The history that the textbooks left out.
For far too long, American history has been left in the unreliable hands
of those that author Donald Jeffries refers to as the court historians.
American Crimes and Cover-Ups: 1776-1963 fights back by
scrutinizing the accepted history of everything from the American War of
Independence to the establishment reputation of Thomas Jefferson and the
other Founding Fathers, the Civil War, the Lincoln assassination, both
World Wars, US government experimentation on prisoners, mental patients,
innocent children and whole populated areas, the Lindbergh baby
kidnapping and much, much more. Secular saints like Abraham Lincoln,
Theodore Roosevelt, and Franklin D. Roosevelt are examined in a critical
way they seldom have been.
Jeffries spares no one and nothing in this explosive new book. The
atrocities of Union troops during the Civil War, and Allied troops
during World War II, are documented in great detail. The Nuremberg
Trials are presented as the antithesis of justice. In the follow-up to
his previous, bestselling book Hidden History: An Exposé of Modern
Crimes, Conspiracies, and Cover-Ups in American Politics, Jeffries
demonstrates that crimes, corruption, and conspiracies didn't start with
the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
History should be much more than cardboard villains and impossibly
unrealistic heroes. Thanks to the efforts of the court historians, most
Americans are historically illiterate. American Crimes and Cover-Ups:
1776-1963 is a bold attempt at setting the record straight.