Best Books to Buy
Your author has a peculiar addiction – books. It is a good thing the bookcases sit on the concrete floor of the basement to support the weight.
Foreword
Your author has a peculiar addiction – books. It is a good thing the bookcases sit on the concrete floor of the basement to support the weight. With hundreds of books dealing with a variety of topics from geopolitics, religion, and history, there are a select number of favorite works summarized here for you and to perhaps “whet your appetite.” Of particular importance, these books appeared twenty or more years ago. Going through these works from cover to cover back then was akin to reading a prophecy that in recent times came true in every sense. These books from the turn of the century pinpoint the who, what, when, and where of the Covid-1984 plan-demic and the money madness of 2021.
For each entry below, click on the book image to get more information from Amazon.com.
The Creature from Jekyll Island: A Second Look at the Federal Reserve by G. Edward Griffin
Top of the list purposely; if you only desire one book to read, get this puppy! Author Fred Griffin takes you through a journey about money. From the beginning of organized society to modern times, “Creature” explains the origins of currency from bartering to precious metals to today’s fiat (worthless) money. The key historical theme is the banking cartel called the Federal Reserve birthed by the elite on Jekyll Island, North Carolina in 1913. If you take this journey, you can learn all about the real programs that make certain people very wealthy by Ponzi schemes. Written long before Enron and the Enron-like scandals, this book explains in excruciating detail that such schemes are the basis for our entire monetary system. Also see Frederick R. Smith Speaks, Creature from Jekyll Island (July 17, 2020). Published May 1998, Amer Media, 608 pages.
Hope of the Wicked by Ted Flynn
This book explains the news behind the news. Ted Flynn takes reliable information from many diverse sources and puts it together in one concise volume. For the discerning reader, it is hard to put down. The principal theme of this book is the small number of elite people who can manipulate society. From Amazon: “Politics has become but a tool for chaos; the solution for the ills confronting us exists far beyond. How have we arrived at the point we find ourselves, a point defined by the lack of ability to even govern our own future? If we can no longer determine our temporal destiny, then what does? The answers lie in a vast tangle of forces, organizations, individuals and philosophies, a tangle purposely confusing so as to avoid detection, a mass bound together tangibly by the desire of money and power, intangibly by the very essence of deceit. Published May 2000, Maxkol Communications, 550 pages.
Cloning of the American Mind: Eradicating Morality through Education by B. K. Eakman
The top pick from Fred’s library that details the lousy school system that our children and young adults must endure. This work goes deep into the system and chronicles the how and why our citizens face programming. B. K. Eakman’s book is a large tome full of copious notes that shows without a doubt there is a reason our children are doing so poorly. It shows a failing school system is the best way to control the people. From Robert Brown (Amazon review): “Ms Eakman mentions hundreds of tax-free foundations, non-governmental organizations (NGO), and socialist psychologists and philosophers like John Dewey, Horace Mann, and B.K. Skinner among many others who have created this current educational fiasco. Besides schooling, this ruling elite have also used the movies, entertainment (sports saturation), and news media to spread their propaganda.” Also see Frederick R. Smith Speaks, Nauseating NEA (August 1, 2020). Lesson – get the children out of the public schools; it is an investment worth the effort. Published August 1998, Huntington House Publishers, 600 pages.
The Keys of This Blood: The Struggle for World Dominion Between Pope John Paul II, Mikhail Gorbachev, and the Capitalist West by Malachi Martin, Anne Kepler (Contributor)
My favorite writer, the late Fr. Malachi Martin, authored this book. The Keys of this Blood is one of four books by Martin that your author has read, and this is an exceptionally large book that chronicles the relationships between big money and religion. However, money is just one of many themes of this book. As an insider for many years, Martin supplies a comprehensive account of the struggle to control the temporal world vs. the spiritual. Anti-Catholic types tout this work as “proof” that the “New World Order” really is a Vatican program! Nevertheless, today it is clear certain counterfeit leaders of the Church are indeed cheerleaders for the New World Order. If one were to take passages from the book selectively, it is easy to make this point. Still, reading the entire work (like reading the Bible as a whole), it becomes clear that it is about the struggle between secularism and salvation. Just before Malachi passed away, he said, “look to the sky.” Rest in peace, my friend Malachi. Published September 1991, Simon & Schuster, 736 pages.
