Laws of Annihilation Virtual Book Tour

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Martyr Maker Series, Book 3

 

Mystery & Thriller / Literature & Fiction / Religion &
Spirituality

Date Published: 10/24/23

Publisher: Sourcebooks

 

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“Eriq La Salle has emerged as a terrific writer with unique
gifts.” ―Don Winslow, #1 international bestselling author

 

A war is brewing in New York City, and no one can stop it.

 

With grit, relentless action, and twists you’ll never see coming, Laws of
Annihilation
is the third installment in the highly-acclaimed Martyr Maker
series by Eriq La Salle.

It’s another blistering summer in New York City, and a sweltering heat wave
stifles the area. Hostility between the Hasidic and Black communities has
been steadily increasing since a tragic incident left a Black teenager dead.
When two rabbis are killed in a gruesome attack on their synagogue, it has
all the signs of retaliation.

The entire city is on edge.

Through it all, Agent Janet Maclin’s dreams of becoming the FBI’s first
female director come crashing down when she receives some devastating news.
In spite of it all, she’s determined to help NYPD detectives Quincy
Cavanaugh and Phee Freeman find the rabbis’ killer as more hate crimes put
the city on the brink of all-out war. As the body count climbs with the
temperature and the tensions, time is running out for Maclin in more ways
than one.

 

Apart from his critically-acclaimed thriller titles, La Salle is a
masterful mystery/crime storyteller. He may be best known for his acting
roles in productions such as ER, Coming to America, and Logan, but his
background in crime fiction was finely honed as he directed and executive
produced countless episodes of popular shows such as Law & Order, Law
and Order SVU, Law & Order: Organized Crime, CSI: NY
, and Chicago PD
with Dick Wolf.

 

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Praise for Eriq La Salle’s Martyr Maker Series

 

“Laws of Wrath is all thriller; no filler―a white knuckled
treat.” 

―James Patterson, New York Timesbestselling author

“Laws of Depravity is a gritty crime thriller, spiritual quest, and
love story all woven into one compelling tale.” 

―Publishers
Weekly

“Fast paced…Characters are richly textured [and] none is
without faults.”

―Kirkus Reviews, for Laws of Wrath

 

 

EXCERPT

Chapter 1

In Hell. It was the only way to describe the hottest summer on record. Even under the daily clamor of city life, if one listened intently it was still possible to hear the faint echo of the Devil’s joyful laughter. He was the only one who could have taken any pleasure in the torturous heat, the ungodly stench, and, of course, the gorge of hatred. 

It felt like the cruelest summer ever. New York was taking gut punches from a punishing heat wave that showed no signs of easing. The Big Apple was in dire need of relief. It was thirsting for summer rains, cool merciful drops that fell from somewhere at least in the proximity of Heaven. Of all of the East Coast cities that were being strangled by the heat, New York was choking the most. 

FBI Special Agent Janet Maclin drove down to the Big Apple from Washington, DC, where it was also hot, yet much more tolerable. She suffered through the slow roast of being in Manhattan because her trip was mandatory. Of her numerous visits to the city, it was the first time she had come to New York and hated it. What she hated most was her reason for having to come. 

From the time she was a child, Agent Maclin had had grand dreams of becoming the first female director of the FBI. She’d entered the Bureau knowing that as a woman she would have to run faster and jump higher than her male counterparts just to be considered half equal. Fueled by her dream, she outran and outjumped the best of them. Though sexism had hindered her at numerous turns, it was good old- fashioned bureaucracy that left her dream all but wilting on the vine. It didn’t matter that seventeen years into her career she had acquired quite the reputation, as not just a rising star but a bona fide standout. She had certainly accomplished more than all of her peers and most of her superiors. Bringing down two major serial killers within a month of each other was just one of the many achievements on the impressive résumé she had built on the journey toward her lifelong dream. Ultimately, none of it really mattered because, even though she had entered the Bureau as a young attorney, she had blossomed into a talented field agent and not a bureaucrat or politician, which, throughout the history of the FBI, had been the traditional path to directorship. 

