Books to read

Not Izzie, I admit.

Not Izzie, I admit.

An incredibly moving book about what it’s like to be all alone with a vision and a fear you can never realize it. If you don’t read the others, read this one. The final scene in the jungle when you’re tracking the jaguar and realize it’s been tracking you instead is the perfect intro for the next, and lesser if more important, two.

He drags his prey into the tree all alone.

He drags his prey into the tree all alone.

No. He’s not a nice guy. Why I can relate. He’s the lawyer Rush Limbaugh refers to as “The Great One.” He is. Maybe the only one who can specify the depth of the constitutional crisis we’re facing with a president who should be impeached on a couple of dozen counts. Number One on Amazon by the way.

No. Not even a conservative.

No. Not even a conservative.

Libertarian. And a scrupulous journalist. Which makes him a lonely hunter indeed.

Trust you to find these books at Amazon on your own. Jaguars never hold you by the hand. They just get into your head and never leave.

Well, you know, ask Rabinowitz about it.

Well, you know, ask Rabinowitz about it.

One thought on “Books to read

  1. I’m having a tough time finding Jaguar in a usable digital format, but I may just have to make a trip to the library, nothing wrong with that.

    I did manage to get The Liberty Amendments and start in on it. He is on fire from the get go, specifically calling out O along with Congress and the courts. “What was to be a relatively innocuous federal government, operating from a defined enumeration of specific grants of power, has become an ever-present and unaccountable force. It is the nation’s largest creditor, debtor, lender, employer, consumer, contractor, grantor, property owner, tenant, insurer, health-care provider, and pension guarantor.” Damn. It’s *exactly* what the authors of the Constitution were trying to prevent.

    It’s nothing you haven’t been saying all along, but I look forward to reading the specifics from one of the top experts, if only to mourn more accurately and precisely.

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