BREAKING: 'Unhumans' by Jack Posobiec, Joshua Lisec breaks into New York Times bestseller list at #14

Unhumans took the 14th spot on the list for hardcover non-fiction.

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Unhumans took the 14th spot on the list for hardcover non-fiction.

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Jack Posobiec and Joshua Lisec's book "Unhumans: The Secret History of Communist Revolutions (and How to Crush Them)" hit the New York Times Bestsellers list, coming in at 14th out of all hardcover nonfiction.

Posobiec and Lisec's novel, which previously hit the top sellers list on Amazon earlier in July, goes over the history of different Communist revolutions throughout history and draws parallels to what is happening in America today. The book was discussed earlier in June by Charlie Kirk, Lisec, and Posobiec at The People's Convention.



The desire to write the book, Posobiec said at the time, stemmed from his wanting to inform Americans about the "history of Communism" beyond what you are typically told about. "What happened in China, what happened in Russia, what happened in Russia, what happened in Spain, what happened in France, what happened in all these places around the world? What are the stories? Who are the people?" Posobiec said at the time, adding that he and Lisec discovered a "system" that was common with Communism.

Lisec noted, "Our hypothesis is that we're currently undergoing an irregular Communist revolution in the United States that's been slow walked through all institutions since the 1950s 1960s and we look at characters who have been despised by not just left-wing educators and entertainment, but even the center and even the right."

At the same time as Unhumans has hit the NYT Bestseller's List, JD Vance's book Hillbilly Elegy took the top spot as he has been chosen as Trump's VP pick.

The book details Vance's rough childhood and relates it to the white working class in America, many of which live in what some on the coasts refer to as the "flyover states." In 2016, Rod Dreher wrote an article in the American Conservative along with an interview from Vance that crashed the site due to the amount of traffic that flocked to read "Hillbilly America: Do White Lives Matter?"

Vance wrote how he was able to escape the cultural norms of broken families, drugs, and other misfortunes that are seen as stereotypical of the white working class in America, ending up at Yale Law School. Dreher wrote at the time that Vance "draws conclusions from it [his experience], conclusions that may be hard for some people to take. But Vance has earned the right to make those judgments. This was his life. He speaks with authority that has been extremely hard won."
 
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