If you are an independent, small press, or traditional publisher and would like to submit your book(s) for consideration to "Recommended Reads," click here.
Liberal Hearts and Conservative Brains By Ron Lipsman
home.comcast.net/~ronlipsman (Nonfiction) Intriguing in-depth examination of the relationship between age and political philosophy in modern America.
Blind Faith By Janet Clark
www.janeteclark.com (Fiction)   Emotionally-charged story about a sexual abuse scandal in the Roman Catholic clergy as experienced through the eyes of young man and his family during the late sixties and early seventies.
Fooled Again By Mark Crispin Miller www.markcrispinmiller.blogspot.com/ (Nonfiction) Every American should read this well-documented and comprehensive account of the nationwide election fraud that handed George W. Bush a second presidential election.
Blackout By Douglas A. Ames www.blackoutbook.com (Fiction) Eye-opening fact-based thriller about how large energy utilities set out to destroy a small, cutting-edge technology company.
Stolen Without a Gun By Walter Pavlo Jr. & Neil Weinberg www.EtikaLLC.com (Nonfiction) Fascinating true story about a corporate executive's descent into corruption and white-collar crime.
Finding the Bloom of the Cactus Generation By Maggie Walters www.cactusgeneration.com (Nonfiction) Personalized exploration of the treatment senior citizens receive in today's society and how to improve it.
The Madness of George W. Bush By Paul Levy www.authorhouse.com (Nonfiction) Insightful Jungian analysis of George W. Bush as reflected in our collective psychosis.
Coyota By Martha Egan www.papalotepress.com (Fiction) Provocative tale about a young Mexican-American woman who runs afoul of two Drug Enforcement agents who want to kill her.
Silent Battlefields By Hugh Rosen www.hughrosen.com (Fiction) Well-written psychological tale about how the Holocaust and its aftermath lead to moral dilemmas and existential choices for a former Nazi soldier and a Jewish woman whose life he spared. Read Review
Think Like a CEO By Mark Kuta Jr. www.thinklikeaceo.com (Nonfiction) Practical, detailed information about the tools one needs to sell to the executives of any company in today's market.
The Food and Feelings Workbook By Karen R. Koenig, LCSW, M.Ed www.gurze.com A practical and detailed workbook on how to successfully overcome eating problems by learning to effectively and appropriately handle emotions.
Fixing American Healthcare By Richard N. Fogoros, MD www.publishorperishdbs.com (Nonfiction) Comprehensive analysis of the problems and challenges of health care in America today and suggestions how to fix it. Read Review
Sojourners in a Strange Land By Rochelle Arnold www.xulonpress.com (Nonfiction) A survivor of a rare form of cervical cancer tells her inspirational story of faith, prayer, and passion.
Peacemaker of the Pecos By C.E. Edmonson
www.peacemakerofthepecos.com (Fiction) Gritty, fast-paced tale about a man with a hidden past who stands up to a ruthless land baron
in the Old West.
Dream of the Dragon Pool A Daoist Quest By Albert A. Dalia
www.pleasureboatstudio.com (Fiction) An unforgettable tale about China's best-loved poet-adventurer that blends magic, myth, and occult powers with fast-paced action.
The End of Sorrow: The Siege of Leningrad in World War II By J.V. Love
www.EndOfSorrow.com (Fiction) Based on true events, a compelling account of Hitler's 900-day siege of Leningrad and how the city's inhabitants dealt with massive death and destruction... Read Review
A Winter's Vigil By Norval Rindfleisch
www.iuniverse.com (Fiction) Well-written, nostalgic tale about a young man's apprenticeship at a movie theater in the early 1960s and the mentors who taught him about life.
Terrorism 101 By Leon Newton, Ph.D.
www.terrorism101.info (Nonfiction) A library reference and selected annotated bibliography that describes how to fight terrorism not with bombs and bullets but by using experts in diplomacy, intelligence gathering, and crisis management.
The Final Human By David M.Yourtee
yourteeD@umkc.edu (Nonfiction) An engaging search for higher meaning in life that challenges rational thinking about the value and future of humans.
Warming the Stone Children By Christine Sandor
www.christinesandor.com (Nonfiction) A shocking true story of mother-daughter sexual abuse and eventual spiritual healing.
The Bible's Cover Stories Revealed: The Golden Keys That Unlock History By Arthur Earl Jones, Ph.D
www.fearorlove.com (Nonfiction) An illustrated historical treatise that purports to solve the puzzle of Egypt's 18th Dynasty and resolves the riddle of Judeo-Christian religion by using an apocalyptic revelation of the akashic records.
If you are an independent, small press, or traditional publisher and would like to submit your book(s) for consideration to "Recommended Reads,"
click here. |
Book submission deadline is the 20th of each month. |
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The Conspiracy Against Renewable Energy
By John F. Miglio
I hate to use the "C" word, but there is no other way to say it. There is a national conspiracy to prevent renewable energy from becoming the primary energy source in the United States.
And who are the conspirators? The usual cast of characters: the fossil fuels industry, which continues to rake in exorbitant profits on oil and gas while it refuses to make any significant investment in renewable energy, even in the face of global warming; the members of the mainstream news media, too craven to cross their corporate masters by doing any serious coverage on the viability of renewable energy in today's market; and the members of Congress, too addicted to the big bucks they receive from Big Oil and other traditional energy sources to create any sweeping renewable energy legislation for the good of the country.
The truth is, if it were not for this unholy trinity of greed, cowardice, and bribery, all of us would already be living in solar or wind powered homes and driving electric cars to and from work.
Here are the facts:
1) According to the U.S. Department of Energy, the amount of solar energy that hits the surface of the earth every hour is greater than the total amount of energy that the entire human population requires in a year. Another way of looking at it is that roughly 100 square miles of solar panels placed in the southwestern U.S. could power the entire country.
2) The Department of Energy also states that all U.S. electrical energy needs could be met by the wind in Texas and the Dakotas alone.
3) In 1977, the Office of Technology Assessment published a nonpartisan report that concluded that if the federal government offered substantial tax credits and incentives to speed up the mass production of renewable energy technologies, these technologies "could be made competitive in markets representing over 40% of U.S. energy demand by the mid-1980s." At that rate, they would be competitive in almost all markets today.
4) The technology to produce photovoltaic panels and modern wind turbines has been around for decades, and thousands of Americans already have installed these renewable technologies on their homes and businesses, cutting their energy bills by significant margins. Recently, a New Jersey resident named Mike Mercurio installed both an array of solar panels on his roof and a wind turbine in his back yard and cut his energy bill from over $300 per month to about $10 per month.
This immediately begs the question: If we have the renewable technology at hand and we know it works, why don't we use it in place of heavily polluting energy sources like oil, gas or coal? And why have so few people installed solar panels or windmills on their homes and in their backyards?
The primary reason is because the cost of renewable energy is still relatively high compared to fossil fuels, although the gap is closing as the cost of natural gas and oil continues to climb. For example, the price to install an array of photovoltaic panels on the average home-- notwithstanding some modest tax incentives and rebates from the government-- is anywhere from $20,000 to $40,000. At this price, only those who are well off can afford to have solar panels installed on their homes.
Of course, anyone with half a brain knows that once a product is mass produced, its price per unit plummets. But in order to facilitate this process and make it happen over a period of years and not decades, the federal government (with help from the states) needs to institute a massive, full-scale national renewable energy program, something equivalent to the Marshall Plan, something that would transform our entire society within a decade.
It can begin this process with a four-point plan: 1) Mandate tight pollution standards on the fossil fuels industry and stiff penalties for not abiding by them. This will get the carbon-based boys to start thinking about divesting some of their money into renewable energy. 2) Impose high CAFE standards on auto manufacturers and stiff penalties if they don't implement them post haste. This will get the bright boys at GM to start thinking about electric cars in a big way. 3) Implement a windfall profits tax on oil companies and remove tax incentives to the entire fossil fuels industry. This will create billions of dollars that can be used to promote renewable energy. 4) Offer generous tax credits and incentives to the renewable energy industry to facilitate mass production of its technology and equally generous tax credits and incentives for homeowners to buy it.
If Congress made this four-point plan a reality, it would literally reverse the brain-dead energy policy that has been in effect for the past 27 years, ever since Ronald Reagan, Big Oil's Bad Boy, strutted into office, decimated Jimmy Carter's renewable energy program, and created energy bills and tax policies that favored the fossil fuels industry at the expense of renewable technology.
But how much money would it actually cost to institute a full-scale national renewable energy program in the United States? Hundreds of billions, no doubt, which is a lot of money, but not that much when you consider that over the past seven years, the Bush regime has already blown a half trillion dollars on Iraq and another trillion on tax cuts for the rich.
If that $1.5 trillion had been used to fund renewable energy instead, photovoltaic panels and wind turbines would already be in mass production at affordable prices for most homeowners, and the electric car industry would have been able to stage a major comeback.
For the last couple of decades, the electric car industry has languished due to the introduction of the hybrid car, the "compromise car," as I call it. Instead of going from gas-powered cars straight to all-electric vehicles, which was the original plan, auto manufacturers decided to take an in-between step in deference to the fossil fuels industry and create the hybrid. (See the documentary Who Killed the Electric Car? for more information on how auto manufacturers deliberately sabotaged their own electric vehicles.)
As a result, three misperceptions about electric cars have persisted to this day: 1) They're too slow. 2) Their batteries won't go far enough on a single charge. 3) Their batteries take too long to recharge. This was partially true 20 years ago, but no longer. Recently, the Japanese built an electric car called the Ellica that can out perform a gas-powered Porsche from zero to 100 by almost two seconds! So much for being slow.
And as far as batteries being a problem, the technology has come a long way in recent years, and if the money is there for more research and development, the battery technology will be perfected, and the electric car will become the ultimate driving machine, i.e., a vehicle that is affordable, fast, pollution-free, economical, and stylish-- all in one package. And the best part of all, American drivers will never have to pay $3 a gallon for gas again. At the end of the day, they will simply plug their electric vehicles into their solar and wind-powered homes and recharge their batteries for nothing! Read More
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A bone-chilling political morality fable... -- Midwest Book Review