It was public knowledge that the long-standing, current director of the Bureau was being vetted as the heavily favored vice- presidential replacement after the current VP had suffered irreversible brain damage from a severe stroke just five months into the current administration’s incumbency. Now that the director was more than likely leaving, all types of rumors were spreading. There was speculation, thin and unsubstantiated, that he was aggressively looking for a woman to succeed him. Although she knew, both logistically and realistically, she didn’t stand a chance, the spark, however faint, still reignited the flames of her most desired dream. 

Under normal circumstances, she wasn’t the type to allow herself to get caught up in things she considered highly improbable. But for once, she embraced the distraction of hope— because, unfortunately, the current circumstances of her life were unfolding as anything but normal. 

She’d started the day with a stomach full of butterflies. By the time the receptionist ushered her into the penthouse office on Park Avenue, they had mutated into angry dragons that were currently wreaking havoc on her intestinal fortitude. She wore her favorite navy- blue pantsuit with a crisp white collarless top beneath. She wasn’t much on jewelry. She wore no earrings, bracelets, or rings— just a simple, rose- gold Lady Bulova and a silver hamsa necklace barely peeking over the second button of her blouse. 

The tiny hand- shaped amulet had several names and meanings. 

In the Jewish faith, it was referred to as the Hand of God, but Agent Maclin didn’t wear it for any religious reasons because she was definitely not the religious type. She had worn the necklace for the last thirty- four years because it was all that she had left of her mother, who had passed away when Maclin was seven years old. Born into a proud Protestant family, her mother converted to Judaism just before marriage to hopefully establish spiritual consistency for her impending family. The irony was that although Maclin’s father was raised in a Conservative Jewish family, by the time she was born he had at best grown indifferent to the faith. 

Maclin wasn’t a woman who was easily intimidated. Yet, the large office made her feel like a truculent child waiting to be reprimanded by the principal. She stuck her hands in her pants pockets in an attempt to stop them from trembling. She wasn’t the most patient of women. Agent Maclin was a verb, a ball of kinetic energy who found her greatest peace when she was doing. The helpless waiting was nerve- racking. The quiet office didn’t help in any way; the silence was burdensome. She looked through the twelve- foot-tall windows facing 49th Street and could see down the corridor of high- rises all the way to the West Side. 

The inside of the building was unfazed by the scorching heat wave that was punishing everything outside. The office felt like the coolest place in New York, both thermally as well as estheti-cally. She tried to distract herself by taking in all that she could of the space that was unabashedly vying for a shot on the cover of Architectural Digest. Everything about it screamed of money. The address, the bone suede walls with coffered ceilings, customized fixtures, and intricate appointments throughout. The room even smelled rich; the scent of some high- end fragrance floated in the air like a perfect reminder of a tropical island. There was an original Picasso as well as one of Degas’s famous paintings of a ballerina. 

It was not surprising to her that the man she came to see had an “ego wall.” It was the one wall solely dedicated to the long list of his accomplishments over an extremely successful career. 

There were multiple degrees from Harvard and Princeton along with his photo on the cover of Time magazine, not to mention the framed pictures of him with three different presidents. There were tchotchkes and even artifacts in display cases from various parts of the world, no doubt collected during his extensive travels. Despite how much she had read up on him, he still held the upper hand because he knew more consequential things about her. 

Agent Maclin analyzed the office in the same way she ran a crime scene. She gathered facts based on meticulous observation. Even though she had already read as much information as she could, she still gathered clues about the man who knew more about her future than she did. Maclin hated more than anything that she no longer controlled her fate. After being seated for two minutes, she concluded that the leather Barcelona chair she sat in was intentionally only mildly comfortable. As beautiful as the office was, it was never designed for meetings lasting longer than necessary. It was fine by her because she certainly didn’t want to be there any longer than she needed to be. 

