The Books
Books by don fredrick:
After her 2016 election loss, Hillary Clinton asked, "What Happened?" This book tells you, from the entry of more than one dozen Republican and Democrat candidates into the race in 2015, through the primary debates and elections, the party conventions, the presidential debates, the polls, the controversies, and the election results. Along the way, follow the goings-on in the nation's capital, including the terrible Obama nuclear deal with Iran, Hillary's secret server, and the inability of the mainstream media leftists, establishment Republicans, and the Democrats to stop Donald Trump. Hillary Clinton may never understand why she lost the election when most pundits believed she had an almost guaranteed victory, but after reading this book you will know what happened.
The Complete Obama Timeline is a 30-volume set of books covering the life of Barack Obama, from his birth in 1961 to his last day in the Oval Office. Although this Timeline is primarily about Obama, it is also about the United States of America and how it has changed dramatically since the 1960s. In following the rise of Obama’s political career one can also observe the decline of the United States. The purpose of this Timeline is two-fold: It is to relate the story of Obama and to explain how and why he came to power. It will take the nation many years to recover from the devastating actions of Obama and his fellow radicals. It will take even longer if few understand how it all happened. This Timeline is intended to help people understand.
Kindle versions of each volume are only $0.99 each!
Kindle versions of each volume are only $0.99 each!
University professor Mark Connor investigates the bizarre death of his elderly neighbor. Meanwhile, television reporter Patricia Harris obtains an unusual material found by a homeless man in a park - a material not even an expert can explain. Together, Mark and Patricia research the strange phenomenon of spontaneous human combustion. With the help of a local firefighter they conduct an experiment that makes them wonder whether the impossible may in fact be possible.
Author Don Fredrick, continually astonished by the number of modern-day Americans who seem not to know many of the basic things they should know, shares some of the wisdom he has absorbed since his baby boomer beginnings. With directness, clarity, and wit, he discusses self-esteem, shame, irrational sacrifice, unintended consequences, visions, goals, risk-taking, fairness, acceptance, envy, gratitude, passion, and enthusiasm.
This book consists of all four volumes of the author's "Liberals Are Nuts" series, and is therefore not for the faint of heart! But if you have the stomach for 700+ pages of liberal lunacy, dig right in and read about trigger warnings, safe spaces, bigoted eclipses, fake testicles for middle-schoolers, womb wannabes, dyke marches, animal liberation, big-boned boneheads, and racist bananas.
Proceed with caution!
Proceed with caution!
Yes, some liberals believe bananas, cheese, and solar eclipses are racist; little boys should be given princess makeovers at Disneyland; pets contribute to global warming; and $80 "cuddle sessions" can help relieve the stress of a Trump Presidency!
Here is book four in the "Liberals Are Nuts" series. Don't miss the chapter on "Camp Tranny" (with apologies to Allan Sherman), or the discussion of history's balance sheet (prompted by an angry transgender model who hates all white people).
Get ready for another round of anger and laughter!
Here is book four in the "Liberals Are Nuts" series. Don't miss the chapter on "Camp Tranny" (with apologies to Allan Sherman), or the discussion of history's balance sheet (prompted by an angry transgender model who hates all white people).
Get ready for another round of anger and laughter!
Get ready for more outrage and irreverence with this third book in the Liberals Are Nuts series! Meet liberals who think no men can be trusted, all white people are racists, you can change your race like your hair color, there are not enough lesbian geographers, algebra is far too difficult for minorities to comprehend, war movies have shamefully large numbers of male actors, and homecoming kings and queens should be called "homecoming ambassadors." Yes, liberals are nuts!
If you were outraged and amused by the first book in this series, "Proof That Liberals Are Nuts," just wait until you read "More Proof That Liberals Are Nuts!" The politically-correct police are at it again, in the Magic Kingdom, London's tube, breweries, liberal Oregon, American universities, the U.S. military, the halls of Congress, and, of course. La-La Land (Hollywood)!
Whether they believe animals should have the right to sue humans, increasing the minimum wage has no down side, your SUV is killing polar bears, terrorism can be defeated with James Taylor appearances, “safe spaces” can make reality go away, or anything that has even a remote possibility of offending anyone should either be banned or accompanied by a “trigger warning,” today’s liberals are nuts! This book provides proof that liberals are certifiable—along with a few laughs at the expense of pajama boys and precious snowflakes!
