This book is divided into three parts. The first 310 pages compiles 619 quotes
from the scriptures and 417 footnotes referencing historical, social science and religious sources
bearing on American politics. The second 8 pages is a science essay describing the rings of
Saturn as a precision constellation of ten billion satellites showing tremendous structure that is
unexplained. The last 33 pages reports computer word frequency research identifying common
authorship from the New Testament and specific Nineteenth Century scripture. These three
sections are bound together inseparably into one 352 page book - THE POLITICS OF GOD.
SATURN'S RINGS. One science and religion essay is titled "The Rings of Saturn, Miracle in
the Heavens." The American Voyager Space Mission provides the facts. The rings are
composed of billions of independent satellites each falling freely in its own orbit, each having
the same ellipticity, each having the proper different velocity required at its specific altitude, and
all forming a precision razor thin disk of only 36 millionths of one degree of arc measured from
the center of Saturn. The engineering challenge for men to launch all those satellites into the
required orbits is explained. Kepler's Laws, taken from Newton's Laws as applied to orbital
motion, explain all the current motion in the billions of orbits. But there is no explanation of
how that intricate constellation was first put into motion. On the internet in May 1995 these
correct statements were posted: "Open issues - What is the origin of the rings?" and
"tremendous structure' that is still "unexplained."
COMPUTER WORDPRINTS. The other science and religion essay is titled "Computer
Wordprints say God dictated specific Scripture." Computer word frequency analysis is used to
separate clearly different authors discovered in the New Testament book of Revelation. Christ
speaking to John from the heavens has distinct word frequency characteristics compared to the
narration of John in that same book. This unique word frequency signature of Christ is
compared to several specific modern writings, each alleged to be the word of God. All
candidates clearly fail the test except one. This rare matching text is not small. It comprises
100,000 words. The original computer research was done in English using a King James Bible.
Main portions of the study were performed again, but this time in German using Martin Luther's
translation of the Bible in 1534. Also, a modern German Bible translated in 1980 as a joint
Catholic and Protestant effort was used. Comparable powerful matches were obtained in
German as in English. The results are very stable and robust.
AMERICAN POLITICS. This 310 page section is a compilation of scriptures, counsel from
prophets, and history bearing primarily on American politics. God's political views for secular
government are taken from His inspired scriptures and His prophets. Occasionally these sources
give Satan's political views as well, which views are ideal to define bad political positions.
A primary source of quotations on political topics is the scriptures beginning with the Old
Testament and the New Testament. Also, the great protestant Christian historian Benjamin Hart
allowed use of 75 of his quotations showing God's hand in the American Revolutionary War,
with the Founding Fathers, and in establishing the Constitution. Clarence B. Carson permitted
inclusion of 34 references on personal freedom. These same conservative Christian viewpoints
are affirmed in detail by secular political quotations included from Mormon literature and
leaders. Also, social science studies from various universities collected by the Heritage
Foundation show the harmful effect of government welfare on children.
Secular political counsel are included given by denominational heads such as David O. McKay,
Ezra Taft Benson, Gordon B. Hinckley, and many more. McKay labeled communism as "the
greatest satanical threat on the face of the earth" and counseled support of political candidates
who are "truly dedicated to the Constitution in the tradition of the Founding Fathers." These
views of the founders about their Constitution are identified by position statements of
Washington and Jefferson, and by interpretations of Supreme Court Justices over the first
hundred years. George Bancroft (1800 to 1891), author of his very popular History of the
United States, collected most of these position statements on the Constitution. Twentieth
Century statements justifying a serious drift from the original Constitution are presented from
Woodrow Wilson, FDR, Thurgood Marshall, William Brennan, and from others. Throughout
the book these opposing political views are documented and placed side by side for many
striking contrasts.
Other personalities quoted or discussed include Lincoln, Hoover, Truman, Eisenhower,
Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, Carter, Reagan, Bush, Clinton, Gingrich, Whittaker Chambers,
Churchill, Eleanor Roosevelt, Hillary Clinton, Joycelyn Elders, Donna Shalala, Al Gore, Alger
Hiss, Joseph McCarthy, Antonin Scalia, and Martin Luther King. Other topics include Satan's
plan, Christ's plan, communism, Nazi platform, mafia, death penalty, Medicare, Medicaid,
Social Security, abortion, animal rights, and civil rights.
Robert L. Hamson attended several universities including California Institute of
Technology and The Ohio State University where he received his B.E.S., M.Sc., and Ph.D.
degrees. He worked for General Dynamics and Hughes Aircraft as an engineer on cruise
missiles. Dr. Hamson presented six technical papers in the field of operations research,
authored a book reporting his research using computers to identify authors, and wrote a script
for an educational film on the physics of what holds satellites in orbit. The two science and
religion essays at the back of this book are composed directly from the personal research and
analysis of Dr. Hamson. On the other hand, the 310 pages of politics and religion in this book
rest almost entirely on the thousand authoritative references compiled by the author.