She stared at a Swarovski crystal clock on the desk, irritated that she had now waited six long minutes past the designated time of the meeting. Just as her hands stopped trembling, one of the double doors to the office opened. The man breezed in and greeted her with an apology that she felt was filled more with eti-quette than sincerity. 

“My apologies. My staff meeting ran longer than normal,” he offered. 

Maclin hated the man the second she met him. She thought he looked too slick with his gelled hair, artificial tan, and two-thousand- dollar loafers. 

She was a bit surprised that he was younger looking than his online photos and even the magazine covers. He looked too young, she felt, to have acquired all the expertise he was renowned for. 

“It’s quite all right. I was just admiring the view,” she lied. 

She reminded herself to smile because her natural disposition was sometimes a bit off- putting to people. Today, more than any other, she needed not to put anyone off and certainly not the man she came to visit. Maclin wasn’t an unfriendly woman by any means; but unfortunately, she had the kind of pensive face that more often than not seemed frozen in a permafrown .  Her lifelong habit of pursing her lips made her seem as though she was just two ticks away from a full- on scowl. Whenever she was contemplative— which was most of the time— the corners of her mouth turned downward like a grumpy fish. Her malady only added to the pile of misogyny that she waded through on a semiregular basis at the Bureau. “You know, Janet, maybe if you smiled a lot more, you’d go a lot further.”  She’d once overheard two of her male colleagues laughing about how she had a terminal case of Resting Bitch Face. 

Maclin extended her hand and smiled hard, as though it were the most natural thing in the world for her. She smiled like a woman who was certainly worthy of her host’s empathy. He had small, manicured hands that looked better than hers ever had. There was a softness to them. His handshake had the tentativeness of a man afraid that a firm greeting might somehow jeopardize his liveli-hood. He was the type of man that Maclin usually easily dismissed; she had very little tolerance for men with tepid introductions. 

Yet, she was in no position to rebuff him because regardless of the unimpressive measure of his hands they still held all the power. 

However, the minute they shook she knew that things weren’t going to go her way and all the smiles in the world wouldn’t change that. Now she had to wade through indeterminate minutes of polite chatter before he confirmed what she already knew. 

The man’s name was Dr. Winston Quinlan III, and he was widely regarded as one of the top five oncologists in the country. 

Maclin had traveled from DC to New York to see him so that he could offer his professional opinion about how much time she had before she died. 

“…and, unfortunately, after looking at your CT scan we weren’t able to find anything that contradicted your previous two doctors’ 

prognoses. Stage IV metastatic ovarian cancer is certainly a huge challenge on its own, but now that it’s spread to your pancreas and other parts of your body, I’m afraid we’re terribly limited in what we can hope for. I do have to say that in some cases— although it is rare— we’ve seen people beat the odds and live another three to five years.” 

Maclin stayed standing and looked at him directly. “The thing about working in law enforcement is that I’ve given enough bad news over the years to have learned how to take it. There’s no need for you to feel that you have to give me some false sense of hope. I just need the facts so I know what to expect and when to expect it.” 

“Well then, I would have to start by saying that, frankly, I’m surprised that you’re currently functioning as well as you are. In the next month, two max, things are going to get pretty bad and then only worse from there.” 

“Would chemo and radiation help any?” she asked. 

“In your case, I’m afraid not. Your cancer is much too aggressive.” 

“At the risk of sounding clichéd, how long before I, uhh…you know?” 

“I think we’re looking at three months. Four, tops. I’m sorry I can’t give you better news.” 

Agent Maclin looked over the doctor’s shoulder and stared at the painting of the ballerina, and for the next minute was able to shut out everything else. Dr. Quinlan continued speaking, but his voice became nothing more than a steady whirr of garbled apologies. Maclin looked so hard at the painting that she thought she saw it come alive. She found escape in seeing the ballerina move. She saw grace and perfection. She could even smell the hard work and hear the applause of the faceless audience. She felt the warm foot-lights that lit up the stage. The more Maclin looked at the painting, the more she thought about how much it was filled with life and possibilities that were no longer available to her. 