This book begins with the article that took the Internet by storm because it spoke for millions of Americans who felt betrayed by elected officials and their media toadies. Those same millions are represented in this collection of biting, witty, and entertaining essays, that include:
Peter, Paul & Wary
What Does "Never Again" Mean?
Don't Blame the Thermometers
Higher Education Free-for-All
That's Sharia
It's a Small Damn World
Saving Ryan's Privates
Deport Khizr Khan!
Obama's Colin Cleansing
Not That Woman
So Long, CNN
Peter, Paul & Wary
What Does "Never Again" Mean?
Don't Blame the Thermometers
Higher Education Free-for-All
That's Sharia
It's a Small Damn World
Saving Ryan's Privates
Deport Khizr Khan!
Obama's Colin Cleansing
Not That Woman
So Long, CNN
This collection of more than 100 articles begins with the now famous title essay, a devastating summary of Obama’s lifelong associations with thugs, frauds, swindlers, socialists, and communists. Throughout almost 600 pages, author Don Fredrick outlines how the nation’s current temporary occupant of the Oval Office is—whether by design or by accident—destroying the United States of America. Learn about the liberal thought process and why it’s not that easy being “green.” Find out why fat black women need not apply for jobs in the Obama economy. Discover the real cause and devastating impact of inflation. Understand how everyone has a threshold and why Obama is determined to find yours. Search for the missing hatchets and scalpels. Examine the “Job Destruction Act of 2009.” Learn the other “N-word.” Find out why you should invest in gold and silver, while you prepare for health care rationing. Learn to recognize Obama’s false choice persuasion technique. Consider the real meaning of the term “natural born citizen” and why it makes Obama the nation’s second illegal president. Learn why Obama is more like Captain Queeg than Seth Adams. Enjoy the tales of King Barry and the Nation of Decline, and Obama in the chocolate factory. Lastly, prepare for the coming de facto secessions and contrast life in America economy with survival on a desert island. With simple examples and often acerbic wit, the author turns complicated issues into straightforward concepts that will remain in your mind—and make it easier for you to challenge the arguments of leftists. Some pages will make you laugh. Others may make you cry. But all will leave you better informed… and prepared for what lies ahead.
This is an economic primer for the average American, who was never taught the basics in school and who is now, as a result, being robbed by the government while being told it is for his/her own good. It includes but is not limited to: - The basic principles of free market capitalism explained. - A debunking of the many economic sophisms of our day. - Why raising the minimum wage hurts the very people it was intended to help. - Why unrestricted free trade is best for everyone in the long run. - The real, logical reasons why women are paid less than men. - Why minorities should embrace rather than fear capitalism. - What the government doesn't want you to know about taxes, inflation, and regulation. - The basic facts you need to know to protect yourself from the tax-loving politicians and regulation-loving bureaucrats.
What happens when the parasites outnumber the producers? When the producers refuse to produce? When society becomes more important than the individual? When the "social engineers" finally get their way? What happens when the engine of free enterprise is shut down? When those who know how to operate and repair the engine desert their posts? What happens when the nation's producers - the creators, inventors, entrepreneurs, scientists, geniuses, and hard workers - tell the parasites to go to hell? Colony 14 is about men and women who place freedom above all else, and who believe that those who would sacrifice liberty for security deserve neither liberty nor security. It is the story of America's future if we continue down our collectivist path, and the tale of freedom fighters whose principles lead them to take on the world.
books by frederick william dame:
Introduction to The Complete Obama Timeline provides the reader with necessary background information concerning the theory of history, the different kinds of history, the importance of history, and how representative, historical materials are chosen. These aspects are applied to a critique of The Complete Obama Timeline and an analysis of the work of the author. The book includes five essay sections concerning Barack Hussein Obama and liberal fascism in the United States of America. Of importance to those readers who purchase the 30 volumes of The Complete Obama Timeline is the inclusion of a Master Table of Contents at the end
of the book.
of the book.
The American Crisis
Since Barack Hussein Obama first took office as president of the United States of America in 2008, he has tried to turn his seat into a throne and has slowly but surely stripped our nation of the wisdom and knowledge at the root of what We the People cherish most. Our Constitution is collapsing around us, and rather than try to save it, the media, the moonstruck public, and partisan politicians have merely averted their eyes.
