Robert Osenenko Ed D
Published: 2019-05-30
Total Pages: 272
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First released May 30,2019, Donald J. Trump, An American Dilemma, focused primarily on deviance of country, family, and president until his election. These are the "calm years" of his history. It stands to reason that as more was known about the man, the present update became necessary. Special attention is given to Trump's presentations and speeches from a linguistic point of view. Additions to this revision include new chapter headings, an Appendix, and Index. The body of the book has been condensed. The biography has been updated to include recent information. This book is unique in that it is supported by fact and 40 years of author expertise in psychology. Readers go on a developmental journey into the reasons for Trump's candidacy. Determining what was different from its beginning focusing almost entirely on how it could use ill-gotten gain. Donald is Fred's son who was not repulsed by the 1930s but personally admired it despite its catastrophic parts. At times, the reader can see how the Trump family, if they did not love their role in promoting these hateful ideas, learned how to use them for financial survival. Described by them as a love-surrendered to Donald, often enabling him. The reader will discover a different form of love that hated innocence, an affection for the politically perverse, and human emotions of race and immigration that conservatives found enthralling. Conservatives believed Americans didn't want unity and understanding abandoning tradition. They powered the campaign and changed the meaning of words. Trump's family was not made for peace, which President Reagan encountered in his White House. Still, there are lessons to be relearned on coping with Trump's two realities as a business tycoon and his identity as a skilled imitator. Throughout the book, the backgrounds of those that influenced the family most are presented factually. From the men involved in the politics of the 1930s. To the overlap by Russian leaders and their unquestionable influence in New York and Palm Beach. Some of these self-described "diplomats of crime" participate in the plot, who readers may know. For one, Dr. Armand Hammer was seen along with Lenin is followed by the author. Other familiar names who have received pardons were once highly regarded Americans that changed their loyalties. All of them participated in what can only be described as love-surrendered, waiting to serve a president who initially has nothing in common with. The author leaves the readers to decide how these individuals became enthralled with the same beliefs that caused so much violence and hate no one could forgive. Beginning and ending this first narrative are the unforgettable voices of when the Daily Stormers sang "blood and soil" in Virginia that signaled the White House theme. President Donald J. Trump marked the coming together of times that had no relation to one another. Except that he admired the speeches of the 1920s to the 1930s. So much so that he included them in his campaign. But, did the Stormers sing for him? This is what the author set to find out by examining what appeared to be opposites in time. By delving into the speeches, symbols, and illustrations of the period that Daily Stormers first arrived in the United States and the reception, President Trump gave them a reply to their song.