Ann Coulter, John Zmirak, Eric Metaxas. French Revolution and the American Revolution were Exact Opposites. Pro-Choice Demons Go to War. Judas Gun Stealing Republicans.\n\xa0\nThe American History You Don't Know\nHAPPY JULY 4TH!!!\nAnn Coulter\nAnn Coulter, AUTHOR OF 13 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLERS, chats about politics, religion, war, crime, history, sex, race, soccer (even real sports!) \u2013 all the things we\u2019re told it\u2019s impolite to raise in polite company. Coulter\u2019s UNSAFE podcast is the Rapid Response Team to the Democratic Party and its subsidiaries, The New York Times, The Washington Post, MSNBC, CNN, et al \u2014 as well as 90 percent of the Republican Party. Listen here first \u2013 and be 3 days ahead of all the cable news channel hosts, who will undoubtedly be listening too\n\xa0\nThe Eric Metaxas Show\nJohn Zmirak\n\xa0Jul 01 2022\xa0\xa0\nBig Bad John Zmirak brings his usual thunder and lightning with focus on new articles at Stream.org, including, "Pro-Choice Arguments Are Dead, Now We See the Demons" and "Can SCOTUS Save Our Gun Rights from Republicans in the Senate?" \n\xa0\nThe Eric Metaxas Show\nThe Eric Metaxas Show- https://metaxastalk.com/podcasts/\n\xa0\nBook Mentioned- \nDeath by Government by RJ Rummel. \nGet yours free at- https://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/DBG.CHAP1.HTM \n\xa0\nAbout the Author- \nRudolph Rummel\nFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia\n\xa0\n\nRudolph Rummel\n\n\xa0\n\nBorn\n\n\nRudolph Joseph Rummel\nOctober 21, 1932\nCleveland,\xa0Ohio, U.S.\n\n\nDied\n\n\nMarch 2, 2014\xa0(aged\xa081)\nKaneohe,\xa0Hawaii, U.S.\n\n\nEducation\n\n\nUniversity of Hawai\u02bbi\n(B.A.,\xa0political science, 1959)\n(M.A., political science, 1961)\nNorthwestern University\n(Ph.D., political science, 1963)\n\n\nOccupation\n\n\nPolitical scientist\n\n\nEmployer\n\n\nIndiana University\xa0(1963\u20131964)\nYale University\xa0(1964\u20131966)\nUniversity of Hawai\u02bbi (1966\u20131995)\n\n\nKnown\xa0for\n\n\nResearch on\xa0war\xa0and\xa0conflict resolution\n\n\nWebsite\n\n\nhawaii.edu/powerkills\n\nRudolph Joseph Rummel\xa0(October 21, 1932 \u2013 March 2, 2014)[1]\xa0was an American\xa0political scientist\xa0and professor at the\xa0Indiana University,\xa0Yale University, and\xa0University of Hawai\u02bbi. He spent his career studying data on collective violence and war with a view toward helping their resolution or elimination. Contrasting\xa0genocide, Rummel coined the term\xa0democide\xa0for murder by government, such as the\xa0genocide of indigenous peoples\xa0and\xa0colonialism,\xa0Nazi Germany, the\xa0Stalinist purges,\xa0Mao Zedong's\xa0Cultural Revolution, and other\xa0authoritarian,\xa0totalitarian, or undemocratic regimes, coming to the conclusion that\xa0democratic regimes\xa0result in the least democides.[2]\nRummel estimated that a total of 212 million people were killed by all governments during the 20th century,[3]\xa0of which 148 million were killed by\xa0Communist governments\xa0from 1917 to 1987.[4]\xa0To give some perspective on these numbers, Rummel stated that all domestic and foreign wars during the 20th century killed in combat around 41 million. His figures for Communist governments have been criticized for the methodology which he used to arrive at them, and they have also been criticized for being higher than the figures which have been given by most scholars.[5][6][7][8][9][10][11]\xa0In his last book, Rummel increased his estimate to over 272 million innocent, non-combatant civilians who were murdered by their own governments during the 20th century.[12]\xa0Rummel stated that his 272 million death estimate was his lower, more prudent figure, stating that it "could be over 400,000,000."[13]\xa0Rummel came to the conclusion that a democracy is the\xa0form of government\xa0which is least likely to kill its citizens because democracies do not tend to wage wars against each other.[2]\xa0This latest view is a concept, which was further developed by Rummel, known as the\xa0democratic peace theory.[14]\nRummel was the author of twenty-four scholarly books, and he published his major results between 1975 and 1981 in\xa0Understanding Conflict and War\xa0(1975).[15]\xa0He spent the next fifteen years refining the underlying theory and testing it empirically on new data, aga