
Dr Daniel Brubaker

About The Author
Dr Daniel Brubaker
Doctor, Writer and Author
I grew up on a farm in Lancaster County Pennsylvania among Amish and Mennonites. My father was a horticulturalist and we sold produce at farmer’s markets and showed it at fairs. The Brubaker family is traced to the Reformation in Lake Zurick Switzerland. They were Aa- Baptists who underwent death and persecution by the Catholics, causing them to flee to Germany where they also endured the religious wars of the 1600s. Finally they made it to America in 1700. I am tenth generation American.
I received all my education in Pennsylvania. After medical school I did my post-graduate training at the University Of Pittsburgh Health Center. I did research along with my training and published 5 papers in medical journals. The university had an explorer’s club where I learned rock and ice climbing. I climbed Mt. McKinley in 1979 and Mt. Rainer in 1989. I also did cross country and alpine skiing, sea kayaking, mountain biking, fly fishing, and photography. I published in medical journals and textbooks along with discovering a new medical disease, I called Post-Transfusion Graft –versus-Host Disease. I did a trip to Tibet in 2004 to learn Traditional Tibet Medicine and published my first book, Endless Time, a photo documentary with Buddhist verses.

List of Online Publication
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Book Review by Quipper Prints
The Republican Party, despite continuously invoking the name of Abraham Lincoln, can no longer be considered the party of Lincoln. It is evident that the party has deviated from its original path. In a comprehensive analysis, Dr. Daniel B. Brubaker delves into the reasons behind the Republicans’ struggle to differentiate between reality and falsehoods. He also investigates the tendency of many party leaders to propagate conspiracy theories and falsehoods. Drawing on insights from the neuropsychological development of toddlers, he elucidates how certain Republicans exhibit childlike behavior. Additionally, Dr. Brubaker concludes that some leaders within the Republican Party exhibit traits associated with antisocial personality disorders. A common tactic employed by Republicans is directing their fears towards Democrats by labeling them as socialists. However, this tactic can be characterized as fearmongering, as today’s Republicans lack a genuine understanding of socialism or utilitarianism; these terms have become mere buzzwords intended to instill fear. Readers are invited to join the author as he explores the far-right nationalist agenda of the Republican Party and how it was influenced by a president with clinically psychopathic
tendencies. Moreover, the author delves into the realm of crowd psychology to shed light on the party’s evolution.
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