This book tells a futuristic story of how drastic changes in American society influenced the character development of a man who had been a psychopathic youth. As a teenager, he had been a social outcast who set off bombs. Following circumstances, which led to a Moslem takeover of the United States, his continuing skills as a bomb-maker become instrumental in removing the occupiers from the country. To the few who knew him, he becomes a national hero. This book also describes acts of terrorism by American insurgents against the Moslem occupiers, their families, and sympathizers thus mirroring the situation the United States finds itself currently in with the terrorists of Iraq and Afghanistan To many faithful Moslems, Americans are seen as invaders who have occupied their lands. They see insurgents fighting against the governments that support the Americans as noble warriors trying to free their land. But Americans see these Iraqis as terrorists. History provides various examples of how acts of terrorism can be rationalized as justified by those in whose name they were committed, whether Christian, Muslim, Jew, Hindu, or atheists. Some present-day Americans support doing the same to non-believers in democracy. They disregard the truth that it is one"s frame of reference that defines who the "good guys" are and who the "bad guys" are. Native Americans, once regarded as savages and barbarians, are now seen by many non-Native Americans as the exploited victims of the civilized Christian Europeans. These supposedly well-meaning Christians tried to save the souls of the "uncivilized" heathens they encountered in the New World by killing them and destroying their homes. The author is a 79 year old war veteran confined to a wheelchair. Before suffering a stroke, he had been a psychologist in private practice and in hospitals, working with a variety of patients, including psychopaths. His present work is a follow-up on what happened to the maladjusted youth he had written about in a 1985 novel, called "Bomber!" using the pen name of Ben Samuel. The author has had a longstanding interest in how one"s society defines and judges behavior. He has written articles about this subject for professional journals. In 2005, he wrote a two-volume non-fiction work concerning social values, namely the interaction between money and health in America. Profits of this book are to go to Doctors Without Borders and Physicians for Social Responsibility. Это и многое другое вы найдете в книге The Bomber Redemtion August-September 2020 (Ben Samuel)