Twseb And Its E-books
Dozens Of Power Techniques For Using Excel. A 29 Page Book That You Will Read From Beginning To End And Actually Use.
Twseb And Its E-books
Be Able Series Of E-books
Useful Ideas For Parents, Teachers, Sundayschool Teachers, Home Schoolers And Tutors
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Psychology E-books
As An Outpatient Psychologist, I Run Across The Same Problems Everyday. Clients Said I Should Write Ebooks About Each One, So They Can Fix The Problems Themselves Without Necessarily Going To A Therapist. I Did. Here’s What A Psychologist Has To Say.
Psychology E-books

Ignite Phoenix 8 packed the house and Bookmans presented our newest video that knocked the socks off the SRO crowd. Check it it out! Special thanks to morgantj for the song “café connection.” You will be missing out if you don’t check out the full track. “café connection” by morgantj ccmixter.org is licensed under a Creative Commons license: creativecommons.org
Video Rating: 4 / 5
To ORDER BOOK or E-BOOK editions, or read more: gregmitchellwriter.blogspot.com In my latest book (print or e-book) “Atomic Cover-Up: Two US Soldiers, Hiroshima & Nagasaki, and The Greatest Movie Never Made,” I probe a turning point in US history: the suppression of film footage, for decades, shot by a US Army unit in the atomic cities — a wrong turn with staggering consequences even today. This is a detective story, a profile of two remarkable military officers, and one of the last little-told stories of World War II. The cover-up even extended to MGM and Hollywood–and to President Truman. And there was no WikiLeaks to get the film aired. To ORDER BOOK at .95 gregmitchellwriter.blogspot.com Or E-book version just .99 (for Kindle, all phones, iPads, Blackberry, PCs) at Amazon here: amzn.to You do NOT need a KIndle. My email: epic1934@aol.com As co-author of the classic “Hiroshima in America” and eleven other books, I’ve written about elements of this story for leading newspapers and magazines, but now I tell the full saga here, based on new research — from the Truman Library to Nagasaki. Praise for my “Hiroshima in America” book: “A great book” — Los Angeles Times. “Compelling reading.” — The New York Times. “Excellent.” — The Washington Post. All front page reviews. The new book opens this way: “This is the story of twenty hours of film footage, blazing with color, shot in Hiroshima and Nagasaki in early 1946 by a US military crew, that would change the lives …
Video Rating: 4 / 5

ahaha this isfunny and nice
Is hate to have to clean that up lol
Imagine if you accidently knocked them over x).
cleaning this up would definitely be one of those ‘it seemed like a good idea at the time’ moments
That looks great! So simple but great looking.
well its a library what do else to do you expect them to do, read?
nice video!! xD
coooll
how long did it take to put it back?
Lol at all the comments about the shoeless hipster
Fuckyeah, I’m going to Bookmans in the morning.
That’s cool a hell I wish I could do that
Are you kidding me right now? This is over the top awesome, creative, amazing & wonderful. Harrison – you never cease to amaze me. Now I will probably never get to work with you because you are world famous! Congratulations on the National Addy award!
Great videos…years ago I frequented the Bookman store on Grant/Campbell ave in Tucson. A favorite place to hand out between studies in college.. really miss that old place. Ever feel like opening a store in Dallas?? give me a call first !
Another great think about Bookman’s… DOMINOS. (The first thing is Bob’s hat!)
epic
@SinisterTeddybear They filmed at a bunch of different locations.
mu chulo
I doubt they took books off the shelf for this. Plus everyday there is new inventory, they’re use to shelving things
@amba2006 Let me put it this way, FUCK EM. Semper fi asshole.
