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.
Stolen Fields By Jean Boggio
www.jeanboggio.com (Nonfiction) Riveting account of a family that held out against the government's eminent domain takeover of their farm and how it shattered their American Dream.
Eleven Roses
By Alexander Hernandez www.myspace.com/elevenroses (Fiction) Passion-filled story about a high-powered attorney who is forced to make a decision between a successful career and the woman he loves.
What the Hell Is a Liberal?
By David Truskoff www.erols.com/suttonbear (Nonfiction) Hard-hitting and insightful assortment of progressive essays and observations about politics and life.
The Trail
By Natalia Prentice www.natalia-prentice.com/buy.html (Fiction) Thrilling, fast-paced tale about a young financial journalist who leaves Wall Street only to get sucked into a web of violence and intrigue set up by the world's wealthiest power brokers.
The Shadow Factory By Paul West
lumenbooks@earthlink.net (Memoir) An illuminating account of a stroke victim's experience with global aphasia told through the perception of his own aphasic mind.
Soaring Soul By Sonja D. Szimon
www.RaiderPublishing.com (Nonfiction) Personal meditation on life's meaning and attaining spiritual perfection.
A Cross Estate By William Thomas Kinsella
www.publishamerica.com (Fiction) Heartfelt story of a young man who follows his parents' wishes instead of his own dreams, which lead him to the Twin Towers and 9/11. Read Review
The Woman Who Wrote "King Lear" By Louis Phillips
www.pleasureboatstudio.com (Fiction) A great collection of strange and unconventional stories in the tradition of Borges, Barth, and Barthelme.
Hot Issues, Cool Topics By Sandra McLeod Humphrey
www.kidscandoit.com (Nonfiction) Insightful primer on schoolyard bullying and how kids and teens can understand and change this destructive behavior.
The Art of Conscious Creation By Jackie Lapin
www.theartofconsciouscreation.com (Nonfiction) Inspirational manual on how to consciously create personal self- fulfillment and global transformation.
Presidential Brainiac By Randy Howe
www.kaplanpublishing.com (Nonfiction) Six hundred historical facts and trivia about America's presidents and elections.
The Mental Environment By Bob Gebelein
www.omdega.com (Nonfiction) Probing examination of how humans can overcome their social conditioning, change their values and beliefs, and transform the world.
The Energy of Belief By Sheila Sidney Bender, PhD & Mary T. Sise, LCSW
www.energyofbelief.com (Nonfiction) Easy-to-read guide on how to use acupressure to overcome negative beliefs and achieve positive goals in life.
Definitions of Some Mathematical Terms for 11-18 Year Olds By Brainard Braimah
www.mathsshop.com (Nonfiction) Valuable resource for students, parents, and teachers to make mathematics simple and easy to learn.
Trust in the Lord By Deen Kemsley
www.deenkemsley.com (Nonfiction) Uplifting personal stories and reflections on how to achieve salvation through Jesus Christ.
The New IQ: How Integrity Serves You, Your Relationships, and Our World By David Gruder, Ph.D
www.TheNewIQ.com (Nonfiction) Insightful primer on how to restore the virtue of integrity to all aspects of human behavior.
El Zarco: The Blue-Eyed Bandit By Ignacio Manuel Altamirano
www.lumenbooks.org (Fiction) Turbulent story of passion and politics in 19th-century Mexico involving a love affair between an Indian hero and his Mestiza heroine.
Channeling the Apocalypse: From the Eighteenth Dynasty to the Current Incarnations By Arthur Earl Jones, Ph.D
www.fearorlove.com (Nonfiction) Spiritual source book that uses channeling and higher levels of consciousness to interpret the meaning of politics and human behavior.
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.
If you are an independent, small press, or traditional publisher and would like to submit your book(s) for consideration to "Recommended Reads,"
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Economic Collapse, Huge Disparity of Wealth: Logical Outcome of the Free Market
In this present crisis, government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem. -- Ronald Reagan
By John F. Miglio
God forbid the mainstream news media should ever mention this, but there was once a time in America when citizens thought of government as their friend, and no one with any brains took the theory of free market capitalism as espoused by Ayn Rand or Milton Friedman very seriously. In fact, it was considered a ridiculous idea, and individuals who took it to heart, like Ronald Reagan or Barry Goldwater or William F. Buckley Jr., were considered laughable.
Of course, it was a different time in America then, a time when Keynesian economics was king, when most American families lived comfortably on one income, and when the rich and large corporations paid taxes at much higher rates.
In those days average Americans knew instinctively, if not intellectually, that a "free market" system that took power away from government and allowed Big Business to run the show was just a scam to screw the little guy; that unfettered capitalism without strong government checks and balances led to-- at best-- robber barons like J.P. Morgan and John D. Rockefeller, and-- at worst-- fascist dictators like Hitler and Mussolini.