Defrauding America by Rodney Stitch
That is the most disturbing book in the collection. It is a book that you will never see in a bookstore; it is too hot to handle. Rodney Stitch was a Federal Aviation Administration inspector who tried to blow the whistle about corruption several years ago. As a result of his attempt to blow the lid off the code of silence, Rodney found himself in trouble with the law for trumped-up and false charges. As a result, he was subject to “diesel therapy” (movement from prison to prison), and while incarcerated, he met many others who had the goods about deep corruption. That is one book that is so fantastic it seemed mostly fiction the first time through it. However, after further research and reading it again, your author concluded that Rodney is right. Digesting this book will promptly result in a bout of nightmares for the reader. Published April 2001, Diablo Western Press, 753 pages.
The Trouble With Democracy: A Citizen Speaks Out by William D. Gairdner
Written from a Canadian’s perspective, this book is an excellent compendium of the history and philosophy of democracy. William Gairdner explains in detail that the “democracy” we hear about day in and day out is not what our founders had in mind. This book is a winner to understand how collectivist philosophers such as John Stewart Mill and others have influenced most aspects of society. An anonymous reader (Amazon) review: “In his own words, Mr. Gairdner’s book is a look under the hood of democracy. Not just a surface look at things like who gets to vote or analysis of various political ideologies but a detailed look at the component parts of democracy, how they developed, and how they interact. It is no small undertaking but Mr. Gairdner draws liberally on history, psychology, and philosophy along with smatterings of literature, sociology, and science and is, ultimately, reasonably successful. He certainly generates a good deal that is worth some careful thought.” Published March 2001, Stoddart Publishers, 534 pages.
Environmental Overkill: Whatever Happened to Common Sense? by Dixy Lee Ray, Lou Guzzo, Dixie Lee Ray, Louis R. Guzzo
Dixy Lee Ray, who served as the governor of Oregon, writes about the extremism often associated with the environmental movement. In this fine work, Ray exposes the lies and distortion about things such as PCB’s. Also, learn about some of the extraordinary cases that destroyed people’s livelihood for environmental issues that have had little to no positive effect on the earth. This book shows that certain zealous environmental policies can harm the environment. Zon Fan (Amazon review): “This book should be required reading in every high school. Factually shows the environmentalists are nothing more than a front for the International Socialist Party. Even more astonishing, the book shows science is not on the side of the environmentalists; their stance is all make believe with actual data against them. Highly recommend this book for those seeking the truth. It’s laughable that all the one star reviews discrediting the book are not verified purchasers. Seek the truth.” Published April 1994, Perennial, 260 pages.
When Nations Die: Ten Warning Signs of a Culture in Crisis by Jim Nelson Black
This book is a scholarly treatise about the moral rot that has infected our society. Dr. Black takes you on a tour of the moral debauchery that destroyed the Roman Empire, and he concludes that we are in the same situation today. This book shows that we have been on a slippery slope for some time. It paints a bleak picture based on the historical record of the same decadence that has happened repeatedly in the past. Incredibly, a few years ago, a progressive neighbor scoffed at my observations concerning the contents of this book. He said it is hogwash that the moral condition has anything to do with the fall of any nation. We need to seek out my progressive neighbor and ask him about the new commercials shown on broadcast TV about the product used to shave pubic hair—specifically, the mini bikini thing with footage doing just that (this is not a joke). I can imagine the response from my enlightenment neighbor. Dew (Amazon review): “When Nations Die is a book that I recommend every American read. It is a staggering book, in following the falls of other great nations it is fearful that America is going the same direction. I also recommend that you read this book ASAP, for America is following the road of declining very fast, we know not how long until we may be added to the list of When Nations Die. I plead with you please read.” Published October 1994, Tyndale House, 280 pages.
