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1000 tulosta hakusanalla Lloyd Billingsley

Barack 'em Up: A Literary Investigation

Barack 'em Up: A Literary Investigation

Lloyd Billingsley

Centershot Books
2016
nidottu
"Billingsley unmasks Barack Obama's life story as historical fiction." -Joel Gilbert, producer of Dreams from My Real Father "My father was a foreign student, born and raised in a small village in Kenya. He grew up herding goats, went to school in a tin-roof shack. His father, my grandfather, was a cook, a domestic servant to the British." That was Barack Obama's message to the Democratic Party convention back in 2004. The story first emerged in his 1995 Dreams from My Father but the author confessed a "stubborn desire to protect myself from scrutiny" and was not exactly forthcoming about his background. In 2008, the Dreams author became President of the United States but during his second term the mysteries mounted a surge. In 2012, Paul Kengor authored The Communist: Frank Marshall Davis: The Untold Story of Barack Obama's Mentor. The professor argued that Davis, a Stalinist, was the president's true ideological father. That year Dreams from My Real Father, a documentary film by Joel Gilbert, made a case that Frank Marshall Davis was the president's true biological father. In writings from 1958-1964, including his letters, the Kenyan Barack Obama mentioned nothing about an American wife and Hawaiian-born son. That emerged in 2013 but the president never viewed the collection. In 2015, Gilbert tracked down Malik Obama, son of the Kenyan Barack Obama. Malik Obama noted a strong resemblance between the president and Frank Marshall Davis, right down to the spots on their face. "I don't know how I'd deal with it," Malik Obama said, "if it really came out that he really is a fraud or a con." No insider stepped forward to tell all, but in the 2017 Rising Star: The Making of Barack Obama, Pulitzer Prize winner David Garrow proclaimed that Dreams from My Father was "in multitudinous ways and without any question, a work of historical fiction" and the author a "composite character." Fellow college students call Barry, as he was known, a "GQ Marxist." Close friends see him as a "pompous jive" who likes to "masquerade." Reporters tell Garrow the president's narrative is "not entirely true." Was the 44th President of the United States, the most powerful man in the world, not really who he claimed to be? According to Joel Gilbert, Barack 'em Up "exposes the Obama story as the fraud of the century. Highly recommended "
Killer Confession: Double Murder Dialogue in Davis, California
Two murders, no suspects, zero clues On April 14, 2013, police in Davis, California, received a call to check on Oliver "Chip" Northup, 87, an attorney and bluegrass musician. The singer and guitarist had failed to show up for two gigs, and that was not like him. Chip was not answering his phone and neither was his wife Claudia Maupin, 76, an actress and pastoral associate. Police found a cut screen over an open window. Inside they found Chip and Claudia stabbed, mutilated and eviscerated. It was the first murder in several years in Davis, a low-crime college town near Sacramento. Local police had never seen an attack of such savagery. The killer or killers left no clues. Detectives logged thousands of hours, chased down leads as far as Nevada, served 35 search warrants and generated 218 police reports. The FBI joined the search but by mid-June of 2013 these marathon efforts rendered no suspects and police remained without a clue. Then police got a telephone call that led them to an address a stone's throw from the cemetery where murder victims Chip and Claudia lay in their final rest. There police picked up a high-school student, 16 years of age, and brought him to the station. As it turned out, he knew details only someone at the crime scene could know. And as the police learned, he had a lot to say for himself.
Lethal Injections: Elizabeth Tracy Mae Wettlaufer, Canada's Serial Killer Nurse
Canada's Serial Killer Nurse Tells All "I had been killing people using an insulin overdose, okay." That's what registered nurse Elizabeth Wettlaufer told her friends, her pastor, and her doctors. On October 5, 2016, in Woodstock, Ontario, she told the police all about it. World War II veteran James Silcox was "the first one to die as a result of what I did." After killing him with an insulin overdose, the nurse went home and played computer games. "The doctor wants you to have your vitamin shot," the nurse told Maurice Granat before administering the insulin overdose that killed him. After giving Helen Matheson her blueberry pie, nurse Wettlaufer overdosed the woman. "After I did it, I got that laughter," she told police, and she laughed when Helen died. Nurse Wettlaufer told Mary Zurawinski the injection was "for pain" but it killed her as intended. And after getting the news, nurse Wettlaufer departed on a Caribbean cruise. As the nurse told police, Gladys Millard took longer to die than some others. "Take your medicine," the registered nurse told Arpad Horvath as she injected the insulin overdose that killed him. Nurse Wettlaufer also told police she killed Maureen Pickering and Helen Young. She told police how, when and why she killed her victims. The nurse told police she attempted to kill at least four others, and that she never "got caught." What would be the serial killer's penalty for inflicting so much death and suffering? Read all about it in Lethal Injections.
Yes I Con: United Fakes of America