And they knew something else. Like our Founding Fathers, they knew the cornerstone of American democracy was the common man, not wealthy individuals or large corporations. And from World War II until 1980, this paradigm remained safe in the land of the free, if not always in practice, at least in principle.
But all that changed when Ronald Reagan became president. As a gift to his wealthy friends and corporate backers, he made free market capitalism an integral part of his administration. These so-called friends of his were the same wealthy and well-connected individuals who hated FDR and JFK and who had been plotting a takeover of the government ever since Goldwater's embarrassing presidential defeat in 1964. And with Reagan as president, they finally had one of their own in office.
Thus began the dismantling of the New Deal and the ascendance of the view that government was the problem in America, not the solution. Naturally, the mainstream news media never pointed out the absurdity of Reagan's argument, since in a democracy the people are the government-- at least they're supposed to be. But logic was never a factor during the Reagan era-- propaganda was. And, boy, were "The Gipper" and his pals good at it! In a few short years they convinced a sizeable percentage of the public that "liberal" was a dirty word and "greed" was the highest of all values.
Thus a new Gilded Age was born, and with the "likeable dunce" selling their brand of free market capitalism, the captains of industry (as they were once called) would incrementally push the country deeper into corporate fascism while at the same time creating a cult of uninformed working-class and middle-class citizens who loved Reagan and hated government and liberals.
After Reagan left office, the free market scam continued with Bush Senior and Bill Clinton. Finally, it reached its ne plus ultra with George W. Bush, a man so deluded and corrupt, so entrenched in cronyism and corporate fascism, he doesn't even realize the country is collapsing beneath his feet.
The good news is that George W. Bush's popularity is at the lowest point of his presidency. The bad news, according to the latest poll, is that 22% of those polled still approve of Bush. Now think about that number. Even after two rigged elections, the disastrous war and occupation of Iraq, the flouting of the Constitution, the unabashed use of torture at Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib, the tragic incompetence surrounding Hurricane Katrina, the lack of action on global warming, the scandal behind the housing foreclosure crisis, and the collapse of the dollar, over one-fifth of Americans still think Bush is doing a swell job.
Ethics aside, we expect the corporate elite and the upper one per cent of the population (who own over 40% of the country's wealth) to root for Bush. After all, he has enriched them beyond their wildest dreams. But why in God's name would the other 21% still support him?
That's where the mainstream news media and neo-fascist loudmouths like Rush Limbaugh and Bill O'Reilly come in. They tap into the nostalgia and cult worship of Ronald Reagan, and as a result, are able to convince working-class and middle-class Americans to vote against their own economic interests in favor of free market capitalism, even though these same people are currently losing their jobs, their homes, and their civil liberties.
Ironically, they don't blame Bush for their losses or hard times, since Bush is the logical extension of Reagan, their free market hero. Therefore, if they are having a problem, it must be the liberals who are at fault, the "left-wing radicals" who criticize the free market and want to raise taxes on the rich. After all, the free market is like God; it's infallible.
And like God, what the free market giveth, it taketh away. So for those of you who once had steady jobs with good health care benefits-- move back in with your parents and don't get sick! For those of you who were counting on the equity in your house for retirement-- move in with your kids and don't be a pain in the ass! And for those of you who were hoping to enjoy the great outdoors in the future, get your gas masks and underwater gear ready because global warming is going to get progressively worse in the coming decades and really wreck havoc on the environment.
To borrow a phrase from Barack Obama's old pal, Rev. Jeremiah Wright-- the chickens of the free market are coming home to roost! And it ain't pretty! After 28 years of cutting government regulations and allowing corporate America to run wild, our country has become a polluted, ecological disaster, a second-rate debtor nation perpetually at war. In addition, we have devolved into a two-class society where average citizens are left with diminished standards of living while the super rich live extravagant, yet isolated lives in high-tech security mansions.
This is the true legacy of the free market-- a few winners and a whole bunch of losers. Of course, in the end, even the winners will be losers, because if enough people can't afford the necessities of life or go broke, even the high-tech security mansions of the super rich won't be able to protect them from the angry mob.
People in Third World countries are already fighting over food. And unless we make some serious changes in our country, how long will it be before average Americans are doing the same?
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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 2007)
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Fooled Again By Mark Crispin Miller
Every American should read this well-documented and comprehensive account of the nationwide election fraud that handed George W. Bush a second presidential election.
Book of the Year (Fiction 2007)
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Dream of the Dragon Pool A Daoist Quest By Albert A. Dalia
An unforgettable tale about China's best-loved poet-adventurer that blends magic, myth, and occult powers with fast-paced action.
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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