WhatFinger

Lee Cary

Since November 2007, Lee Cary has written hundreds of articles for several websites including the American Thinker, and Breitbart’s Big Journalism and Big Government (as “Archy Cary”). and the Canada Free Press. Cary’s work was quoted on national television (Sean Hannity) and on nationally syndicated radio (Rush Limbaugh, Mark Levin). His articles have posted on the aggregate sites Drudge Report, Whatfinger, Lucianne, Free Republic, and Real Clear Politics. He holds a Doctorate in Theology from Garrett Theological Seminary in Evanston, IL, is a veteran of the US Army Military Intelligence in Vietnam assigned to the [strong]Phoenix Program[/strong]. He lives in Texas.

Most Recent Articles by Lee Cary:

An 1984 lynching of history in 2017 Dallas

The question "Will Dallas join the 2017 Great Purge of American History?" was posed in the first of a six-part series recently posted on the Canada Free Press. The answer is--Yes, and it has.
- Monday, October 2, 2017

Dallas’ Dealey Plaza has a Confederate Monument

The Dallas Mayor’s Task Force for Confederate Monuments continues its hunt for “Confederate propaganda” – as Mayor Rawlings characterized the now removed statue of Robert E. Lee.
- Monday, September 18, 2017

Mayor Rawling’s Task Force on Confederate Monuments

Mayor Rawlings’ Task Force on Confederate Monuments should consider if the city of Dallas needs a new name. U.S. Vice President George Mifflin Dallas is widely seen as the city’s namesake. Among multiple sources that make that claim are the United States Senate and the April 19, 1925 edition of the Dallas Morning News.
- Tuesday, September 12, 2017

Will Dallas join the 2017 Great Purge of American History? (Part 6)

This last installment in a series concerning the deliberation underway in Dallas, Texas as to whether to remove its Confederate monuments, will take us to the edge of the Civil War. Some at the Court of St. James saw the U.S. Minister to Britain as a representative of slavery
- Monday, September 11, 2017




Who was George Mifflin Dallas in American History?

Does the Dallas task force on Confederate monuments know what the antebellum politician, for whom their city was named, thought about the Congressional Acts that supported slavery?
- Thursday, September 7, 2017


The line from Ferguson to Charlottesville

The turmoil in Ferguson, Missouri back in 2014 was the antecedent of the recent riot in Charlottesville, Virginia. Both are examples of the street theater of "a new civil rights movement." In November-December 2014, the website American Thinker posted a series of nine articles that tracked the persons, groups, and political forces at play in the town of about 20,000 north of St. Louis, Missouri.
- Wednesday, August 23, 2017


The Left’s War on Confederate Monuments

The American Left has declared war on Confederate monuments. Not just Southern military leaders – most notably General Robert E. Lee in Charlottesville, Virginia – but even the bronze statue known as “Old Joe” in a “memorial to men of the Gainesville [Florida] area who lost their lives in the Civil War.” Old Joe is being evicted from where he’s stood, motionless, outside the Alachua County Administrative Building, since 1904. The metallic history of the Confederate States of America (1861-1865) is being erased from parks, courthouses, and campuses across the nation. Can the book banning and burning be far behind?
- Wednesday, August 16, 2017


Washington Post copies Operation Garbo

Juan Pujol Garcia does not write for the Washington Post. He once had the talent to, but he died in 1988, at age 76--a decorated hero of World War II. Garcia's code name within British Security Service MI5 was "Garbo." Garbo was a Spanish citizen whose hatred of the European Communist and Fascist regimes of his time motivated him to volunteer, in 1939, to become a spy for the British. He had no experience in the espionage business. What he did have, though, was a vivid imagination.
- Wednesday, August 9, 2017

Dunkirk and the 2016 U.S. Presidential campaign

The currently-running 2017 movie version of the World War II events surrounding Dunkirk did not address how Allied forces ended up surrounded by the Germans in late May 1940. Here’s one explanation: Britain and France expected a static war with Germany patterned after World War I, but Germany’s army was mobile and flexible. Two different sets of war rules were at play.
- Thursday, August 3, 2017

America's two-party political system is dying

The failure of the Republican-controlled U.S. Senate to repeal ObamaCare signals that both major political parties have accepted the central role of the federal government in controlling the American healthcare industry.
- Sunday, July 30, 2017


America's Real News is in the Numbers

Ignorance of basic economic principles in most American newsrooms contributes to the scarcity of real news today. A wise and worldly friend recently asked, "Where is the news today?" A hard question.
- Friday, July 14, 2017


Denny Hastert and the D.C. Swamp

Since Donald Trump introduced "The Swamp," it' become American slang for the corrupt and secretive underbelly of the Washington, D.C. Deep State. One Swamp secret is the whole truth of Denny Hastert' life as a pederast. And, we are unlikely to ever know it--the whole truth.
- Wednesday, June 21, 2017

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