AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY



Long ago in the early days of television, when screens were tiny and the colors were only black and white, one of the networks was Du Mont and one of its programs was the New York Times Youth Forum. This once-a-week panel show featured six students from around the country discussing national issues. On Sunday, February 1, 1953 the question was "Can We Maintain Ethics in Government?" and one of the panelists was teenager Fred Gielow.

He recalls, "I can't remember much about our discussion, but I vividly recall taking issue with the basic premise of the program. I questioned how ethics could be 'Maintained,' if as I suspected, ethics were largely 'absent' to begin with. Such an attitude wasn't much appreciated by moderator Dorothy Gordon or special guest Ellis Arnall, former Governor of Georgia."

That television debut and debate may have planted a political seed in Fred's subconsciousness, but if so, it certainly remained dormant for a long time. Long enough for him to finish school, get a job, marry, raise a family, even retire, before germinating. But now that seed has blossomed into a full-time interest as his recent appearances on local radio programs, his co-hosted public-access television interview show, and now this book attest.

"There are many sources of truth to refute what liberals and the mainstream media tell us," says Fred, "but you have to dig around a little to find them. If you really expect both sides of an issue to be fully and fairly presented in the major newspapers and magazines and on television, I'd say you've bought into the mainstream media scam. You're a victim of the Propaganda Machine. But, sadly, it appear you're in the majority. The media seem to be winning their clever con game."

Fred continues: "I wrote this book to present a perspective that seems to go largely unnoticed in the U.S. today. It's a real tragedy when lies are regularly masqueraded as the truth. What's even more tragic is when a majority of the public buys into the big deception, or worse, yet, when the public doesn't even care.

"By using quotations direct from the mouths of liberals, quotations generally unreported by the mighty Propaganda Machine, I think it's possible to demonstrate the kind of world our liberal friends wish to impose upon the rest of us. It takes but a few remarks, during rare, unguarded moments, for liberals to vividly and unambiguously show their true colors."