A controversial coloring book company is updating its 9/11 coloring book to include references to more recent events, inviting children to draw on pictures depicting the body of Osama Bin Laden, the five Taliban members exchanged for an American POW and a crucified victim of the Islamic State group, also known as ISIS.

"ISIS brings to the world their perverted case of Islam," proclaims the black-and-white outline of the crucified person. "This is what ISIS wants to bring to America and its people. What are you going to do when they come for you?"

The book is published by Really Big Coloring Books, a St. Louis-based publisher that stirred controversy a number of years ago when it published, "We Shall Never Forget 9/11," a graphic themed coloring book.

The book is billed as a "family publication designed for use with children and adults." The book calls for an "honest debate, with an indiffrence to political correctness."

Wayne Bell, the founder of the company, called that book and the follow-up, "The True Faces of Evil - Terror" both "complicated," requiring "adult supervision while addressing the murders of innocent Christian children, adults and also the annihilation of entire families."

The coloring book includes information about the U.S. military and its opinion in the defense-funding debate. "The US Military is the world's dominant defense against the animalistic, evil terrorists," it declares. "A well equipped, strongly financed, military is mandatory in the 'War on Terror.'"

While the main focus is the war on terror, the book also attacks the Obama administration for freeing five Taliban terrorists in exchange for captured American soldier Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl.

"The GAO, Government Accountability Office, issued a report that concluded that the Obama Administration broke federal law when it released five Taliban prisoners from GITMO I exchange for Bowe Bergdahl without notifying Congress in advance," states the caption above the outlines of the "Talibani 5."

Bell's company also does a spoof of the Rolling Stone cover photo of accused Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. The "True Faces" version changes the magazine name to "Rock Him and Stone Him" and poses the question, "What about the victims?"