But we cannot stay blind to the things this man has done. We cannot look the other way as he continues to lead our nation further away from the principles on which it was founded. We must face this crisis head-on, lest everything we hold dear will be lost.
The American Crisis takes a long, hard look at the contemporary American political environment through open eyes and brings the harsh realities of our situation into full focus, exposing the truths the public has tried to avoid or cover up with lies.
Composed of nineteen essays in the spirit of Thomas Paine’s famous American Crisis Papers of 1776–1783, it is sure to stir controversy—and will inevitably raise awareness, as it raises brows.
Since Barack Hussein Obama first took office as president of the United States of America in 2008, he has tried to turn his seat into a throne and has slowly but surely stripped our nation of the wisdom and knowledge at the root of what We the People cherish most. Our Constitution is collapsing around us, and rather than try to save it, the media, the moonstruck public, and partisan politicians have merely averted their eyes.
But we cannot stay blind to the things this man has done. We cannot look the other way as he continues to lead our nation further away from the principles on which it was founded. We must face this crisis head-on, lest everything we hold dear will be lost.
The American Crisis takes a long, hard look at the contemporary American political environment through open eyes and brings the harsh realities of our situation into full focus, exposing the truths the public has tried to avoid or cover up with lies.
Composed of nineteen essays in the spirit of Thomas Paine’s famous American Crisis Papers of 1776–1783, it is sure to stir controversy—and will inevitably raise awareness, as it raises brows.
America's Indomitable Character: Volume I
In Volume I of America's Indomitable Character the text covers Liberty; the Liberty Tree; the differences between constitutional, democracy, republic, and democratic republic. The discoverers and settlers of America. The social and political atmosphere of the American Colonial beginnings and the influence of European Wars in the developing of a Colonial identity consciousness. The Colonial America identity crisis as seen via masculine femininity or feminine masculinity. The connection between Colonial America and the French philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau in the Enlightenment. The clash of the White European Civilization with the Native American Civilization. At the end of Volume I, the reader will know: Why Barack Hussein Obama has no legal character identity to be the President of the United States of America. What the real title of America's constitution is and why. Why the Mayflower Compact, and Plymouth Rock are sources of American character identity. What the first political cartoons in America were. What British propaganda in the American Revolution thought about General George Washington and what Colonial propaganda thought about King George III. What a doodle is. The origin of Yankee. What a Woffington is. The origin of American libraries. The relationship of philosophy to character identity and politics. The origin of words. The role of deconstructionism regarding American character identity. The role of Nature in connection to American character identity. The relationship of the individual to the American society. The difference between the state and the government. The beginnings of education in America and its relationship to politics. The origin of the term cut throats in referring to the white man. What a noble savage is. That Indians were not drunkards.
In Volume I of America's Indomitable Character the text covers Liberty; the Liberty Tree; the differences between constitutional, democracy, republic, and democratic republic. The discoverers and settlers of America. The social and political atmosphere of the American Colonial beginnings and the influence of European Wars in the developing of a Colonial identity consciousness. The Colonial America identity crisis as seen via masculine femininity or feminine masculinity. The connection between Colonial America and the French philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau in the Enlightenment. The clash of the White European Civilization with the Native American Civilization. At the end of Volume I, the reader will know: Why Barack Hussein Obama has no legal character identity to be the President of the United States of America. What the real title of America's constitution is and why. Why the Mayflower Compact, and Plymouth Rock are sources of American character identity. What the first political cartoons in America were. What British propaganda in the American Revolution thought about General George Washington and what Colonial propaganda thought about King George III. What a doodle is. The origin of Yankee. What a Woffington is. The origin of American libraries. The relationship of philosophy to character identity and politics. The origin of words. The role of deconstructionism regarding American character identity. The role of Nature in connection to American character identity. The relationship of the individual to the American society. The difference between the state and the government. The beginnings of education in America and its relationship to politics. The origin of the term cut throats in referring to the white man. What a noble savage is. That Indians were not drunkards.
