DescriptionRight from the Beginning is the personal memoir of Pat Buchanan, the story of how the most controversial conservative in America got where he is today, and how he came to believe as he does. It is the intimate first-person account of how the third
DescriptionThis audiobook addresses the current societal influences of the "Bigs" and relates the importance of the "Littles" in our communities in an incredibly interesting, conversational style. Packed with credibility and information and proven alternatives to our nation's problems, It Takes a Family is a must-listen for understanding and implementing the crucial elements of a successful society.
DescriptionIn 1982, Peter Robinson was hired as a speechwriter in the Reagan White House. One of a core group of writers who became informal experts on Reagan, Robinson absorbed not just the president's politics but his manner and way of carrying himself. And the ex
DescriptionThe United States has survived clueless presidential administrations before. But no matter how enormous the crisis, the Great Depression, Vietnam, Watergate, or Monica Lewinsky's thong, America always comes out looking like, well, America. This time, ho
DescriptionConservative pundit Ann Coulter pillories American liberals for their views on Republicans and conservative causes. Author of the best-selling anti-Clinton book High Crimes and Misdemeanors, Coulter summons pages of footnotes to support her highly original thesis that most of the media condemn even the most moderate of conservative views. Though accusing Democrats of "prefer[ring] invective to engagement", Coulter herself makes no pretense to temperance, remarking after the terrorist attacks, "We should invade their countries, kill their leaders, and convert them to Christianity." Liberals emerge as Public Enemy No. 1, endorsers of rape and other crimes, and the enemies of Christianity, guns, the profit motive, and political speech. Coulter's over-the-top prose is guaranteed to fan the flames of those who enjoy a good brawl.
DescriptionGeorge W. Bush arrived in the White House an untested governor with an unfortunate habit of tripping over his own tongue, presiding over an economy slipping into recession, and a nation more obsessed with reality television than with the reality of intern