Ad
related to: jack cashill written works
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Jack Cashill (born December 15, 1947) is an American author, blogger and conspiracy theorist. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] He is a weekly contributor to WorldNetDaily and Executive Editor of Ingram's Magazine , a business publication based in Kansas City, Missouri .
Cashill, Jack (October 7, 2014). "You Lie!": The Evasions, Omissions, Fabrications, Frauds and Outright Falsehoods of Barack Obama. Harper Collins. ISBN 978-0-06-234752-7. Carney, Timothy P. (November 30, 2009). Obamanomics: How Barack Obama Is Bankrupting You and Enriching His Wall Street Friends, Corporate Lobbyists, and Union Bosses. Simon ...
Cashill, Jack. Ron Brown's Body: How One Man's Death Saved the Clinton Presidency and Hillary's Future. Thomas Nelson, 2004. ISBN 0-7852-6237-7. Corsi, Jerome R. Partners in Crime: The Clintons' Scheme to Monetize the White House for Personal Profit. WND Books, 2016. ISBN 1-944229-33-7. D'Souza, Dinesh.
This category should contain individuals in which being a conspiracy theorist is either their primary occupation or they are widely documented in the media for producing or endorsing conspiracy theories over a prolonged period.
Bill Ayers speaks to audience members following a forum on education reform at Florida State University (January 12, 2009).. During the 2008 U.S. presidential campaign, controversy broke out [1] regarding Barack Obama's relationship with Bill Ayers, a professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago, and a former leader of the Weather Underground, a radical left organization in the 1970s. [2]
Jack Cashill – author, journalist, blogger, contributor to WorldNetDaily; Kenneth Choi – actor, known for his role as Jim Morita in Captain America: The First Avenger, also Red Dawn and sitcoms; Kate Collins – author (Flower Shop Mysteries) Trevor Collins – Manager at Achievement Hunter; Thomas James De la Hunt – Indiana historian and ...
Ten Novels and Their Authors is a 1954 work of literary criticism by William Somerset Maugham. [1] Maugham collects together what he considers to have been the ten greatest novels and writes about the books and the authors. The ten novels are: The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling by Henry Fielding (1749) Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen (1813)
In the late 1890s, Churchill's writings first came to be confused with those of his American contemporary Winston Churchill, a best-selling novelist.He wrote to his American counterpart about the confusion their names were causing among their readers, offering to sign his own works "Winston Spencer Churchill", adding the first half of his double-barrelled surname, Spencer-Churchill, which he ...