WhatFinger

The transition of America over to One World Government in the middle of a worldwide economic meltdown

Nikita’s Plan, a book for post-election America



Nikita’s Plan, a book for post-election AmericaNikita’s Plan, by Stephen Kenner with Joanna Whitehall, is a book that reflects the dark days in which we find ourselves. That’s because even though it is a work of fiction, the plot is straight out of contemporary true life—the transition of America over to One World Government in the middle of a worldwide economic meltdown, and about the average people working desperately to turn it around. Nikita’s Plan is unique because you, as an American, are a character within its pages.

Many people send books to Canada Free Press, which I rarely find to read. But after I opened Nikita’s Plan, I found I couldn’t put it down. I read it last weekend when I was searching the Drudge Report for any breaking news on anything from the new Office of the President-elect. Nikita’s Plan filled that yearning to find out more about what is happening in the United States, but it did so in a way that took me into the lives of its believable and likeable characters. If you’ve had that “hinky” feeling since Election Night, reading Nikita’s Plan over the upcoming holidays is a good idea. How Stephen Kenner could come so close to the truth of what is happening around us in a work of fiction is truly remarkable. But then again the author is a remarkable man. Born in Southern California, Kenner is the kind of guy often at the center of adventure. Having traveled throughout the states and overseas extensively, his is a life of many challenges, both new and old. But it was only after he survived pancreatic cancer, that he decided to write a book, not any book but one he hoped would wake people up and engage them in what is happening in today’s United States. Not someone to mince words, Kenner believes what is happening in the U.S. today is going to take a lot of energy to turn around. “I say that Civil War is not only possible in our beloved country, but also quite real and near,” he writes in the book forward. “The far right lunatics and the far left radicals have very little between them to stop the oncoming bloodshed. When that happens we all must take a side if for no other reason than to protect our families and homes.” A long time believer that “True life is stranger than fiction”, he made the fiction of Nikita’s Plan imitate true life knowing it would keep readers spellbound. The prologue takes us back to a time we should never have forgotten but somehow did: “A bulbous, obnoxious man stood up during an early 1961 spring conference in Zurich and said in his rough, loud voice, in Russian, “We will bury you!” “He wasn’t talking to the world. He was talking directly to the United States. Nikita Khrushchev could barely stomach Ike, and he absolutely hated John Kennedy. No one really took much notice of that statement. “We will not bury you with weapons. YOU will bury yourselves from WITHIN.” “During the following months, we started to learn exactly what he meant. Khrushchev laid out subtle comments about our education system, our court system, our politics, but especially little hints about our media. It’s strange how one man could have the audacity to think he would be powerful enough to bring down an opponent in such a devious way. But when he told us his plans, we ignored it. “How could we have allowed this to happen?” Enter Ron Tibbett and Jack Chase, two of the most unlikely FBI agents you will ever meet within the pages of any book. Set in a backdrop of an America under siege of civil unrest and on the brink of Civil War, Russian troops are assembling at their staging areas getting ready to deploy their soldiers to return security against the fighting reds and blues. Adding to a powderkeg situation is China threatening to declare war on the U.S. if Russia is allowed in to save the U.S. from itself. But Tibbett and Chase, who listened in and taped a covert meeting in a U.S. Senator’s house, know that the Russians planned the revolution they are now being sent to put down. With a bevy of double agents hot in pursuit to stop them, the two agents have to somehow get the tape to the White House. Their many adventures along the way make Nikita’s Plan an edge of the chair suspense story. Many of the things happening in today’s America will be recognized in the storyline. Kenner makes his characters believable and softens their edges with a human touch. As the story moves along at lightning speed, readers will find themselves hoping that Ron will return safely to his family and that Jack will live to get back to Amanda. Readers of Nikita’s Plan pick up tips about how FBI agents cover their tracks and even some commonsense ideas about how to survive a recession. But like its author, Nikita’s Plan leaves the reader with hope for the future and underlines how the struggle to save one’s country is always worth it. “We are in desperate need of a hero, no a few heroes that will risk their lives to try to save our precious nation,” writes Kenner. “We need these men to go far beyond the call of duty to face situations that are totally against their basic beliefs. We need men that are willing to change their lifestyle and give up all that is precious to them. “Where do you find such men? They are in every walk of our life. They just need to be called upon to sacrifice the ultimate for us, the people of this nation, the ones that don’t deserve it.” Says Kenner: “Even though this is a work of fiction, the subject matter within this book is of great interest to many Americans these days. There are topics that need to be discussed and debated to assist all of us in formulating correct thoughts on how and why we should participate in the world around us. We highly recommend that you visit our websites and join into these discussions. “Please visit us online at: Stephen Kenner.com and at NikitasPlan.com.”

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Judi McLeod—— -- Judi McLeod, Founder, Owner and Editor of Canada Free Press, is an award-winning journalist with more than 30 years’ experience in the print and online media. A former Toronto Sun columnist, she also worked for the Kingston Whig Standard. Her work has appeared throughout the ‘Net, including on Rush Limbaugh and Fox News.

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