
|
 |



 |
 |
 |

|
|
by Stephen P. Halbrook
Hardcover
Our Price: $1.00 You Save: 97%
Does the Second Amendment protect a private citizen's right to keep and bear arms? Or is this power vested solely in government? Beginning in the 1960s, a revisionist view emerged that individuals had a "right" to bear arms only in
militia service -- a limited, collective right. But in the late 1980s a handful of scholars began producing an altogether persuasive analysis that changed thinking on the matter, so that today, even in canonical textbooks, bearing arms is acknowledged as an individual right. Now, Stephen Halbrook's The Founders' Second Amendment is the first book-length account of the origins of the Second Amendment, based on the Founders' own statements as found in newspapers, correspondence, debates, and resolutions. read more |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |

|
|
by Paul Sperry
Hardcover
Our Price: $1.00 You Save: 96%
The most dangerous Muslim radicals won't be sneaking through our borders from the Middle East -- they're already here. That's the alarming message of Washington-based investigative reporter Paul Sperry's new book, Infiltration: How Muslim Spies and Subversives Have Penetrated Washington. Using access to classified documents as well as exclusive interviews with FBI agents, Customs officers, and military intelligence officials, Sperry reveals how the top levels of our government, armed forces and intelligence agencies have been compromised by radical Muslims -- many of them trained, supported, and inserted into their positions by the so-called "moderate" Muslim establishment in America. Cleverly exploiting "diversity," "religious freedom," and tax-exemption laws, these subversives have gained firm footholds in key American institutions, including public schools and universities, the federal and state prison system, law enforcement, the military, nuclear weapons laboratories, the Department of Homeland Security -- even the White House. read more |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |

|
|
by Brian Doherty
Hardcover
Our Price: $1.00 You Save: 94%
The Second Amendment has been part of the Constitution
of the United States since 1791. Yet, although it has been
mentioned, relied on, mused over, and considered -- at least
in part -- in many Supreme Court cases, it was not until
the Court's June 26, 2008 decision in District of Columbia
v. Heller that the Court fully and unambiguously answered
the most basic question: Does the right to possess
firearms, as stated in the Second Amendment, apply to
individuals? Yes, the Court ruled, it does. And, with that
decision, the District's handgun ban -- one of the toughest
and most controversial in the nation -- was ended. read more |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |

|
|
by Matthew Continetti
Hardcover
Our Price: $1.00 You Save: 96%
They did it to Dan Quayle, they did it to George W.
Bush, and they've done it to numerous other conservative
politicians: liberal media talking heads and late-night
comedians chortle repeatedly and relentlessly over their
flubs, their gaffes, their errors -- and their alleged
scandals, incompetence, and stupidity. The plan is to get
the whole country laughing at the victim of this tactic, so
that his effectiveness on the national stage is ended, and
his political career in ruins. It worked with Quayle, and
severely damaged Bush. But every now and then a
conservative politician emerges who is courageous and
intelligent enough to defeat this nasty and brutal assault:
one of them was Ronald Reagan, who trounced the liberal
media in 1980 and 1984, and whose memory has long since
transcended the "amiable dunce" he was portrayed as in
elite media myth. read more |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |

|
|
by Matthew Continetti
Hardcover
Our Price: $1.00 You Save: 96%
They did it to Dan Quayle, they did it to George W.
Bush, and they've done it to numerous other conservative
politicians: liberal media talking heads and late-night
comedians chortle repeatedly and relentlessly over their
flubs, their gaffes, their errors -- and their alleged
scandals, incompetence, and stupidity. The plan is to get
the whole country laughing at the victim of this tactic, so
that his effectiveness on the national stage is ended, and
his political career in ruins. It worked with Quayle, and
severely damaged Bush. But every now and then a
conservative politician emerges who is courageous and
intelligent enough to defeat this nasty and brutal assault:
one of them was Ronald Reagan, who trounced the liberal
media in 1980 and 1984, and whose memory has long since
transcended the "amiable dunce" he was portrayed as in
elite media myth. read more |
 |
 |
 |
|
 |