One Sane One
48 pages
English

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48 pages
English

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Description

During the 1960’s and 1970’s, an early news commentator on television, Eric Sevareid, made sense of national and global events. He approached each two and one-half minute segment, about a 400- word “Think Piece”, as though it were the “Gettysburg Address.” His attitude was that “Democracy is not a free ride,” and that the viewer needed the truth to be an intelligent voter in order to sustain the Republic.
In this book the author uses “Think Notes” to inform the reader how the nation’s primary adversary, China, specifically the Communist Chinese Party, has been molding the American society in its likeness for over half a century. They have successfully aided the Democrats in creating an Entitlement society so citizens rely on them for subsistence. China needs the Bald Eagle Republic for global domination and intends to achieve a peaceful takeover.
Each Think Note discusses key topics which the Chinese use to achieve their control. With rare insight, the author reveals how Climate, Energy, Big Tech, Unions, Farmland and Racism are used to help craft a totalitarian state. Each Think Note ends with a creative solution on how to overcome the problem.
The book ends with a father (Sevareid) and his son discussing the nation’s plight after visiting the Capitol. The discussion is focused on how America, currently at the tipping point to a communist state, can avoid such a fate. A Bald Eagle sails overhead, perhaps a hopeful sign for America’s future.

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Publié par
Date de parution 19 février 2023
Nombre de lectures 1
EAN13 9798823001144
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 1 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0200€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

ONE SANE ONE
China’s Newest Colony: America
JASON ONEIL


AuthorHouse™
1663 Liberty Drive
Bloomington, IN 47403
www.authorhouse.com
Phone: 833-262-8899
 
 
 
 
 
 
© 2023 Jason ONeil. All rights reserved.
 
No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means without the written permission of the author.
 
Published by AuthorHouse 02/14/2023
 
ISBN: 979-8-8230-0113-7 (sc)
ISBN: 979-8-8230-0114-4 (e)
 
Library of Congress Control Number: 2023903020
 
 
 
 
Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Getty Images are models, and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.
Certain stock imagery © Getty Images.
 
 
 
Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.
CONTENTS
Introduction
Books by the Author
 
Think Note 1Executive Orders
Think Note 2China’s Plan
Think Note 3Energy Policy
Think Note 4Climate Change
Think Note 5Big Tech
Think Note 6Christianity
Think Note 7Work Ethic
Think Note 8Employee Unions
Think Note 9School Boards
Think Note 10Racism
Think Note 11Urban Decay
Think Note 12Farmland
Think Note 13Infrastructure
Think Note 14Vietnam War
Think Note 15Modern Warfare
Think Note 16Foreign Affairs
Think Note 17Tipping Point
INTRODUCTION

At the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia in 1787, delegate Benjamin Franklin is reputed to have said when he left the Hall: “You’ve got your republic…if you can keep it!”
Franklin, a student of history and very wise man, knew that a republic dies due to incompetent leaders, unfulfilled promises to the citizens or both. In essence, the key to survival is an informed electorate which applies common sense based upon confirmed facts to make good decisions. This is probably why Franklin was a newspaper man. He believed in reporting the facts in order for the citizens to make informed decisions.
In the mid-1900’s in America, a young Norwegian man was drawn to journalism. His name was Eric Sevareid. He was an avid student of American history. He was keen to understand the rationale behind the Constitution and the genius of the men who conceived it and made it a living document capable of sustaining a free-enterprise Republic. Franklin and Thomas Jefferson were two of Sevareid’s heroes. He modelled many aspects of his own thinking after their written words.
Initially a cub reporter in Minneapolis, the young man was “conscripted” as a reporter for CBS in Europe covering World War II. Later he covered the war in Vietnam where on one occasion he had to be rescued from the jungles of Cambodia. His CBS colleagues saw the potential for this “truth-seeker” at the same time that the television evening news hour needed a dose of sanity to interpret the world’s events.
The Dane, essentially a shy, introspective person, was thrust into the limelight as a commentator on Walter Cronkite’s daily News Hour. It was during the turbulent decade of the 1960’s and early 1970’s when tens of millions of new viewers tuned into the broadcast to learn the news but also the sane truth of Sevareid’s twice-weekly, 400-word, two and one-half minutes of much appreciated truth serum about the meaning of global events. Eric Sevareid’s guiding principals were simple: 1) trust in a knowledgeable citizen 2) guided by the lucid sanity of the Constitution, the greatest document on Earth since the Bible.

