The Kindle book has been taken down by Amazon but the author's children's books remain up.
“The author gives his opinion on what motivated hundreds of thousands if not millions of protesters to journey to the nations capitol [sic], recalls what he saw and experienced that day, and shares his thoughts on the aftermath.”
Pretty brilliant writing. /s
Thornsberry also published a book called Dakota Black: or ‘The Dragon,’ which he lists as being coauthored with Moby Dick author Herman Melville, who died in 1891.
The Statement of Facts filed by the FBI in the case claims that Nathan A. Thornsberry published January 6 Redux: A Patriot’s Story under the poorly-disguised pen name “Nathaniel Matthews.” The FBI identified “Matthews” as Thornsberry because the Facebook profile promoting the book was named “Nathan Thornsberry (Nathaniel Matthews)” and subpoenas filed with both Facebook and Amazon returned information that tied the penname to Thornsberry. The book was deleted off of Amazon over the weekend, but the page for an earlier version, called January 6: A Patriot’s Story, is still up.
Any right that sounds difficult and unpleasant or like you’d have be an idiot not to take it is there solely to improve your life and should generally be taken whenever applicable. The right to remain silent/to not be forced to testify against yourself is the prime example.
It’s fine to confess in a plea deal or out of a guilty conscience, but not for a self published book. At least get a book deal to confess to crimes you can still be charged for
Reminds me of:
"I killed Darnell, yeah I shot him with my nine I shot him nine times, 9PM on the dime And by the way it was November 9th"
"Shot em with my long ass gun and threw it in the aquarium "