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The Founders' Speech To Save America
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The Founders' Speech To Save America
Current price: $27.76
Barnes and Noble
The Founders' Speech To Save America
Current price: $27.76
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The faith that sustained them- the families they held on to- the God-given rights they fought for . . . and how they won.
The Founders' Speech To Save America
gives readers a front-row seat to hear firsthand how the Founding Fathers defeated the greatest empire the world had yet known. The work serves as an instruction manual for patriots today to stand for and defend their rights, a call to organize and defeat those who seek to destroy them, and a reminder that we must restore the faith and character of the people if we mean to retain our liberties.
Continuing his widely acclaimed work in telling the story of America's Founding through the lens of the issues we face today, National Bestselling author Steven Rabb asks, "How would the Founding Fathers address the political and moral crises in modern-day America?"
The Founders' Speech To Save America: How The Founding Fathers Defeated Tyranny
answers that question using the very words of the Founding Fathers to tell the story of how patriots from across the colonies united in purpose and deed to defy the British Empire.
The Patriots uniting to defeat tyranny is a compelling theme of
The Founders' Speech
, as is their exhortation to teach our children to love and revere their country, their example of courage and sacrifice as they declare for independence, and their patriotism and sacrifice as they boycott, rally, and spirit the colonies to victory. One of the lessons we learn in their telling is that the remarkable success of the colonists was largely made possible by their unity. Through the Committees of Correspondence, a little-known network that connected every town and colony, the Patriots organized to defy the odds and, as John Adams stated, "make thirteen clocks strike together as one."
The prologue introduces
through a fictional telling of the Founding Fathers reuniting in Independence Hall in modern-day America. Reflecting age-old tensions, Hamilton and Jefferson are soon at odds and each other's throats, as they debate the scope and role of the federal and state governments. As tensions threaten to boil over, the Founding Fathers realize, as they sit down to write the speech, that the principles at issue in the room must be one of the work's themes. The ensuing chapters lay out, theme by theme, in the actual words of our Founding Fathers,
The Founders' Speech To Save America.
The Founders' Speech To Save America
gives readers a front-row seat to hear firsthand how the Founding Fathers defeated the greatest empire the world had yet known. The work serves as an instruction manual for patriots today to stand for and defend their rights, a call to organize and defeat those who seek to destroy them, and a reminder that we must restore the faith and character of the people if we mean to retain our liberties.
Continuing his widely acclaimed work in telling the story of America's Founding through the lens of the issues we face today, National Bestselling author Steven Rabb asks, "How would the Founding Fathers address the political and moral crises in modern-day America?"
The Founders' Speech To Save America: How The Founding Fathers Defeated Tyranny
answers that question using the very words of the Founding Fathers to tell the story of how patriots from across the colonies united in purpose and deed to defy the British Empire.
The Patriots uniting to defeat tyranny is a compelling theme of
The Founders' Speech
, as is their exhortation to teach our children to love and revere their country, their example of courage and sacrifice as they declare for independence, and their patriotism and sacrifice as they boycott, rally, and spirit the colonies to victory. One of the lessons we learn in their telling is that the remarkable success of the colonists was largely made possible by their unity. Through the Committees of Correspondence, a little-known network that connected every town and colony, the Patriots organized to defy the odds and, as John Adams stated, "make thirteen clocks strike together as one."
The prologue introduces
through a fictional telling of the Founding Fathers reuniting in Independence Hall in modern-day America. Reflecting age-old tensions, Hamilton and Jefferson are soon at odds and each other's throats, as they debate the scope and role of the federal and state governments. As tensions threaten to boil over, the Founding Fathers realize, as they sit down to write the speech, that the principles at issue in the room must be one of the work's themes. The ensuing chapters lay out, theme by theme, in the actual words of our Founding Fathers,
The Founders' Speech To Save America.