@amba2006 Don’t think I don’t appreciate your opinion. However, Iwo Jima measured about 3 miles by five miles. On it 6,000 marines were killed and almost all of the 21,000 defending Japanese. Do you really think taking Japan would have less Casualties? Next, taking Okinowa, the Japanese sunk more US Tonnage than in all previous wars the US fought in combined, not to count the deaths. I like you peaceful sentiments, and others..with they were true, but tragicaly no, we had to drop the A bomb
“I had been conscious of depression and so I voiced to (Sec. Of War Stimson) my grave misgivings, first on the basis of my belief that Japan was already defeated and that dropping the bomb was completely unnecessary, and secondly because I thought that our country should avoid shocking world opinion by the use of a weapon whose employment was, I thought, no longer mandatory as a measure to save American lives…. ”
- General Dwight D. Eisenhower
@giannivee1 there was no need to land in Japan, the US foe had no military resources no food to fight the war, the war had practically ended by August. These are all lies (“saving 0.5 mln americans etc.) created by Truman. Before bombings, even the US military experts estimated possible US losses after the on-the-group operation at 20,000, not half a million. Half a million appears after the bombing somehow.
@btwall60 The fact that their military defended Okinawa to the last man, that they were allies with Hitler, does not justify burning out alive 100,000 children. No one in the world had ever committed a crime against humanity of such magnitude and destroying power, just in few days! Most of the US generals were against the bombing and advised Truman about its uselessness, as Japan was already negotiating the peace truth. Americans are feeding themselves lies about this tragedy.
@orchards
The Japanese had just defended Okinawa to the last man. They had to be burned out of their holes like bugs. Attacking Japan by sea would have cost the USA about a million men and a zillion dollars. Harry Truman got it right the first time. End it here, end it now. No apology.
Support the series that have warned Western citizens
Search For
“BUSH OBAMA DESTROYED US ARMY”
Wow just watched “7(7) Iwo Jima”, Marines who suffered 10% killed on Iwo said they went back to Hilo in Hawaii to begin training for the landings on Japan, the Marine said “I feel like all my luck was used up, the prospect of surviving the landing on the Mainland of Japan was very doubtful”. Reason, I say, The bomb was necessary. He attributes his life and many of his friends to the fact the war ended very quickly after the dropping of the bomb. My argument is sound, he was not a revisionist.
@ kurd55 you spoke of cognitive dissonance. lack of honest public discourse over a clearly horrendous war crime continues to weigh on the american collective memory like a guilty secret. kids are taught we dropped the only nuclear weapons ever used on a purely civilian population but it was the right thing so don’t dare question it unless you wanna be unpatriotic. how dogmatic is that? if we can admit we regret such things we can move closer to the more peaceful foreign policy most all desire.
@kurd55 did we bomb innocent women and children unnecessarily? YES. can we do better in the future? YES. apologizing would move that aspiration into the realm of explicitly articulated policy. THAT WOULD BE GOOD. but not just us, yeah the japanese should apologize too, ect. of course, the present war-mongering govt. will never because wars of pure aggression are now an unquestionable cornerstone of US foreign policy. meanwhile real peace remains possible as ever, if we shift mentality.
@kurd55 “only an electronic entity sitting down in your own room”(?) hmmm…. strange choice of words.
funny the SON of a war of an actual vet trying to be all tough “we shouldn’t apologize”. that’s the kind of mentality (PRIDE) which only leads to more conflict. if we’re honest about it apologies are due all around, from all sides. WHY? because apologies accept responsibility for the past and indicate aspirations to do better in the future.
I respond point counterpoint, its seems shallow, but not enough space is here for a long dialogue. I am very verbally skilled, as are you. This block doesn’t allow for much, so i respond as you respond, you walk, I walk. I don’t think your dad wants to destroy the truth. As far as rote beliefs, you have as many as me, I am just aware of them, you are denying yours. But I do like you, you are tougher than an old Schlitz beer can, makes me sort of fond of you as you chew my hide. God bless
@giannivee1 I hope you’re attempting to be clever, otherwise I fear you have some sort of learning disability. Or maybe you have such a high level of cognizant noise in your head, that you just can’t comprehend some speech dialectics that don’t coincide with your rote beliefs. A common problem among religious people. Again. YOU brought up apologies, I did not. YOU said, “You revisionists are always at it, destroying the truth!!” Get it? I’m quoting YOU! So, my dad wants to destroy the truth, eh?
