Michael Rectenwald, Ph.D., a former NYU Professor turned fierce cultural critic, builds a narrative that marries intellectual depth with relentless suspense. Drawing on historical revisionism and thinkers like Friedrich Nietzsche, Michel Foucault, George Orwell, and Hans-Hermann Hoppe, The Cabal Question explores the workings of propaganda, the ethics of resistance, and the contested domain of historical truth. Through safe houses, border crossings, and secretive talks in rural refuges, the story wrestles with the forces-be they a hidden elite, a crafted narrative, or the mind's own distortions-that mold the present. The revisionist's vision, both asset and peril, propels a clash with the state and his own legacy. Rectenwald's incisive prose delivers a stark reflection on identity, faith, and the cost of forbidden knowledge. The saga challenges official narratives, disorienting the reader, and prompting questions about what's true in the stories that shape the landscape of the reader's mind.