America's Indomitable Character: volume II
Volume II of America's Indomitable Character has information on: A synopsis of Volume I. A preview concerning the content of Volume II with the sub-themes of Nature, human nature, society, the social contract, and education and how they weave into American character identity. American character identity and its Colonial connection to the philosophy of Jean-Jacques Rousseau. The historical personage Michel Guillaume (J. Hector St. John) de Crèvecoeur, a French, British, American Colonial citizen, and the America farmer par excellence who posed the famous question: What is an American? Benjamin Franklin's contributions to the developing American character identity. Thomas Paine's revolutionary views on American character identity. Thomas Jefferson's philosophical contributions to American character identity. John Dickinson, America's soldier and founding father. Hugh Henry Brackenridge, American publisher and author who educated Colonial Americans in politics. The literary group the Connecticut Wits who were both for and against America's independent development. The role of Colonial Religion and early attitudes concerning the American Colonial Theater as they relate to American character identity. The American dramatist and jurist Royall Tyler and his play The Contrast (A Comedy in Five Acts) in which the newly developing American consciousness of independence, including female independence, vis-à-vis English foppery and buffoonery are presented. Further, the use of the Native American's chanson du mort, in this case the Song of Alknomook and the dramaturgical presentation of Yankee Doodle are of utmost importance in understanding The Contrast and how they interplay with American character identity. The Albany Plan of Union. The Declaration of Independence written by the Founding Fathers. The Articles of Confederation (and Perpetual Union). A chronology of theatrical events between 1600 and 1800.
Volume II of America's Indomitable Character has information on: A synopsis of Volume I. A preview concerning the content of Volume II with the sub-themes of Nature, human nature, society, the social contract, and education and how they weave into American character identity. American character identity and its Colonial connection to the philosophy of Jean-Jacques Rousseau. The historical personage Michel Guillaume (J. Hector St. John) de Crèvecoeur, a French, British, American Colonial citizen, and the America farmer par excellence who posed the famous question: What is an American? Benjamin Franklin's contributions to the developing American character identity. Thomas Paine's revolutionary views on American character identity. Thomas Jefferson's philosophical contributions to American character identity. John Dickinson, America's soldier and founding father. Hugh Henry Brackenridge, American publisher and author who educated Colonial Americans in politics. The literary group the Connecticut Wits who were both for and against America's independent development. The role of Colonial Religion and early attitudes concerning the American Colonial Theater as they relate to American character identity. The American dramatist and jurist Royall Tyler and his play The Contrast (A Comedy in Five Acts) in which the newly developing American consciousness of independence, including female independence, vis-à-vis English foppery and buffoonery are presented. Further, the use of the Native American's chanson du mort, in this case the Song of Alknomook and the dramaturgical presentation of Yankee Doodle are of utmost importance in understanding The Contrast and how they interplay with American character identity. The Albany Plan of Union. The Declaration of Independence written by the Founding Fathers. The Articles of Confederation (and Perpetual Union). A chronology of theatrical events between 1600 and 1800.
America's Indomitable Character: Volume III
Volume III of America's Indomitable Character concerns itself with: American character identity as represented by ten selected Colonial female authors, among them the early Colonial authors of religious freedom Anne Hutchinson and Anne Dudley Bradstreet; the Colonial adventuress Sarah Kemble Knight; Anne Cotton and her eye-witness accounts of the history of Virginia; Mercy Otis Warren, a contemporary historian of the American Revolutionary Period; Abigail Adams who gave her husband John Adams, the second President, political advice; Judith Sargent Murray, a Colonial feminist; the African-American poet Phillis Wheatley; Hannah Webster Foster, an early advocate of female education; and Susanna Haswell Rowson, America's first professional female novelist. How the Thirteen Original Colonies became states. The American Constitution and American character identity. Attempts to destroy the American Constitution. The Monroe Doctrine and American character identity. The origin and essence of Romanticism and its importance in America. A presentation of Nature, human nature, society, the social contract, and education in selected works of William Hill Brown, Philip Morin Freneau, Charles Brockden Brown, Washington Irving, William Cullen Bryant, David Crockett, James Fenimore Cooper, Edgar Allan Poe. The Bill of Rights. David Crockett's Not Yours to Give Speech. Why Colonists and immigrants came to America and how they became Americans. Individualism and anti-elitism in America's character. America as a place where individuals form and decide their own destiny; where, as Don Fredrick says, society "means nothing more than a collection of many individual citizens in the same place; where there exist not many rules telling a person what he is permitted to do, but only a few rules telling him what he cannot do. Or, at least, that is what America was when the aforementioned authors wrote about the nation."