Yes I Con: United Fakes of America

Lloyd Billingsley

Centershot Books
2020
nidottu
From FDR to BHO, United Fakes of America ExposedFranklin Delano Roosevelt is remembered as a president fully able in body and mind, and a tower of strength during World War II. In reality, FDR was anything but, and his "splendid deception," as one author explained, endures to this day. In similar style, Senator Elizabeth Warren built a career on the claim that she was of Cherokee ancestry. That turned out to be fictional, but the fakery was no barrier to a bid for the presidency of the United States. Over in the House, Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar claims "some people did something" on 9/11. Some journalists wonder if she did something improper to enter the United States. Before he sought to unseat Sen. Dianne Feinstein, former California senate boss Kevin de Leon suddenly claimed his father was a Chinese cook from Guatemala. That story had some observers scratching their heads.Sen. Richard Blumenthal claimed he had served in Vietnam. Some journalists found the claim untrue, but Blumenthal carried on in the U.S. Senate with no problem.Slain San Francisco supervisor Harvey Milk won the Presidential Medal of Freedom and has an airport terminal and U.S. Navy ship named after him. Was he really booted out of the Navy for being homosexual? And was he really gunned down by an anti-gay bigot?In Dreams from My Father, the 44th president of the United States claimed his father was a Kenyan named Barack Obama. Then after eight years in the White House came this: "Dreams from My Father was not a memoir or an autobiography; it was instead, in multitudinous ways, without any question a work of historical fiction. It featured many true-to-life figures and a bevy of accurately described events that indeed had occurred, but it employed the techniques and literary license of a novel, and its most important composite character was the narrator himself." The casual reader might see a "birther" at work, but the writer is Pulitzer Prize-winning historian David Garrow, PhD, in the 2017 Rising Star: The Making of Barack Obama, official biography of the 44th president. As one insider explained, the president's story is "not entirely true."It took some 40 years for the truth to emerge that President Franklin Roosevelt was severely disabled, and how this affected his presidency. It took much less time to expose the others, including, quite possibly, the biggest fake of all time. Read all about it in Yes I Con: United Fakes of America.
Lloyd

Lloyd

VM Roberts

Independently Published
2019
nidottu
Lloyd finds herself in many wavering situations through no fault of her own. It all began when she lost both of her parents tragically within a two-year span. Taken from her legally appointed guardian and placed in the foster care system in Pennsylvania at the age of 10, she is forced to fend for herself. She ultimately seeks assistance from a long-time family friend to break free of this system. Was this a wise decision? Betrayal. Trust. Determination. Loyalty. What must a child do to gain the attention of a noteworthy adult without being labeled a nuisance or troublemaker?
Lloyd McNeil's Last Ride

Lloyd McNeil's Last Ride

Will Leitch

Harper
2025
sidottu
SOON TO BE A MAJOR MOTION PICTURE"Lloyd McNeil's Last Ride broke my heart. And then it somehow mended that shattered heart, made it beat more buoyantly than before. We need books like this and writers like Will Leitch now more than ever."--Richard Russo, author of Empire Falls and the North Bath Trilogy of "Fool" novelsFrom the Alex Award-winning and Edgar-nominated author of How Lucky, this twisty, funny, and ultimately uplifting novel follows a father in a race against time to provide for his child.Lloyd McNeil has just learned he has months to live. He also learns that his twenty years as a beat cop in Atlanta haven't earned him enough money to take care of his teenage son, Bishop, after he's gone. But when Lloyd discovers his police benefits will increase exponentially if he dies in the line of duty, he comes up with a plan.Lloyd begins to throw himself into one life-threatening situation after another to try to get himself killed and to provide for his son . . . but he keeps failing--and surviving. To his shock, his accidental heroics make him an inspirational icon in the community. But time is still running out for Lloyd to get his affairs in order, to teach Bishop the lessons he needs to be a good person, and to say goodbye.Lloyd McNeil's Last Ride is a surprising, unforgettable blend of suspense, humor, and compassion. It is a novel about what we leave behind and what we learn along the way, a bighearted and stirring story about the depths of a father's love for his son.
Lloyd Alexander

