At the time of this writing, I’m sitting just a few miles from a Century 16 theatre in Aurora, Colo., where, in the early morning hours of July 20, 2012, a deranged, fame-starved gunman shot dead at least 12 innocent people and wounded scores more at a midnight showing of “The Dark Knight Rises,” a Batman sequel. Clearly, what our nation needs is more “separation of church and state.” If those obnoxious, right-wing Bible thumpers would simply quit bellowing about the need for revival – a return to the deeply held Judeo-Christian principles embraced by our Founding Fathers – America would be a much better place.
Read more ›Archive for July 22nd, 2012
Lawless America — The Movie’ & the Filming of the Gary & Sara Harvey Case
The Star Gazette’s Ray Finger was on hand during filming for “Lawless America — The Movie”, which took place Thursday, July 19, 2012 in Elmira, New York. The subjects of the Elmira segment were Gary & Sara Harvey and the government officials and their attorneys who have kept Gary Harvey isolated in a hospital room with little stimulation and extremely restricted visitation. The once silenced truth is about to make it’s way to the screen in shocking revelation.
Read more ›American Clarion Week in Review, Ending Jul. 21, 2012
These were the top articles at American Clarion over the past week, including: The Constitution, Vattel, and ‘Natural Born Citizen’: What Our Framers Knew; The Obama Verdict; SD Attorney General Responds to Request for Secretary of State Investigation; Homosexual Pedophile Activist Targets MassResistance with Million-Dollar Lawsuit; In 2016, What Would Obama’s America Look Like?; A New Dark Age Lighted by Perverted Science; Clergy Starting to Speak Out Against Marxism; What ‘These Hands’ Can Produce; and more!
Read more ›America in the Crimson Light
“A baby is God’s opinion that the world should go on,” wrote poet Carl Sandburg, who died JULY 22, 1967. A son of Swedish immigrants who worked on the railroad, Sandburg left school after 8th grade, borrowed his father’s railroad pass and traveled as a hobo. He volunteered for military service, was sent to Puerto Rico in the Spanish-American War, and then attended college on a veteran’s bill. Carl Sandburg wrote children’s fairytales, called Rootabaga Stories, and mused of his wanderings in American Songbag. In 1926, he wrote Abraham Lincoln-The Prairie Years, and in 1939 he wrote Abraham Lincoln-The War Years, for which he received a Pulitzer Prize.
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