About the Author

Eriq La Salle

Actor, director, producer, and masterful storyteller Eriq La Salle is best
known to worldwide television audiences for his award-winning portrayal of
Dr. Peter Benton on the medical drama ER. Educated at Juilliard and
NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts, his credits range from Broadway to
film roles, starring alongside Eddie Murphy in Coming to America, Robin
Williams in One Hour Photo, and Hugh Jackman in Logan. La Salle has
maintained a prolific acting career while also taking the helm as director
for HBO, Showtime, Netflix, Amazon Prime, ABC NBC, Fox and CBS productions.
His craft as a crime writer was honed over his many seasons as a key member
of the Dick Wolf Entertainment team, which include four years as executive
producer and director on Chicago PD, in addition to directing episodes of
Law & Order, Law and Order SVU and Law & Order: Organized Crime. He
is also executive producer, director, and one of the lead actors of Dick
Wolf’s “On Call,” out in 2024 on Amazon Prime Video. As a
writer, La Salle is the author of several critically-acclaimed thrillers
published by Sourcebooks—Laws of Depravity (2022), Laws of Wrath
(2023), and Laws of Annihilation (2023). His episode of The Twilight Zone
recently made WGA’s list of 101 Best Written TV Series. He lives in
Los Angeles, California.

 

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True Treasure Virtual Book Tour

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The Dragon and the Girl, Book 2

 

Middle School Grade Fantasy

Date Published: November 14, 2023

Publisher: Acorn Publishing

 

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Dire news arrives from Cantington. Rumors of dragon sightings are stirring
up fears based on old stories that depict dragons as blood-thirsty,
fire-breathing monsters. To protect his people, the Overking decrees that
all dragons must die.    

Twelve-year-old Eliana knows the truth about dragons. After all, her best
friend, Winston, is one! Fresh off an adventure where she saved her kingdom
using her ability to communicate with Winston’s family, she is now
excited to hone her skills through her Dragon Speaker apprenticeship. That
is until she begins having a recurring nightmare of a scar-faced soldier, a
poison-tipped spear, and an orb that glows in the dark. What’s even
more worrisome is that Winston is having the same nightmare.

When they hear of the Overking’s decree, they realize their dreams
may not be a coincidence. Eliana must quickly learn how to use her ability
to understand dragons to help new friends–and old–solve a
mystery about an ancient treasure and save the dragons from certain death.
Along the way, there are lessons to be learned about the dangerous desire
for fame, about the transitory nature of plans, and about how treasure can
mean different things to different people…and dragons.

 

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EXCERPT

The tip of the spear was mere inches from Eliana’s eye. A drop of poisonous liquid hung there, and in it she saw her own reflection. She tried to scream, to beg for mercy, to somehow stop Margred’s soldier from what she was about to do. Eliana’s cry clawed at her throat, but it was soundless, useless. In the soldier’s other hand was an orb, a glowing round stone that cast light on the soldier’s smile, a terrifying smile made crooked by the scar running the length of her face.

Someone grabbed Eliana’s shoulder. Shook it.

“Eliana.”

A barely audible whisper. Why could she hear her name carried on a breath but not her own screams? 

“Eliana.”

The hand on her shoulder was heavy and warm. And tugged gently on her quilt. Quilt? Why would her quilt be here in the Morgan Castle courtyard in the midst of the battle? She opened her eyes to the dim light of the sleeping room. Her father pulled on the quilt again.

“I know it’s early,” he said. “But Winston is here already. He’s out by the chicken coop.”

Winston. Chicken coop. Eliana felt like she was pulling herself from a murky bog, her dream fading. Yet another of the dreams that had started the night Winston flew her home from Morgan Castle.

