America's Caesar

From Dixiepedia: The PC-Free Encyclopedia

America's Caesar
Enlarge
America's Caesar

America's Caesar: The Decline and Fall of Republican Government in the United States of America
(Institute for Southern Historial Review, 2006)
by Greg Loren Durand

Abridged Edition
572 pages: 30.00, plus 3.00 s/h

Expanded Edition
two volumes; 1072 pages: 42.00, plus 5.00 s/h
(this expanded edition contains over fifty additional essays, documents, and appendices)


America is no longer the land of the free. In Senate Report 93-549, the United States Congress made the astonishing admission that, since at least 9 March 1933, the American people have lived under a state of national emergency. Instead of a federal Government of delegated and limited powers, what now operates from Washington, D.C. is a centralized military despotism which claims ultimate sovereignty over its citizens and rules them by statute in all cases whatsoever.

Beginning with the usurpations of Abraham Lincoln, this book explains how the so-called emergency powers of the President of the United States developed over a period of seven decades and finally culminated in the virtual supplanting of the Constitution by Franklin Delano Roosevelt's New Deal democracy. The author draws heavily from a wealth of rare political literature from the past two centuries, as well as long-forgotten Government documents to paint an unsettling picture of American history and to show why nothing ever changes in Washington, no matter which political party is currently in power.

Chapters include:

Early Tensions Between North and South
A Brief History of the African Slave Trade
The "Higher Law" of Abolitionism
The Negro and the Territorial Dispute
Racial Attitudes in the North and South
State Sovereignty and the Right of Secession
The Economic Background of the War
Lincoln Circumvents the Constitution and the Laws
The Reign of Terror in the Northern States
The Effects of the Emancipation Proclamation
The Genesis of the Civil Rights Movement
The Social Effects of the War on the South
The Military Occupation of the Southern States
The Purpose of the Fourteenth Amendment
The "New Nation" Enters the First World War
The Deception of Roosevelt's "New Deal"
The Nature of the Federal Reserve System
The Socialist Utopia of Federal Insurance
A Permanent State of National Emergency

And much more...