Revised and updated 2012 edition with 25% new material! Enjoying Your Hope and Change? Whiny Little Bitch is your guide to the most embarrassing presidency since the Carter Administration. It's an exciting way to pass some time while you're waiting for the sea levels to drop. Don't faint, or you'll miss: Obama's Foreign Policy - Under the exciting new Obama regime, treating your allies with respect is part of the failed policies of the past. Obama's Party - Congressional Democrats view tax cuts with the same enthusiasm as a vampire viewing a crucifix. Come to think of it, Congressional Democrats view a crucifix with the same enthusiasm as a vampire viewing a crucifix. Obama's Financial Meltdown - Obama blaming Wall Street for the financial meltdown is like showing up for the last five minutes of Star Wars and deciding that Skywalker kid should go to jail for murdering all those nice folks on the Death Star. Obama's Homeland Security - Janet Napolitano is proof that there is at least one person in Washington who is less qualified for her job than Barack Obama is for his. Obama's Favorite Phrase - 'Let me be clear' is the rhetorical equivalent of an exploding dye pack in a bag of cash. It indelibly marks all words that follow as false.
Rhodes to Myers, Boston, 29 March 1914, in john A. Garraty, ed., The Barber and the Historian: The Correspondence of George A. Myers and lame: Ford Rhodes, 1910-1923 (Columbus, 1956), pp. 29-30. [xxxiii] Introduction.
For the present edition, Drago has included a new preface about recent writing on Reconstruction, and has added an appendix containing new data on locally elected or appointed black politicians. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc.
"The NAACP Hot Springs Unit 6013, presents profiles of 63 black candidates who filed for political office in Hot Springs, Arkansas, from 1954-2010."
This is an authorised biography of Condoleezza Rice, based on interviews with this powerful woman. Condoleezza Rice became the first black woman with the title US Secretary of State in a government dominated by rich white Republicans.
As such, the book is exceptionally powerful."--Journal of Southern History "A brilliant history of black politics and white resistance in post-civil rights era Mississippi.
This book examines the remarkable increase of blacks at all levels of political life and makes the first systematic comparison of black and white elected officials.
An unexpected accident and the law of succession have just made Douglass Dilman the first black President of the United States. This is the theme of what was surely one of the most provocative novels of the 1960s.
Examines the history of the African American struggle to achieve a voice in government in the United States, from before the Civil War to the present