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Review of Red Wave Imperative

Posted: 20 Nov 2021, 22:26
by dickweed
[Following is a volunteer review of "Red Wave Imperative" by Alan Schein.]
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4 out of 4 stars
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In this day and age, it’s reassuring to know that local governments the world over are desperately trying to curb the onslaught of the Covid-19 pandemic which had already claimed thousands if not millions of human lives.
But unfortunately, there was still one despicable disease that is raising havoc, ferociously tearing itself into the fabric of society and in this regard, the American way of life.
This dreaded disease was now presently entrenched deeply in the country’s political landscape, in the form of a political strategy of “misinformation”; which was now being weaponized by those political parties whose aim is to discredit the present and future administration of the US government.
Allan Schein, who wrote the book, The Red Wave Imperative, further stated that the adverse effect of misinformation has done nothing but widen the gulf between political factions in America.
As a result, there is more political chaos to deal with than the utmost prioritizing of significant economic and social reforms which, unfortunately, had taken a back seat in the government’s top agendas.
Moreover, according to Schein, the collective economy of this great nation may just well spiral to the brink of total collapse not unless the American public chooses to wipe the slate clean by voting wisely especially during the upcoming presidential election.
The author likewise suggested that the eligible voter must shift away from the power from a purely socialist-political perspective which according to the book, can be meaningfully achieved through an electoral procedure billed as Voter-Controlled Democracy.
Thus, these United States for once can only then begin the process of truly healing itself from within.

Although the disparaging world of politics has never been my cup of tea, this book had proven me wrong.
Like the other best-seller book, The Brethren, (Woodward/Armstrong) this book furnishes pile after pile of compelling evidence why most politicians today favor biased agendas because of an insatiable appetite to maintain their affluent status quo.
I also particularly loved the FYI about North Korea's mobility of dispatching tens of thousands of elite hackers to do random damage to online infrastructures around the world.
There was one incident according to the book, wherein cyberspace terrorists from the former tried to hack 1 billion worth of currency from the New York Federal Reserve.
They almost got away with the supposed heist were it not from the fastidious investigation of an affiliate bank that became largely suspicious of a withdrawal request made by the latter.
But still, unfortunately, those same cyberspace terrorists did manage eventually to cart away 81 million dollars before they were foiled of going after the supposed bigger loot.
With this in mind, I would rate this book four out of four stars because the author has been brutally honest about his convictions (with a surplus of evidence to boot) with regards to how political parties bicker among themselves to stay at the top of the “food chain” without genuine regard for the general welfare of the masses.
Although this book was not professionally edited because of slight grammatical and punctuation errors with a slew of profanities thrown in for good measure, I would still rate it a perfect rating and gladly recommend this book to everyone owing to its generously daring and compelling account of the shadier inner workings of the US political structures and their enormous sway over the much hallowed Constitution but most especially among the lives of the minority.
As this book points out, to arrive at the superlative truth a person must seek and gather multiple angles from a story or source before becoming mostly judgemental about certain issues.
That way, we can purposely separate the wheat from the chaff of bewildering misinformation/disinformation.
 
 
 

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Red Wave Imperative
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