As a Marine Officer in Vietnam, I would lead resupply convoys to the fire bases in the norther sector of the country. After a mission, I would return to a compound and watch the war unfold on television. Sometimes our units were the subject of the broadcast about the “progress” in Vietnam. I knew that the generals and politicians were lying. There was no way we could win against a guerilla revolutionary force. It reminded me of America’s struggle to be free from England. There was no way America would contain the Chinese-backed forces in Vietnam.
Commentator Sevareid had experienced it first-hand. He knew the truth and reported it, much to the dismay, indeed anger, of the Johnson Administration. Like several of my fellow officers, I went into combat as a brandishing Eagle but returned home as a singed Pigeon! Five long years later, Saigon would fall. Over two million Vietnamese and 50,000 Americans died because of the lies.
Today, a half-century later, Washington is again spuing lies, huge ones, about all aspects of our society. History has shown that democratic societies routinely die after 250 years, most before that. The root cause is that the central government can not meet a society’s demands. Today, Washington has almost finished its creation of a Socialist State over the silent protests of a hapless Republican minority.
This book attempts to apply Sevareid’s sane techniques to describe the sad tragedy unfolding before our eyes in a manner which the reader can apply real-world experience to form an opinion about the impact of current events. Perhaps, a ground swell will lead to a revolutionary zeal capable of regaining our republic from the Marxists and their millions of recruits who are blind to the role that China is playing in the internal destruction of our democracy prior to their planned peaceful takeover of America, a goal which must be achieved to gain world domination.
BOOKS BY THE AUTHOR

Bald Eagle Vision
The Red Box
Turbopod
Turbospace
Sinecure
Cyberclipper
When Baldie Cries
New Age Ark
A Necessary Coup
Micronations
Hypersonica
Mission Embryo
DroneViper
Bald Eagle Vision 2
DragonChip
Cellphonica
Solarmania
Escape from La-La Land
Mirachip
Tough Sale
Padlockers
Flipphonia
Think Note 1
EXECUTIVE ORDERS

The American Constitution does not address in detail nor prohibit a President from issuing Executive Orders (EO’s). They exist to fundamentally address a need to modify an existing law which is exercised elsewhere in the Federal Government. It can be used by the President to justify emergency action without Congressional debate and/or funding. This was the case in the 1930’s and 1940’s when President Roosevelt issued over 300 EO’s to end the Depression and wage World War II.
Recently, a president has used dozens of EO’s to nullify a previous administration’s actions while creating political support for the Democratic Party.
Clearly, the EO is both a strategic and tactical tool. However, as we’ll learn, the jury is out about its legitimacy in a democratic republic. Our Constitution creates three separate but equal branches of the Federal Government as a check and balance system on behalf of the citizenry. It’s worked well for 250 years. Congress represents the public and manages the purse. The judiciary implements the Rule of Law and affirms the meaning and intent of the Constitution. The Executive Branch administers the bureaucratic tasks essential for effective governance of a free society. And this branch has cabinet positions for department leadership. In the last half-century, presidents have created key cabinet positions for Health, Environment, Energy, Homeland Security, Transportation and Veterans Affairs. These departments must be effective in meeting the demands of the citizens. If they are not, the void is traditionally filled by Socialist promises.
Advocates of the liberal use of the EO point to the transparency-meaning publication of the EO by print or digital media. This assertion is blatantly false because the public never reads an EO. Newspapers almost never publish them. The result is the avoidance of any public debate, much less compromise, about the substance and requirement for an EO. The legislature never participates in the process. As a result, EO’s which profess to be temporary to deal with a crisis, such as take control of an industry, usually end up as “pseudo laws” implemented by the bureaucracy. Almost a century ago, President Roosevelt routinely issued EO’s. Major topics covered the depth and breadth of the nation such as:
— Seizing control of the manufacturing of war material such as petroleum, food and the railroads
— Social Security Act
— Conservation: Dams, Parks, Beaches and Public Lands
— Veteran’s Issues (Over two dozen EO’s)
— Bureaucracy: Creation of Agencies, Boards, Committees, and Councils
— Foreign Affairs: Proclaimed the neutrality of the USA from Europe’s war. Also included the freezing of Japanese and Chinese assets
— Finance: Took control of silver and gold; created and opened new banks
By the end of World War II, dozens of permanent organizations had been created which still exist today and perpetuate a dependence upon the Federal Government by tens of millions of citizens.
Most recently, on the first day in office, the president issued 17 EO’s. All but two terminated programs initiated by the previous president. Several related to climate and global warming issues. Sixteen of the seventeen were purely political to harvest votes for the Democratic Party to insure long-term incumbency. Huge sums of money had to be printed to fund the initiatives during a period when the nation couldn’t even pay the interest on the National Debt.
Recently, White House spokespersons have floated the idea of an EO to create Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC). Informed financial analysts poi

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