Monday, August 1, 2016

Hillary's America: How Accurate is the History?

Hillary's America: How Accurate is the History? - thenewamerican.com

Excerpt from this article:

"I suspect that D’Souza, who spent eight months in prison as a result of a clearly politically inspired prosecution because of his 2012 movie documenting the leftist background of Obama, is understandably bitter. But as bad as the modern Democratic Party is, that does not excuse twisting history in an effort to make the Democratic Party totally evil and the Republican Party totally good....
D’Souza’s thesis is that the Democratic Party was essentially founded by Andrew Jackson in the 1820s, and the party has been both racist and evil ever since. In an effort to advance this thesis, every Democrat in the film is evil and every Republican is cast as heroic.  And no man is more evil, at least according to D’Souza’s film, than Andrew Jackson. While there are many negative things that can fairly be said about Andrew Jackson, D’Souza simply goes too far in his desire to make Jackson the Devil Incarnate. One can certainly disagree with Jackson’s Indian removal policy without presenting him as a hater of Native Americans. Left out of the movie was Jackson’s adoption of a Creek orphan boy, Lyncoya. He and his wife, Rachel, were unable to have children of their own, and they raised the boy at the Hermitage, and paid for his education as a saddle maker. (Jackson’s original desire was to send the boy to West Point, but the young man died in 1828 of tuberculosis.) But perhaps the most unfair treatment of Jackson was D’Souza’s portrayal of him as forcing slave women to have sex with him. Absolutely zero evidence exists to support such a claim."
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Recommended video:

Hillary's America: The Secret History of the Democratic Party, by Dinesh D'Souza

Recommended reading:

Mugged: Racial Demagoguery From the Seventies to Obama, by Ann Coulter
Chuck Norris: Top 10 Highlights of Hillary's America - wnd.com

How I Found Christ?

 How I Found Christ? by Charles Spurgeon (1834-1892)