@kurd55 Here is a good one for you…The coverup wasn’t to save us embarassment, rather to hide the intensity of the Japanese atrocities. If most American had known what the Japanese war machine really had perpetrated, it would have been doubtful we would have given one dollar to the post war recovery of Japan. Japan was spared much unpublicized embarassing documentation dealing with treatment of civilians, POWs, Biological research, much of the documentation destroyed, showed thier guilt.
@kurd55 I don’t want to destroy your dad’s truth, like my mom and dad who lived through WWII. My mom was German citizen then, saw the holocaust from the inside out. She was big fan of Harry Truman and she was very glad the United States was there to save the world form Hitler and Tojo. I like your dad’s truth, be happy to listen to him talk about what he lived through. The way you talk about your dad making you aplogize..well, its kind of weird, how old are you? He sounds like a good guy!
“You revisionists are always at it, destroying the truth!!” Really? That sounds like you may be VERY one-sided on everything–including apologies. My dad, the WWII combat vet, and me want to destroy the truth, eh? Well, don’t worry,my dad would never ask you to apologize. Me either. I just think it’s a weird and nutty–and most importantly–dreadfully hackneyed. The bright side is that I’ve heard that comment so many times that it makes me laugh nowadays.
@giannivee1 “You revisionists are always at it, destroying the truth!!” Really? That sounds like you may be VERY one-sided on everything–including apologies. My dad, the WWII combat vet, and me want to destroy the truth, eh? Well, don’t worry,my dad would never ask you to apologize. Me either. I just think it’s a weird and nutty–and most importantly–dreadfully hackneyed. The bright side is that I’ve heard that comment so many times that it makes me laugh nowadays.
@orchards Oh really, professor? i don’t treat liars and their arrogant ignorant fabrications with kids gloves. “You revisionists are always at it, destroying the truth!!” I’m supposed to let idiot comments like that slip on by, eh? Why are people like you so ready to treat lying hyperbole with more respect than some minor rude comments here and there. Very curious, and in my humble opinion, just plain ol’ dumb, as well. And relax, you’re only an electronic entity sitting down in your own room.
@kurd55 for some reason, i like apolgies, i think it would cause the Japanese to reflect admit the attrocities, and be sure not to repeat. You warn against, and there has been many episodes of the US realizing its wrong in Civil rights and wars and making sure we did not repeat the process. So I am a proud american. God Bless
@giannivee1 Yes, but YOU said the Japanese should apologies to the Philippines. My point was that if we’re going to start demanding apologies, who’s going to next ask for the United States to apologies to the Philippines for the Philippine–American War? Is gawd going to lay out the rules for handing out apologies for war atrocities and crimes? It’s a valid question. The subject of apologies did NOT appear anywhere in this video–that was YOU. It’s an incredibly vapid assertion.
@kurd55 I know, the film the above author mentions happned in 1945, World War II, 20th Century, that is where my comments are about. That war, not the War of 1812, World War I, the Korean War, or Viet Nam. World War II and the Japanese. The reason for the bomb, the atomic bomb. If you wish to go into Xerxes and the Spartans, or England and the Normons, or the French and Ho Chi minh, you can tackle those without me. 1932-1945 is basically the time frame his article is about.
@giannivee1 MacArthur is 1945. I’m talking about the Philippine–American War, 1898-1902–when a lot of filipinos were slaughtered by American troops. They finally were “granted” their “independence” in 1945, I believe. Like I said, if countries are going to start apologizing, who’s going to set the cut-off dates? Take it easy.
@kurd55 I appreciate that you are an Atheist, and I am not. We can respect each other. I served my country so that those who share your belief are entitled to have it. Freedom is true freedom to believe and be free to disbelieve and be free. Yes, religion has honorably presented man with a more ethical and logical way to deal with daily problems. I agree on that. Appreciate the kind banter, That is why I like Youtube, we have the freedom to disagree and enjoy it. Peace brother!