Heaven on Earth: The Rise and Fall of Socialism by Joshua Muravchik
This one is the ticket for a detailed history of socialism from the very beginning to the modern world. My favorite chapter is the comprehensive account of the commune known as New Harmony (Indiana, circa 1825). The author, Joshua Muravchik, a staunch socialist early in his life, realized that collectivism in any form does not work. The Utopian idea has been a failure repeatedly for all the experiments from the French Revolution to Communism and finally to today’s hidden socialism sometimes called the “third way.” Craig Kennedy (Amazon Review): “Heaven on Earth is a captivating intellectual history of the first rank. When I first heard about this book, I imagined 450 dense pages devoted to socialism’s political splits, rivalries and intellectual schisms over the past two centuries. Not a very inviting prospect. The reality is much different. Josh Muravchik tells the story of the socialist idea and of the socialist movement(s) through a series of fascinating vignettes and brief biographies. Starting with the French revolutionary Babeuf and taking the story through the fall of the Soviet Union (and the troubled current state of the Israeli kibbutz movement), Muravchik uses this format to highlight the central philosophical and political issues addressed by the key figures in a particular historical setting.” Published April 2002, Encounter Books, 391 pages.
The Black Book of Communism
This book was initially published in France in 1997 as Le livre noir du Communisme and two years later in English as The Black Book of Communism: Crimes, Terror, Repression. Academia said it was “controversial.” The English version, published in 1999 by Harvard University Press, continues to stir the “controversy” mantra. This 858-page tome is among the “life-changing” books that your author read cover to cover. The “Black Book” has six authors. These scholars are not your “red under every bed” types but dyed-in-the-wool socialists who were courageous to detail the crimes committed by the Communist regimes. The chief editor, Stéphane Courtois concludes that the many forms of Communism were no better than Nazism. He avers that both systems were more efficient at killing than at governing. The occult evil of Nazism caused the direct genocide of six million people. (Some references show 21 million-plus for all deaths resulting from the Nazi regime). The 100 million Communist death toll indicates that there is a penchant for Communism to kill. This egalitarian philosophy promised to end class distinctions. Nazism, on the other hand, while trying to redistribute wealth, was a virulent form of racism. Communism did not discriminate based on race. It was an equal opportunity killer. The same old scheme is used today to divide the people (neo-Marxism) under the guise of Critical Race Theory. Specifically, cogent non-woke folk are called right-wing racist-nationalist-supremacist. The ultimate form of projection is whereby the accusers do the very thing they decry. Also see Frederick R. Smith Speaks, The Black Book of Communism (September 28, 2020). Published October 1999, Harvard University Press, 858 pages.
Death in the Air: Globalism, Terrorism & Toxic Warfare
Without a doubt, this is the strangest book in the Smith library. Dr. Leonard G. Horowitz details the developments in the field of population control. He supplies copious examples of genetically engineered viruses and bacteria and the latest technologies for biological warfare. Included are the disturbing joint exposures to biochemical, metallic, and electromagnetic agents. All this under a global genocide pogrom auspiciously for the earth’s good under the euphemisms of public health and national security. The author details the “chemtrail” controversy, about which your author has some doubts. Otherwise, this is a chilling book and prophetic given the Covid-1984 plan-demic we live. Dr. Horowitz has contended for years that the main agenda of the globalists is to reduce the population of the world by as much as 50%. To give this book even more credibility, your author has a dear friend who knows this author. For safety reasons, we will stop here. Published May 2001, Healthy World Distribution, 526 pages.
None Dare Call It Treason; 25 Years Later by John Stormer
None Dare Call It Treason is a breathtaking account of the Communist infiltration into our government and other organs of society. Originally written in 1961, Stormer’s updated version shows how the progressives (leftists) and neocons have dominated our schools, churches, press, labor, unions, and State Department for over 70 years. With a focus on the Soviet Union tye of Communism, the intrigue contained in the book marches on with the added threat of the Chinese Communist Party (e.g., the 1998 book Year of the Rat: How Bill Clinton Compromised U.S. Security for Chinese Cash.) The events and people outlined by Stormer supply a clear view of the reason for the breathtaking control the media has over the average citizen. It is taking a lot longer than Stormer had predicted for the takeover, but it is clear the same Marxist infestation has updated its delivery system. The new delivery mechanisms include the environmental movement (take your pick - global cooling, warming, or change) and the race-bating (divide and conquer) instruments (take your pick - CRT, BLM, or the 1619 Project). Of course, the mainstream vilified this book with vignettes about the author being a “right-wing kook” and generalities about the content while ignoring the facts in the book. Published February 1992, Liberty Bell Press, 640 pages.
Cogent Author and publisher, Frederick R. Smith
Cogent Editor, Sean Tinney