The Enemy Within: The Secret War Against the Miners

£13.495
FREE Shipping

The Enemy Within: The Secret War Against the Miners

The Enemy Within: The Secret War Against the Miners

RRP: £26.99
Price: £13.495
£13.495 FREE Shipping

In stock

We accept the following payment methods

Description

Horowitz lays out how we have ended up in the worst national crisis since the Civil War. He details: I quote at length Horowitz’s opening argument to show what a concise writer he is, marshaling his case one step at a time.

How did this state of affairs come to pass? What are the lessons and challenges for the future - and how will the tale of Muslim Britain develop? Sayeeda Warsi draws on her own unique position in British life, as the child of Pakistani immigrants, an outsider, who became an insider, the UK's first Muslim Cabinet minister, to explore questions of cultural difference, terrorism, surveillance, social justice, religious freedom, integration and the meaning of 'British values'. The Enemy Within is a 1994 American political thriller television film directed by Jonathan Darby and written by Darryl Ponicsan and Ronald Bass. It is a remake of the 1964 film Seven Days in May, itself based on a 1962 novel, and stars Forest Whitaker, Jason Robards, Jr., Dana Delany and Sam Waterston. [1] The film involves a planned military coup to overthrow the President of the United States. The television film remake was originally announced in 1984, while producer Peter Douglas worked for his father's film production company The Bryna Company (which had produced Seven Days in May). [2] The film took ten years to develop and was finally produced in 1994 through Peter Douglas' own film production company, Vincent Pictures. [2] It aired on HBO on August 20, 1994.The ramifications are not limited to campus, however. Horowitz cites the work of journalist Christopher Rufo to show how these ideas are being exported through racial sensitivity training sessions at America’s corporate headquarters, and even within branches of the U.S. Federal Government. Identity Politics is often referred to as Political Correctness, but is is more accurately understood as Cultural Marxism – the idea that American society is characterized by oppressive hierarchies, and thus divided into warring races, genders, and classes. [p.4] Important, informative, well-researched book. The author was raised by Communist parents and spent many years as a leftist. He truly knows the “enemy” he is writing about: those who are working to destroy America as we know it. Recommended for those who love America and our freedoms and who want to know the actual facts of what’s happening in the USA (in contrast to the narrative promoted by the media). The ANC expelled Holomisa in 1996 after he testified at the Truth and Reconciliation Commission about the alleged corruption, while the person against whom the allegations were made (Sigcau) remained in the Cabinet under Mandela’s administration, and under former President Thabo Mbeki’s administration. Enemies Within: Communists, the Cambridge Spies and the Making of Modern Britain by Richard Davenport-Hines, 2018

Mkhabela said this problem is not limited to the ANC: “This is why the issue of disclosures by politicians of who’s funding them — individually, as factions, or as organisations — becomes critical,” he said. DMThe first form refers to, for example, when an ANC leader has information on another comrade’s corruption. Rather than report the wrongdoing, the leader keeps mum — to reveal this information and use it as leverage, if or when the leader becomes embroiled in corruption allegations of their own. New left radicals spoke foolishly of revolution, but that is what they really wanted. They did not want a revolution modeled after the American Revolution, or even the French Revolution, but the Russian Revolution.

In a nod to this tragic truth, Horowitz ends this latest tour-de-force with a coda titled “Love against Hate,” which he borrows from the recovering-journalist Daniel Greenfield’s article “An Election between Love and Hate.” That election steal he correctly terms “the greatest political crime in the history of the country.” [p.200] Warsi is at her best delivering a withering polemic on the flaws in government rhetoric and policy on extremism and multiculturalism. In a chapter entitled “Islamophobia”, she dismisses the approach of David Cameron and other former colleagues as “nonsense”. Applied across the board, the government’s current definition of “extremism” would, she says, include Russell Brand.Another casualty of the Democrats’ ‘Resistance’ had been patriotic loyalty, which in now suspect as loyalty to ‘white nationalism’ and ‘white supremacy.’” [p.4] But Horowitz contends that America’s founding serves as an obstacle to the realization of this agenda. Arguing that the Declaration of Independence’s commitment to equality is a counterforce to Marxism’s obsession with power, Horowitz explains that leftist intellectuals have found it necessary to obfuscate America’s founding principles in their narratives to achieve their objectives. The account reveals tantalising details of an identity struggle in which she felt “acutely aware of difference” and “wanted to fit in”. In her 20s she had something of an early midlife crisis, closing her legal practice – she was by then a successful lawyer – and taking a “very late gap year”, travelling around Pakistan. In a rather extraordinary rebuttal of the various conspiracy theories about her, she cautions those suspicious about her past to “stop watching Fox News!”. The Enemy Within chronicles Warsi’s memories of life as a young Muslim woman growing up in a South Asian household. She discusses the importance of her family values: notions of hard work, respect for others and their differences and, importantly, fully supporting women as much as men, a perennial struggle facing many. The growing status of the family was achieved through self-employment and eventual financial success. It motivated her desire to become a confident and self-assured woman working in high politics in later life. Her path to political power, however, was not easy, laced as it was with many obstacles along the way.

Why is this history of 1619 important now, at a time when versions of American society compete politically, when one fraction of the citizenry plots a return to an America whose image was white, and another fraction of the citizenry embraces an evolution into a multiracial, multicultural democracy? Because how we envision our past shapes how we see ourselves today. One of the favorite objectives of white pride makes this point.” The Enemy Within: The McClellan Committee's Crusade Against Jimmy Hoffa and Corrupt Labor Unions is a book by American politician Robert F. Kennedy [1] (assisted by John Seigenthaler) [2] first published in 1960, and republished in 1994. [3] Edwin Guthman, chairman of the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial provided the introduction to the 1994 edition. [3] As Robert Kennedy was intimately involved, the book is somewhat autobiographical. White Fragility’ explains that white people are racists by birth, regardless of anything they say, do, or intend,” Horowitz writes. “‘How to Be an Antiracist’ provides a rationale for the efforts of left-wing activists to redefine racism to cover any viewpoint that doesn’t conform to theirs. In short, it is a handbook of totalitarian ideology.” Horowitz shares the story behind “Strange fruit song”. I know the song but I didn't know the full story. Virginia was not America in 1619 (would not be until 1776) we were an English Colony, following English Laws.This cookie is set by Addthis. This is a geolocation cookie to understand where the users sharing the information are located. Re: lynching: “About a third of lynching victims were white, and many of the victims had committed criminal acts and were targets of ‘frontier justice’ rather than racism.” -p. 37



  • Fruugo ID: 258392218-563234582
  • EAN: 764486781913
  • Sold by: Fruugo

Delivery & Returns

Fruugo

Address: UK
All products: Visit Fruugo Shop