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The Forever Witness

The Forever Witness

by Edward Humes
0 Pages · 2022 · 1 MB · 31 Downloads · New!
" Happiness doesn't result from what we get, but from what we give. ” ― Ben Carson
Tyrannical Minds
by Dean A. Haycock
336 Pages · 2015 · 26 MB · 95 Downloads · New!
The “Tyrannical Minds: Psychological Profiling, Narcissism, and Dictatorship” is a government in which all power belongs to one person. The author of Tyrannical Minds book is Dean A. Haycock. Haycock is a science and medical writer living in New York. He completed his PhD in neurobiology from Brown University and fellowship at The Rockefeller University. He is the author of different books and Tyrannical Minds is one of the fabulous books. Haycock also wrote many articles for the general public. In Tyrannical Minds book, he explains it is not easy for everyone can become a tyrant. It needs a particular confluence of events to gain absolute control over whole nations. Haycock writes three part of this book. The first one is, you must be born with the potential and to develop brutal personality features. Second is, your behaviour must be developed and healthy during childhood. And the last one is, at one stage when you grow up and the political system of your country is unstable. These events establish a basis for a rise of power. Such that, Osama Bin Laden is the leaders of the Islamic State wished to gain such power. Tyrannical Minds also telling the actions of dangerous leaders and how to stop them. In short, Tyrannical Minds is a criminology book that tells how to judge and stop them.
One Long Night
by Andrea Pitzer
480 Pages · 2017 · 1.19 MB · 65 Downloads · New!
One Long Night is the criminology, Jewish Holocaust and military history book which discussed the history of concentration camps. Andrea Pitzer is the author of this fascinating book. This book brings a global history of concentration camps from all over the world. In recent ten decades, at least one concentration camp has existed anywhere on earth. These camps first used to build the strategies on the battlefields. The camps are evolved with the passage of time and their purpose are also changed from time to time. WWII brings chaos, tragedy, and destruction for every nation but it has some special link with the Jewish community. Hitler has no mercy for the Jewish people and he starts killing them from his own country. Although he has a camp for them that provides them safety there are only a few of them who make it to camps. There is not a single family who have not lost their loved ones.
Life After Death
by Damien Echols
416 Pages · 2015 · 4 MB · 39 Downloads · New!
The “Life After Death by Damien Echols” is a memoir of Damien Echols. Damien was born in 1974 and grew up in Mississippi, Tennessee, Maryland, Texas, Oregon, Louisiana, and Arkansas. When he was just eighteen years old, he was wrongfully convicted of murder, for the three eight year’s old boys in Arkansas, along with Jason Baldwin and Jessie Misskelley. Damien reveals about the guards and wardens, to portraits of fellow inmates and deplorable living conditions. He describes prison life as we all imagine from movies and TV shows, abusive guards, horrible food, lack of sleep, etc. But Damien Echols informs us that sadistic guards are the norm, rather than the exception. Echols also writes in-depth of the spiritual journey that led him from being high Protestant to exploring Catholicism on his own as a teen. His general thirst for knowledge and his keen interest in spirituality led to an ongoing study of Buddhism even though when he was imprisoned. In August 2011, all three men were released, because they are not suspects. This is a must-read book for anyone, who is interested in the criminal justice system. All in all, Life After Death is a brilliant, haunting, painful and uplifting narrative of hopeless childhood.
Behave
by Robert M. Sapolsky
800 Pages · 2018 · 17  MB · 35 Downloads · New!
Behave is the anatomy, biology, cardiology, criminology and psychology book which describes the behavior of a human in the different scenarios. Robert M. Sapolsky is the author of this stunning book. Human is itself a mystery and there is the number of theories on the existence of human. Scientists say it’s the evolution process that leads an animal to become a human. The human in the past was not so creative and intelligent that we see today. Human behavior also gives clues to his past and how he become a civilized creature. Why humans become angry and happy? What are the emotional triggers that force humans to make violence? Why we feel proud of killing people? What is the impact of dominance and power in our mind? Why intelligent people did not talk much and they are not materialistic. What is the impact of society in our decision making? How a kid learns from his family and especially parents. What not to do in front of kids and how your child attracts violence. Why kids did not see their parents shouting at each other. What kind of environment that you should provide your kids? This is a powerful and comprehensive book that describes in details about human behavior in different scenarios.
Blood in the Water
by Heather Ann Thompson
752 Pages · 2017 · 14 MB · 42 Downloads · New!
Blood in the Water is the law enforcement, history of America, and criminology book that contains the story of a brutal incident that happened three decades ago in New York, America. Heather Ann Thompson is the author of this impressive book. She is the bestselling author in the New York Times. This book is the winner of many awards and hits at the heart of readers. The story begins on September 9, 1971, when prisoners try to take control of their hands by taking the hostages. They wanted to stand against the facilities and mistreatment of the government to them as prisoners. These prisoners have civilian employees and guards as hostages. They are ready for negotiation but the government has decided something else for them. New York’s law enforcement decided to take serious action against them. An emergency meeting is being called and they are ready to take control back from prisoners no matter how hard the situation becomes. The operation was continued for 4 days and eventually police get control back. The State sends hundreds of heavily armed troops that ends up in severe violence. 39 people have killed both hostages and prisoners. Hundreds of them were injured badly and the media has no right to bring the inside stories.
Prisons and Punishment in America
by Michael O’Hear
241 Pages · 2015 · 3 MB · 90 Downloads · New!
The “Prisons and Punishment in America: Examining the Facts (Contemporary Debates)” is an amazing book that reveals American punishment. Michael O’Hear is the author of this book. Michael is a professor of criminal law and procedure at Marquette University Law School. His books include The Failure of Sentencing Reform and Wisconsin Sentencing in the Tough-on-Crime Era. In this book, Michael provides a thorough and accessible survey of the major policy issues in America. He reveals the American criminal justice system holds more than 2.3 million people in 1719 state prisons, 102 federal prisons, 3283 local jails, and 79 Indian country jails. The United States is the only developed Western nation that applies the death penalty regularly. This book provides readers with an accessible introduction to important, timely topics of public debate. They maintain a neutral, balanced perspective on a subject often a matter of heated partisanship. It also provides a balanced assessment of the strengths and weaknesses of significant reform proposals. This book is very informative, so it engages all the readers from the first to the last page. To sum it up, Prisons and Punishment in America is an informative book for the readers.

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