Volume III of America's Indomitable Character concerns itself with: American character identity as represented by ten selected Colonial female authors, among them the early Colonial authors of religious freedom Anne Hutchinson and Anne Dudley Bradstreet; the Colonial adventuress Sarah Kemble Knight; Anne Cotton and her eye-witness accounts of the history of Virginia; Mercy Otis Warren, a contemporary historian of the American Revolutionary Period; Abigail Adams who gave her husband John Adams, the second President, political advice; Judith Sargent Murray, a Colonial feminist; the African-American poet Phillis Wheatley; Hannah Webster Foster, an early advocate of female education; and Susanna Haswell Rowson, America's first professional female novelist. How the Thirteen Original Colonies became states. The American Constitution and American character identity. Attempts to destroy the American Constitution. The Monroe Doctrine and American character identity. The origin and essence of Romanticism and its importance in America. A presentation of Nature, human nature, society, the social contract, and education in selected works of William Hill Brown, Philip Morin Freneau, Charles Brockden Brown, Washington Irving, William Cullen Bryant, David Crockett, James Fenimore Cooper, Edgar Allan Poe. The Bill of Rights. David Crockett's Not Yours to Give Speech. Why Colonists and immigrants came to America and how they became Americans. Individualism and anti-elitism in America's character. America as a place where individuals form and decide their own destiny; where, as Don Fredrick says, society "means nothing more than a collection of many individual citizens in the same place; where there exist not many rules telling a person what he is permitted to do, but only a few rules telling him what he cannot do. Or, at least, that is what America was when the aforementioned authors wrote about the nation."
America's Indomitable Character: Volume IV
Volume IV of America's Indomitable Character contains information on: A synopsis of Volume III. Philosophical and intellectual streams of thought as they came from Old Europe and connected with the intellectual developments of the New America. Transcendentalism and Dark Romanticism. A presentation regarding Nature, human nature, society, the social contract in the following authors: Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Nathaniel Hawthorne, (Sarah) Margaret Fuller Ossoli, Theodore Parker, Herman Melville, Walt Whitman, Emily Dickinson. How the development of a national literature contributed to the development of an American character identity. Identities and affinities between the American authors and Jean-Jacques Rousseau. The Reiseweg of Rousseau's spirit to America. A conclusive summary of all four volumes. How the Democrat Party after the Civil War and up to Barack Hussein Obama has been exceedingly active in making sure that the values expressed in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution for the United States of America were not applied to all Americans - from the Democrat Party affiliated Ku Klux Klan, through the communist takeover of the Democrat Party, to the defeat of racism in the second half of the twentieth century and the re-emergence of racism with the racist class division polemics of Barack Hussein Obama in the twenty-first century. How the Democrat Party has dumbed-down American citizens. How Barack Hussein Obama, the putative president of the United States of America, has hollowed out the substance and laws that were once the backbone of America's character identity; from symbolical insults, through the expansion of social programs and the weakening of national defense, to the destruction of America's religious identity and the erosion of the middle class. This is Barack Hussein Obama's active destruction of American character identity.
Volume IV of America's Indomitable Character contains information on: A synopsis of Volume III. Philosophical and intellectual streams of thought as they came from Old Europe and connected with the intellectual developments of the New America. Transcendentalism and Dark Romanticism. A presentation regarding Nature, human nature, society, the social contract in the following authors: Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Nathaniel Hawthorne, (Sarah) Margaret Fuller Ossoli, Theodore Parker, Herman Melville, Walt Whitman, Emily Dickinson. How the development of a national literature contributed to the development of an American character identity. Identities and affinities between the American authors and Jean-Jacques Rousseau. The Reiseweg of Rousseau's spirit to America. A conclusive summary of all four volumes. How the Democrat Party after the Civil War and up to Barack Hussein Obama has been exceedingly active in making sure that the values expressed in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution for the United States of America were not applied to all Americans - from the Democrat Party affiliated Ku Klux Klan, through the communist takeover of the Democrat Party, to the defeat of racism in the second half of the twentieth century and the re-emergence of racism with the racist class division polemics of Barack Hussein Obama in the twenty-first century. How the Democrat Party has dumbed-down American citizens. How Barack Hussein Obama, the putative president of the United States of America, has hollowed out the substance and laws that were once the backbone of America's character identity; from symbolical insults, through the expansion of social programs and the weakening of national defense, to the destruction of America's religious identity and the erosion of the middle class. This is Barack Hussein Obama's active destruction of American character identity.

