Jack Cashill
Jack Cashill is an independent writer, producer and public speaker of the first rank. He also serves as the executive editor of Ingram's Magazine, the Kansas City region's premier business magazine.
If there is a common theme to his work, it is that Jack tells stories that the major media won't. He started early, writing his Ph.D. dissertation on "The Capitalist as Hero," an unpopular subject in academe. He has since written books on several unsolved mysteries among them the crash of TWA Flight 800 and the death of Ron Brown. His expertise includes the economy, American history, and intellectual fraud including the various climate scandals and the true authorship of Barack Obama's books.
In addition to his work with Ingram's, Jack has written for Fortune, the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, the Weekly Standard and regularly for WorldNetDaily.
Within the last decade Jack has written one novel and six books of non-fiction, most recently "Sucker Punch," "What's the Matter With California," and "Popes and Bankers: A Cultural History of Credit and Debit from Aristotle to AIG."
Jack has produced at least 15 documentaries for regional PBS and national cable channels, including the Emmy Award-winning "The Royal Years." Jack has a Ph.D. from Purdue University in American Studies, has taught media and literature at Purdue and at Kansas City area universities, and served as a Fulbright professor in France.
Jack speaks on a wide range of subjects, from entrepreneurship to intelligent design to political intrigue of the highest order. What follows are comments from some of his hosts.
"Jack Cashill is an exciting speaker. You will be amazed and fascinated by his exposés of the celebrity frauds of the last half century."
– Phyllis Schlafly, Eagle Forum
"Thank you for a great and meaningful job for last night's audience and for Vitae, last night and in the future. Maureen told Joanie last night and again today that you were THE BEST speaker they have ever had, bar none. And that puts you ahead of other speakers they've had, including Alan Keyes and Ollie North. That's quite a testament and well earned and deserved."
– Col. Thomas Fitzpatrick, USAF ret., Whiteman AFB, Vitae Society
Jack Cashill's WorldNetDaily columns
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