Contrary to her nightmares, Eliana knew all was well now. King Halwyn’s horrible counselor Margred and the remainder of her soldiers were gone—had sailed north up the Pearl River. Everyone she’d poisoned had recovered, thanks to Cook’s special tea. Morgan Castle’s treasure had all been found, right where Margred had hidden it. Now King Halwyn could pay the annual tribute to the Overking of Canting at the Banquet on June the sixth, just three days away.

Eliana pushed tangled brown curls out of her eyes and tried to smile at her father. If all were well, why did she keep dreaming about the scar-faced soldier and her poison-tipped spear? And a cavern with a huge dark shape that would never move again?

Eliana slid out of her bed, careful not to wake her older sister Alethia. Her father wrapped a shawl around Eliana’s shoulders and held the sleeping curtain open for her. In the kitchen, Father’s teacup—one of the four Dragon Cups—was on the wooden table, along with a slab of brown bread.

Cadoc pulled out a chair and gestured for her to sit. He unhooked the water pot from the rod above the stove, poured the simmering water over the tea leaves in the cup, and slid it to her waiting hands.

“Same dreams?” he whispered, turning to hang the pot back on the rod.

She nodded and wrapped her hands around the cup with its intricate blue designs. The steam from the tea wafted up. It smelled like citrus.

“Have a little,” said her father. “And eat. Then you can go see why Winston is here so early.”

Eliana nodded again and took a few sips of the tea. It seemed to chase away at least some of the nightmare remnants.

“The nightmares . . . it’s your mind trying to understand what happened,” said Cadoc. “Even though everything turned out well in the end, what happened was . . . was what no child should have to experience.” He handed her the bread.

Eliana heard sadness mixed with frustration in his voice. Now he could no longer leave for work at the quarry every day assuming his family would be safe at home, doing the things they’d always done. A dragon was at this very moment dozing in their yard. And his daughter was a Dragon Speaker. Had flown on a dragon hundreds of feet above ocean waves barely covering boulders at the foot of the Dead Rise Cliffs. Had been in the middle of a battle with an evil woman and her spear-wielding soldiers, one of whom Eliana kept seeing in her dreams.

Delicate yellow light from the window fell on her father’s face and on the lines that hadn’t been there before. He stood, careful not to scrape the chair legs on the slate floor. He slung his leather tool satchel over his shoulder and took his coat off the hook by the front door.

He smiled. “I’ll go out this way so I don’t disturb Winston. He seemed tired, too.”

Winston. Her new friend, the young dragon with amazing turquoise and emerald green scales and feathers. Winston, who she could understand when she touched him.

 

498 words

Winston crouched in Eliana’s yard, holding his blocky head as still as possible so as not to disturb the rooster who stood precariously balanced between his ears. Eliana’s father had said his name was Henry the Fifth when he’d unlatched the door to the coop. Gray and white and clearly in charge, he still reminded Winston of his father.

After all the hens had erupted into the yard to begin their morning forage, the rooster had tipped his head to examine Winston with one shiny black eye. Then, without warning, Henry the Fifth had lifted his stubby wings and flapped his way to his current perch on Winston’s head. Clearly, the rooster no longer viewed Winston as a threat.

Now, the rooster shifted his weight, dug his claws into Winston’s scales, and emitted his loud, raspy call. Ererghh errrr eregrerrh errrrr!

The hens ignored him, but Winston’s sensitive ears rang from the assault. Inch by inch, careful not to unbalance the rooster, Winston used his powerful neck muscles to lay his head on the ground by the Fallonds’ garden. With one more awful call, Henry the Fifth made his way slowly down the length of Winston’s snout and hopped off.

Winston watched the rooster strut to the edge of the garden. The rising sun warmed the dragon’s scales. A slight breeze danced in the tufts of turquoise and emerald feathers on his neck.

I’ll just rest a little until Eliana comes out, he thought. His eyelids drifted upward. Soon, puffs of steam emerged from his nostrils, warming the air around his head. One of the chickens came and took a dust bath in the dirt beside his right nostril.

