
Vice-Admiralty Court
CHAPTER 9
Prelude to Revolution
By coincidence, on the day of the Boston Massacre, March 5, 1770, Lord
North, the successor to Townshend as Minister, was addressing the
British Parliament urging them to repeal many of the provisions of the
Townshend Acts most abhorred by the colonists. The boycott of English
goods in America had greatly diminished the profits of manufacturing in
England and the manufacturers were blaming the Crown for their
problems. The Act was repealed on April 12, 1770. Read More...
CHAPTER 1
A Philosophy of Evil
For many Americans, the election of Barack Obama to the office of
President in 2008 marked the end--- at least temporarily--- of
constitutional government and the rule of law that has guided the
progress of America for the past 220 years. However, although he may
be the first to set out deliberately and consciously to destroy America’s
capitalist system and replace it with a socialist one, President Obama is
only the latest in a long line of progressive (American socialist)
Presidents. He is though, the first President since Woodrow Wilson to
disparage our Constitution publicly, calling it a “flawed document” and
promising to remake America into what the Founders would have wanted
it to be, had they been more enlightened. Read More...
CHAPTER 15
Constitution Fundamentals
The Constitution contains the rules for the operation of our government.
It does not convey “constitutional rights”, it does not contain a catalog of
“goodies” the government is to provide for its citizens, or a list of things
the government must do for the “people”. This fact has always been the
number one complaint of President Obama and his progressive
supporters. Read More...
CHAPTER 13
The Philadelphia Convention
The Philadelphia Convention met on May 14, 1787, but did not have a
quorum of seven states until May 25. Eventually delegates from twelve of
the thirteen states participated in the effort to remedy the defects in the
federal constitution. Rhode Island boycotted the convention hoping to
prevent changes to the Articles of Confederation. Many of the most
radical leaders of the Independence movement of ’75 and ’76 were not
present. John Hancock and Samuel Adams of Boston were not chosen as
delegates from Massachusetts. John Adams was serving as Minister to
Great Britain, although he supported the convention and encouraged
delegates by letter. Thomas Jefferson was serving as Minister to France.
He referred to the convention delegates as an assembly of “demigods”.
Patrick Henry refused to attend saying he “smelt a rat in Philadelphia”.
Read More...
CHAPTER 28
The Spread of Socialism
As socialism spread around the globe during the twentieth century it
adapted itself to the history and culture of each nation. Evolutionary
socialism developed differently than Revolutionary socialism. Socialism in
most western nations resembled what Marx referred to as bourgeois
socialism rather than the revolutionary kind advocated by Marx and Engel
in the Communist Manifesto. Read More...
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Philosophy of Evil Socialism in America
The struggle of history is not between the bourgeoisie and the proletariat; it is between the government and the governed."
"Those who refuse to learn from history are doomed to repeat it"; ~George Santayana
Jerry McDaniel
|
Illinois Conservative
"It is impossible to rightly govern a nation without God and the Bible" ~George Washington