Sunshine Assassins By John F. Miglio (Fiction) Controversial political thriller about a band of democratic rebels and their attempt to overthrow the corporate fascist shadow government in the USA...Read Reviews
Listen to J.F. Miglio discuss Sunshine Assassins and other issues on Radio Power Network's podcast archives.
Book of the Year (Nonfiction 2006)
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Your Daily Walk with the Great Minds of the Past and Present By Richard A. Singer Jr.
A terrific inspirational guide to personal transformation and spiritual development that uses quotes of famous people and insightful advice for every day of the year.
Book of the Year (Fiction 2006)
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Hollywood and Sunset By Luke Salisbury
Witty and well written story about a writer from the East who takes a life-altering tour of 1916 Hollywood-- in the company of D.W. Griffith, Lillian Gish, and Howard Gaye, an actor who likes to dress up as Jesus Christ.
Book of the Year (Nonfiction 2005)
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Bush on the Couch By Justin A. Frank, M.D.
A compelling and insightful look into George W. Bush's psyche, and how his deep-seeded fears, insecurities, and megalomania have undermined the safety of our country.
Book of the Year (Fiction 2005)
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Clearing Customs By Martha Egan
A sinister, yet amusing tale of an ex-hippie owner of a small, struggling Latin American imports store who joins with her friends to fight corrupt custom officials whose harassment threatens to put her out of business.
Books of the Year (Nonfiction 2004)
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The Assassination of Julius Caesar By Michael Parenti
Award-winning author and scholar examines ancient Roman history from a populist viewpoint, arguing that Caesar was assassinated for being a champion of the people.



The War on Freedom By Nafeez Mossaddeq Ahmed
Riveting and well-researched expose of how and why America was attacked on 9/11, including information about faked terrorism and mass media manipulation by the Bush administration.



Crossing the Rubicon By Michael Ruppert
Hard-hitting, iconoclastic editor/publisher of "From the Wilderness" strips the power elite to the bone and takes a shocking look at the decline of the American empire at the end of the age of oil.
Books of the Year (Fiction 2004)
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Candle in a Dark Time By Virginia Stuart
Compelling, emotionally charged story of how a Danish woman risks her life to save Jews from Nazis during World War II.



My Life: A Story By Jesus Christ By Christopher Miller
Innovative and provocative story of the life of Jesus Christ told as a first person narrative.



The Others at Monticello By Esther Franklin
Award-winning historical novel that explores the relationship between Thomas Jefferson and his slaves, especially Sally Hemings and her children.
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