In the late 1990s,
while I was working on my Ph.D. at Columbia, I happened to be looking around inside the stacks and came upon a mysterious box.
When I opened the box, I discovered a bunch of old political pamphlets -- one of them dating to 1832.
The one
from 1832 was a pamphlet written pseudonymously by Abel Upshur in defense of the idea of state nullification of unconstitutional federal laws, and in reply to objections to the idea.
(The objections then, which Upshur parried effortlessly, were exactly the same as the ones today; these are not creative people.)
Essentially
nobody had read this since 1832.
I knew I had to share it with the world. The Internet at that time wasn't as developed as it would one day become, but I eventually included it in the documents section of my 2010 book Nullification. It was sheer luck by which I found it, but I'm very proud to have brought that work back into circulation.
Russell Brunson had a similar experience.
He came across some unpublished work by Napoleon Hill that had never seen the light of day, in the areas of success and wealth. It was in, of all places, an Arkansas church.
They don't make 'em like they used to, and that includes advice in these areas. Anyone who still remembers the old ideas has a massive advantage today.
He's now making it available to the world, in an essentially irresistible free-plus-shipping offer. (That's one
thing Russell specializes in: free bundles you can't bring yourself not to get.)
I thought Friday was the last day to grab it, but it's actually today. Read, absorb, implement, and enjoy: