2 out of 4 stars
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The Natural World Order: A Thought-Provoking Guide to the Right Path is an eye-opening and agitating book written by Wm Harold Stewart.
The book is a courageous attempt to open up the minds of the American people, to guide them, and to help them break free from the influence of controlled thinking by following the natural world order. The author begins by defining free will and expounding on the male/female principle, then moves on to the importance of knowledge and harmony.
Moreover, the book distinguishes between creation and evolution and explains the result of disharmony, misdirection, and political division. Furthermore, the book offers a possible solution to the present state of things by giving advice on how to bring up a child into a man, to look out for each other, and to free the mind from the control and manipulation that are holding the people back.
Quite noticeably, in each topic, the author discusses the ways and manners the people are controlled and manipulated into passivity and submission. In a tone fueled by profound disgust and undisguised acrimony, the book describes how the people are brainwashed into compliance through politics, religion, and education. With the same ardor and intensity, the author expresses his undeniable faith in the people’s capability to change the present circumstances if they realize the power in number and learn to work together.
This is a very interesting book. It is thought-provoking and passionately written. What I like most about the book is the undeniable courage of the author in writing a book that he believes would guide American people towards the truth. His burning desire, fired by his sincere intention, to wake the people up, coming from his profound love for his country, becomes his personal mission. This mission, expressed in words, jumps-off the pages of this book to call attention and steer the readers towards the direction of change.
However, some readers may find the book a little vague and difficult to comprehend. While some parts are completely ambiguous, some deviate from the topic. There are even some parts that seem irrelevant like Immaculate Conception and the author’s 7-day fasting. There is an entire chapter that enumerates the common grounds, which are simply more political, social, and economic issues in addition to those already integrated in each chapter.
Moreover, the book doesn’t appear to follow a specific outline for organization and the topics seem to be thrown in randomly. Furthermore, some readers may find it too political, preachy, and, in the absence of a list of references, subjective. Finally, aside from the constant use of sentence fragments, there are too many errors within the entire book including grammatical errors, particularly subject and verb agreement (grandparents offers anything of value), incorrect use of prepositions (in the bottom in ignorance), faulty parallelism, improper use of punctuation marks, and misspelled words (irrelavent and decietful).
In view of the above, I rate this book 2 out of 4 stars. It is interesting and thought-provoking. Readers who enjoy books about society, politics, and life in general may find it enjoyable.
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The Natural World Order
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