Unintended Consequences by John Ross
Requirements: EPUB Viewer, 8.5 MB,
Overview: John Franklin Ross (born 1957) is "an investment broker and financial adviser," as well as a "certified personal protection instructor," and has written articles for "Precision Shooting" magazine and "Machine Gun News." He is, "by his own admission, a member of the gun culture." He wrote in the "Acknowledgements" section of this 1996 book, "This is a work of fiction with a story line based on political history and historic precedent. The real-life events that comprise much of the book have been re-created to the best of my ability using as many sources as I could locate... To help tell the story, I have at times invented specific thoughts and dialogue and ascribed them to real people... The reader should remember that this is a work of fiction."
The main character, Henry Bowman, thinks that "not only was it possible to kill someone and not be convicted, as the cop in the gun store had explained, but it was also possible to not ever be suspected of the killing in the first place... Killing someone was not an emotionally devastating experience when the person you killed was evil." (Pg. 269)
The author observes, "Prices of existing guns were driven up, and this caused the unintended consequence of government corruption. One ATF examiner in the Washington NFA office became well-known for falsifying documents... using his access to official approval and date stamps to line his own pockets. The biggest unintended consequence of 'Black Monday', as the NFA dealers called it, was something else... (it) awakened a sleeping giant to a terrible resolve." (Pg. 427)
"Henry" has doubts about the "official" version of the Oklahoma City Bombing incident, suggesting, "my first thought was that maybe a couple of individual (ATF) agents were scared of losing their jobs what with the upcoming hearings on ATF, Waco, and Ruby Ridge. So they go stick a bomb in a van out in the middle of the parking lot on the Waco anniversary, figuring they'll break a bunch of windows..." (Pg. 582)
Definitely not a "book for everyone," Ross's book will definitely provoke reactions from every reader.

Download Instructions:
https://www.tusfiles.com/h3tg1kvbpxxf
Mirror:
http://mir.cr/U9UQES56
Requirements: EPUB Viewer, 8.5 MB,
Overview: John Franklin Ross (born 1957) is "an investment broker and financial adviser," as well as a "certified personal protection instructor," and has written articles for "Precision Shooting" magazine and "Machine Gun News." He is, "by his own admission, a member of the gun culture." He wrote in the "Acknowledgements" section of this 1996 book, "This is a work of fiction with a story line based on political history and historic precedent. The real-life events that comprise much of the book have been re-created to the best of my ability using as many sources as I could locate... To help tell the story, I have at times invented specific thoughts and dialogue and ascribed them to real people... The reader should remember that this is a work of fiction."
The main character, Henry Bowman, thinks that "not only was it possible to kill someone and not be convicted, as the cop in the gun store had explained, but it was also possible to not ever be suspected of the killing in the first place... Killing someone was not an emotionally devastating experience when the person you killed was evil." (Pg. 269)
The author observes, "Prices of existing guns were driven up, and this caused the unintended consequence of government corruption. One ATF examiner in the Washington NFA office became well-known for falsifying documents... using his access to official approval and date stamps to line his own pockets. The biggest unintended consequence of 'Black Monday', as the NFA dealers called it, was something else... (it) awakened a sleeping giant to a terrible resolve." (Pg. 427)
"Henry" has doubts about the "official" version of the Oklahoma City Bombing incident, suggesting, "my first thought was that maybe a couple of individual (ATF) agents were scared of losing their jobs what with the upcoming hearings on ATF, Waco, and Ruby Ridge. So they go stick a bomb in a van out in the middle of the parking lot on the Waco anniversary, figuring they'll break a bunch of windows..." (Pg. 582)
Definitely not a "book for everyone," Ross's book will definitely provoke reactions from every reader.
Download Instructions:
https://www.tusfiles.com/h3tg1kvbpxxf
Mirror:
http://mir.cr/U9UQES56