“Opal!”

Winston jerked from his doze at the sound of Eliana’s laugh. He raised his head to greet her, but instead began sneezing. And sneezing. Eliana scooped up the fluffy white hen and put her several feet away from him.

“I think she got dust in your . . . nose? Your . . . nostril? Whatever you call it. What do you call that?” She put her hand on his sun-struck scales so she could understand him.

“My nostril,” he said, attempting to sound more dignified than he felt. He sneezed once more, this time spraying the air with droplets of water mixed with dirt. Eliana backed away, obviously trying not to laugh again.

“Uummmhh mmm muhhhh . . .” Winston began.

Eliana reached to touch him again.

“It’s not really funny, Eliana . . . well, maybe a little bit funny,” he said.

“I’m sorry, Winston,” she said. “Just warn me next time you’re going to sneeze. I don’t want mud on my dress when we meet Doryu at Morgan Castle.”

Morgan Castle.

Winston’s scales rippled and his tail tightened around his body. He’d thought the nightmares only came at night when he slept. But here, this morning, even in Eliana’s sun-brightened clearing, the sights and smells and sounds of what had happened at Morgan Castle returned.

About the Author

Laura Findley Evans

Laura Findley Evans is the author of True North, Book 1 of The Dragon and
the Girl series. It all started when her grandchildren said one night (when
they were supposed to be sleeping), “Tell us a story.” And so
the adventures of a feisty young girl and an impossible dragon began. Laura
would like you to know that whatever she writes must be true, whether it is
real or not. She hopes you will discover the truth in whatever she writes.
When she’s not writing, Laura reads (a lot), cooks (mostly) healthy
dinners, and spends time with people she loves. You can visit her at
www.LauraFindleyEvans.com.

 

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The Keeper of the Book Blitz

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Action Adventure

Date Published: November 13, 2023

  

In the year 2043, World Council Edict 1735B proclaimed that all of the
world religions were to be outlawed in the interest of public safety. Houses
of Worship were labeled centers of dissension and attending any underground
religious service was punishable by imprisonment and relocation. To possess
any religious artifact or Holy Book was a mandatory death sentence. Jenny
Keane is a Believer, a Christian and the proud owner of a Holy Bible given
to her by her Grandmother. Michael Keane, her husband, is a former Special
Forces Operative. He is not a believer in the holy teachings of any
religion. Michael gave up the warrior path to live a cherished, peaceful
life with his family. Jenny and the children, while attending an illegal
religious service are captured by sadistic One World troops and taken to a
reeducation camp. This sets Michael out on a one man rescue mission to bring
his family home and nothing short of death will stop him. Against impossible
odds he walks a path of revenge and destruction with no negotiation, no
rules of engagement and no mercy for his enemies. He is aided by the unseen
prayers of the faithful and years of experience in killing his foes.

 

About the Author

Ryland Harris

Ryland Harris is a father, a builder and a combat decorated Marine. He
resides in the Appalachian mountains of southwestern Virginia. He enjoys
long hikes in the mountains, designing and building houses and spending time
with his children. He shares his life with nine chickens, three goats and a
black mouth cur dog.

 

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Rise of the Liberal Colossus Virtual Book Tour

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From Corporate Globalization to the Great Reset

 

Political / Nonfiction / History

Date Published: July 12, 2023

Publisher: MindStir Media

 

