America's Indomitable Character Volume I
From the Age of Exploration to the American Enlightenment
Nonfiction, History
In Volume I of America's Indomitable Character the text covers Liberty; the Liberty Tree; the differences between constitutional, democracy, republic, and democratic republic. The discoverers and settlers of America. The social and political atmosphere of the American Colonial beginnings and the influence of European Wars in the developing of a Colonial identity consciousness. The Colonial America identity crisis as seen via masculine femininity or feminine masculinity. The connection between Colonial America and the French philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau in the Enlightenment. The clash of the White European Civilization with the Native American Civilization. At the end of Volume I, the reader will know: Why Barack Hussein Obama has no legal character identity to be the President of the United States of America. What the real title of America's constitution is and why. Why the Mayflower Compact, and Plymouth Rock are sources of American character identity. What the first political cartoons in America were. What British propaganda in the American Revolution thought about General George Washington and what Colonial propaganda thought about King George III. What a doodle is. The origin of Yankee. What a Woffington is. The origin of American libraries. The relationship of philosophy to character identity and politics. The origin of words. The role of deconstructionism regarding American character identity. The role of Nature in connection to American character identity. The relationship of the individual to the American society. The difference between the state and the government. The beginnings of education in America and its relationship to politics. The origin of the term cut throats in referring to the white man. What a noble savage is. That Indians were not drunkards.
In Volume I of America's Indomitable Character the text covers Liberty; the Liberty Tree; the differences between constitutional, democracy, republic, and democratic republic. The discoverers and settlers of America. The social and political atmosphere of the American Colonial beginnings and the influence of European Wars in the developing of a Colonial identity consciousness. The Colonial America identity crisis as seen via masculine femininity or feminine masculinity. The connection between Colonial America and the French philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau in the Enlightenment. The clash of the White European Civilization with the Native American Civilization. At the end of Volume I, the reader will know: Why Barack Hussein Obama has no legal character identity to be the President of the United States of America. What the real title of America's constitution is and why. Why the Mayflower Compact, and Plymouth Rock are sources of American character identity. What the first political cartoons in America were. What British propaganda in the American Revolution thought about General George Washington and what Colonial propaganda thought about King George III. What a doodle is. The origin of Yankee. What a Woffington is. The origin of American libraries. The relationship of philosophy to character identity and politics. The origin of words. The role of deconstructionism regarding American character identity. The role of Nature in connection to American character identity. The relationship of the individual to the American society. The difference between the state and the government. The beginnings of education in America and its relationship to politics. The origin of the term cut throats in referring to the white man. What a noble savage is. That Indians were not drunkards.