Lloyd Alexander

James S. Jacobs; Michael O. Tunnell

Greenwood Press
1991
sidottu
Lloyd Alexander--A Bio-Bibliography profiles both the professional career and private life of this prolific author, winner of both the Newbery Medal and the National Book Award. Although best known and loved for his children's books, Lloyd Alexander also has been a regular contributor to magazines, anthologies, textbooks, and professional journals, all of which are documented in this comprehensive volume.A biographical glimpse into Alexander's early life reveals a youngster impassioned by books and touches upon the influences that shaped his sensibilities and encouraged his creativity to flourish. A list of writings by Alexander for both young and adult audiences as well as writings and audiovisual media about him comprise the annotated bibliography that follows. Illustrations, unpublished speeches, translations by Alexander, dissertations, book reviews, and monographs describing his work are just some of the works cited. In order to provide as thorough a recording of primary and secondary source materials as possible, most citations contain full bibliographical information; however, rather than omit an entry for lack of complete documentation, a small number of references are only partially covered. Dates of awards conferred and a Lloyd Alexander chronology appear in the appendixes, and a full index concludes the work.
Lloyd George and the Lost Peace

Lloyd George and the Lost Peace

A. Lentin

Palgrave Macmillan
2001
sidottu
This lively and original book critically re-examines Lloyd George's part, crucial but enigmatic, in the 'lost peace' of Versailles, 1919-1940. In a re-examination of six key episodes 1919-1940, it reviews his protean role at the Paris Peace Conference, 1919, his strategy on reparations, his abortive guarantee-treaty to France, and the emergence at the Conference of 'Appeasement'. It then reassesses his controversial visit to Hitler, and his bids to halt World War II after the fall of Poland and France.
Lloyd George

Lloyd George

Stephen Constantine

Routledge
1991
nidottu
An understanding of Lloyd George's long and prominent political career elucidates many of the key issues in modern British history. Seen by some as `the man who won the war', he was central to the political activity which appeared to secure the pre-eminence of the Liberal party before the First World War, but which later contributed to its reduction in status. His initiatives in government, particularly in the area of social reform, helped to redefine the relationship between the state and society and laid the basis for the Welfare State. This pamphlet examines these developments with reference to Lloyd George's Welsh background, his personal ambitions and his response to the challenges posed to Liberal society by radical conservatism and socialism. It draws on the wealth of material that is now available and provides a concise, interpretive study.
Lloyd George and the Generals

Lloyd George and the Generals

David R. Woodward

Routledge
2014
nidottu
The frustrating stalemate on the western front with its unprecedented casualties provoked a furious debate in London between the civil and military authorities over the best way to defeat Germany. The passions aroused continued to the present day. The mercurial and dynamic David Lloyd George stood at the centre of this controversy throughout the war. His intervention in military questions and determination to redirect strategy put him at odds with the leading soldiers and admirals of his day. Professor Woodward, a student of the Great War for some four decades, explores the at times Byzantine atmosphere at Whitehall by exhaustive archival research in official and private papers. The focus is on Lloyd George and his adversaries such as Lord Kitchener, General Sir William Robertson, and Field Marshall Sir Douglas Haig. The result is a fresh, compelling and detailed account of the interaction between civil and military authorities in total war.
Lloyd George's Secretariat

Lloyd George's Secretariat

John Turner

Cambridge University Press
2009
pokkari
When Lloyd George became Prime Minister during the First World War he appointed a private secretariat to help him run the complex machinery of wartime government. This book, drawing extensively on private and public archives, describes the work of that Secretariat during its two years of existence and discusses its contribution to policy-making and to the development of the Prime Minister's office. The 'Garden Suburb', so named from its temporary offices in the garden of 10 Downing Street, has won a poor reputation. Contemporaries described it as a nest of intrigue and imperialist, anti-democratic sentiment which helped to turn Lloyd George from a great Radical into a cynical dictator; and historians have tended to accept their word. This examination reveals a different picture. On the one hand, wartime government was imperfectly co-ordinated, and members of the Secretariat performed a genuine administrative task in helping Lloyd George to supervise it and save it from breakdown, although their small number and limited resources allowed them to cover only a few politically sensitive questions. On the other hand, the Garden Suburb was more eclectic in its ideological and political affiliations than has been allowed. Home Rule, collective security, temperance, state supervision of industry, Christian Science and the revival of agriculture, as well as imperial unity and opposition to socialism, each contributed through the Secretariat to the climate of ideas in which policy was made.