23,99 €
inkl. MwSt.

Versandfertig in über 4 Wochen
  • Broschiertes Buch

Abraham Lincoln was the worst president. He killed 800,000 Americans and failed to seek peace that even barbarians sought throughout history with much less loss of life. Truman was the second worst president, splitting the world into two ideologies and causing the Korean and Vietnam wars. No other book has the fortitude to address the errors Blacks and Whites make with respect to race. This book reveals the racist words of Blacks today that create fear and mistrust that can be verified in the speeches of the democrat and republican convention speeches. The American people must learn the truth…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Abraham Lincoln was the worst president. He killed 800,000 Americans and failed to seek peace that even barbarians sought throughout history with much less loss of life. Truman was the second worst president, splitting the world into two ideologies and causing the Korean and Vietnam wars. No other book has the fortitude to address the errors Blacks and Whites make with respect to race. This book reveals the racist words of Blacks today that create fear and mistrust that can be verified in the speeches of the democrat and republican convention speeches. The American people must learn the truth to prevent a constitutional and religious loss of freedom. The bill of rights is being attacked and a second civil war is looming by outside influences pledging death to America. Anti-government people pretend to know how viruses spread and then blame the government, when they themselves are the cause of the deaths.
Autorenporträt
In high school, Benjamin Levine won a Latin award and broke his high school quarter mile track record even though the team had no track and had to practice in parks and on streets. He went on to earn a B.S. in chemical engineering, then graduated medical school at the State University Of New York, earning his M.D. He worked in the emergency room, in internal medicine, ENT, and in pediatrics where he met his future wife. They married in 1968 but had to cancel their honeymoon when Benjamin was called to serve in the Vietnam War as a Marine Corps medical officer. His wife worked as a nurse at a nearby army hospital. After the war he opened a private practice and an emergency clinic. In later years he developed a deep interest in history, which, combined with current events happening today, was what inspired him to write this book.