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To speak of a modern Liberal Colossus conjures nothing less than the
largest power structure the world has ever known. A distinctly (but not
entirely) American phenomenon, this sprawling network of economic interests,
political forces, and cultural influences revolves around four organically
interconnected sectors – a domestic corporate oligarchy, authoritarian state
apparatus, military-industrial complex, and (now in process) a reconstituted
liberal (or “neoliberal”) world order. Going back to the watershed
presidency of Woodrow Wilson at the time of World War I, the overarching
ideology that defines, legitimates, and sustains this Colossus has been one
variant of liberalism, more precisely a combination of corporate and global
liberalism. For the past century the main pillars of this power structure
have been continuously reinforced by great scientific and technological
innovations in the economy, government, and military as well the
international system. If ambitious planning within the World Economic Forum
and other global institutions manages to achieve its unprecedented goals,
that system will expand further — toward what has been described as the
Great Reset. This would be a global tyranny based on increasingly
concentrated (and integrated) economic and governmental power. Here, in The
Rise of the Liberal Colossus, Carl Boggs systematically explores the
history, politics, and ideology of this frightening development, the biggest
threat in modern times to the future of democratic society.

 

“Carl Boggs provides a sweeping historical and political treatise on
the origins of the imperial state and its grounding in the liberal paradigm.
The trajectory of global destruction begins begins, as Professor Boggs
recounts, with the era of World War I and its aftermath and escalates to the
present day under the regime of a global corporate order that has brought
the world to the precipice of ecological and military disaster.”

— Professor Gerald Sussman, Global Studies, Portland State
University

 

Rise of the Liberal Colossus tablet

EXCERPT

To speak of a modern Liberal Colossus conjures nothing less than the

largest power structure the world has ever known. A distinctly (but not

entirely) American phenomenon, this sprawling network of economic

interests, political forces, and cultural influences revolves around three

organically interconnected sectors—a domestic corporate oligarchy,

authoritarian state apparatus, a reconstituted liberal world order. Going

back to the watershed presidency of Woodrow Wilson, the specific

ideology defining, legitimating, and sustaining this Colossus has been

some variant of liberalism, more precisely a combination of corporate

and global liberalism. The main firmaments of this power structure

have been continuously reinforced by great technological innovations in

the economy, government, and military as well the international system.

About the Author

Carl Boggs

After receiving his Ph.D. from U.C., Berkeley in 1970, Carl Boggs taught at
Washington University in St. Louis and then at UCLA, USC, Carleton
University in Ottawa, and Antioch University, Los Angeles before concluding
his career at National University in Los Angeles, focusing on the education
of working adults. He participated in the Free Speech Movement at Berkeley,
among other activities, and then was active in the anti-Vietnam War
movement. Involved in the work of several magazines and journals, he was
instrumental in bringing the work of Antonio Gramsci to America, and with it
the crucial motif of cultural revolution which he explored in two books and
several articles. Since the mid-1970s he has written another 24 books,
including ten on topics related to U.S. foreign and military policy along
with several on ecological politics. Since 2000 he has been a regular
contributor to the online journal CounterPunch. He has also contributed, in
writing and presentations (including several plenary talks) to the Global
Studies Association based in Chicago. In 2007 he was recipient of a Career
Achievement Award from the American Political Science Association.

 

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Journey to Bethlehem Blitz

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Religion & Spirituality

Date Published: 11-25-2022

Publisher: OACC Media

 

 

Come with me to Bethlehem. A sleepy hamlet in the mountains of Southern
Israel. Here we will find a newborn baby lying in a manger surrounded by his
parents and barn animals.

It doesn’t seem like the most idyllic Christmas. There is no tree, no
presents, and no stockings hung by the fireplace. Everything is ordinary.
Jesus lying in a mound of hay is the furthest thing from extraordinary. Yet,
the Savior of the world begins his first moments here in this barn, in this
village.

During this journey, you will discover the true meaning of the season.
It’s not the glow of lights or the smell of pine needles. We celebrate
Christmas because of Jesus Christ, God’s gift to us.

 

About the Author

Joseph Guy serves as the President of Joseph Guy International Ministries,
an organization dedicated to reaching people around the world through
digital ministry. He is the host of the podcast Biblical Insight With Pastor
Joseph, and winner of the 2022 Readers’ Favorite 5-Star Review Award.
It is his goal to change the world one life at a time through the timeless
message of the Gospel. The great outdoors is where you can find him when
he’s not building God’s kingdom.

 

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