Praise Jesus, in these troubled times, it is difficult for even the most stalwart True Christian to get the truth out of the seccular media. I thought that as a service to you bookworms out there, I would establish this thread so that we Pastors might steer you Republican truth seekers toward some decent reading material. Aside from the Holy KJV1611 Bible, of course.
Today's suggested reading is a recent book written by Godly Conservative Bay Buchanan. She has penned a fair and balanced biography of the she-witch Hillary Cliton. THIS review sums her position up nicely.
It is an invigorating 256 page read, and will serve to reinforce the truth about the radical feminazi agenda that awaits America.
Today's suggested reading is a recent book written by Godly Conservative Bay Buchanan. She has penned a fair and balanced biography of the she-witch Hillary Cliton. THIS review sums her position up nicely.
Meet the new Hillary - same as the old Hillary
The Extreme Makeover of Hillary (Rodham) Clinton
by Buchanan, Bay
Hillary Rodham Clinton has been many things, but one thing she has always been is a dedicated, unapologetic liberal - until now. In positioning herself for her 2008 presidential run, Hillary has begun to carefully put away the trappings of a liberal and wrap herself in a cloak of moderation. The Senator who had been (with the possible exception of Ted Kennedy) the highest-profile member of the Democrat party's left wing, is now being packaged as a centrist - with the willing help of the liberal media, which has taken up her cause and castigates anyone who attempts to keep labeling her a liberal.
But now, in The Extreme Makeover of Hillary (Rodham) Clinton, Bay Buchanan examines the evidence in order to determine whether it's really true: after forty years of battling for every imaginable liberal cause on earth, has Hillary Rodham Clinton really become the right-of-center politician she is presented to be today? Has the darling of the Left, the Feminist-in-Chief, the architect of universal health care, the author of It Takes a Village, really abandoned the causes of a lifetime and turned to the Right? After years in the political trenches with the best the Left has to offer, has Hillary rejected the ideals for which she fought so hard? Are we to forget about Hillary's eight years as co-president and decades as an outspoken advocate of most every left-wing cause and limit ourselves only to Hillary's six years in the Senate when assessing her political philosophy? Are we to treat one of the most widely recognized women in the world as if she dropped out of the sky and onto the political scene just a few years back?
Or could there be something else going on here? Could Hillary's apparent ideological shift be a cunning move to overcome her two great vulnerabilities as a candidate - the fact that voters think she's too liberal, as well as cold, calculating, and unlikable? To find the answer, Buchanan looks at the many faces of Hillary Clinton: the woman, the wife, the lawyer, the feminist, the politician, the senator, and the aspiring president. She scratches at the Hillary's new façade to see if the old Hillary still resides there, or if parts of her have truly been replaced. She examines Hillary's strengths and weaknesses, her fears and challenges, her beliefs and values, her passions and causes, her apparent willingness to reach out to Republicans, and a host of other evidence in order to determine whether or not there has really been any discernible movement in her political leanings.
To establish whether we are witnessing a change of heart in Hillary or a cynical makeover, Buchanan also establishes a baseline: since the reinventing began in earnest when Hillary took office as the junior senator from New York, she uses that moment as a point of reference, establishing who Hillary was when she entered the Senate, and examines Hillary's policy positions as a senator -- from the social issues to national defense -- to determine what she really believes.
The Extreme Makeover of Hillary (Rodham) Clinton
by Buchanan, Bay
Hillary Rodham Clinton has been many things, but one thing she has always been is a dedicated, unapologetic liberal - until now. In positioning herself for her 2008 presidential run, Hillary has begun to carefully put away the trappings of a liberal and wrap herself in a cloak of moderation. The Senator who had been (with the possible exception of Ted Kennedy) the highest-profile member of the Democrat party's left wing, is now being packaged as a centrist - with the willing help of the liberal media, which has taken up her cause and castigates anyone who attempts to keep labeling her a liberal.
But now, in The Extreme Makeover of Hillary (Rodham) Clinton, Bay Buchanan examines the evidence in order to determine whether it's really true: after forty years of battling for every imaginable liberal cause on earth, has Hillary Rodham Clinton really become the right-of-center politician she is presented to be today? Has the darling of the Left, the Feminist-in-Chief, the architect of universal health care, the author of It Takes a Village, really abandoned the causes of a lifetime and turned to the Right? After years in the political trenches with the best the Left has to offer, has Hillary rejected the ideals for which she fought so hard? Are we to forget about Hillary's eight years as co-president and decades as an outspoken advocate of most every left-wing cause and limit ourselves only to Hillary's six years in the Senate when assessing her political philosophy? Are we to treat one of the most widely recognized women in the world as if she dropped out of the sky and onto the political scene just a few years back?
Or could there be something else going on here? Could Hillary's apparent ideological shift be a cunning move to overcome her two great vulnerabilities as a candidate - the fact that voters think she's too liberal, as well as cold, calculating, and unlikable? To find the answer, Buchanan looks at the many faces of Hillary Clinton: the woman, the wife, the lawyer, the feminist, the politician, the senator, and the aspiring president. She scratches at the Hillary's new façade to see if the old Hillary still resides there, or if parts of her have truly been replaced. She examines Hillary's strengths and weaknesses, her fears and challenges, her beliefs and values, her passions and causes, her apparent willingness to reach out to Republicans, and a host of other evidence in order to determine whether or not there has really been any discernible movement in her political leanings.
To establish whether we are witnessing a change of heart in Hillary or a cynical makeover, Buchanan also establishes a baseline: since the reinventing began in earnest when Hillary took office as the junior senator from New York, she uses that moment as a point of reference, establishing who Hillary was when she entered the Senate, and examines Hillary's policy positions as a senator -- from the social issues to national defense -- to determine what she really believes.
It is an invigorating 256 page read, and will serve to reinforce the truth about the radical feminazi agenda that awaits America.