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diggronpaul
05-03-2009, 09:33 PM
They Live (feature movie)

This masterpiece by John Carpenter shows how they influence our decisions without us knowing it. They numb our senses without us feeling it. They control our lives without us realizing it.

A rugged loner (RODDY PIPER) stumbles upon a terrifying discovery: goulish creatures (sociopaths) are masquerading as humans while they lull the public into submission through subliminal advertising messages. Only specially made sunglasses make the deadly truth visible.

They Live (http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-9005367754264973286&ei=RF7-SbSEGYWq2ALu6c23BA&q=%22they+live%22)


The End of Suburbia (documentary on oil - 52 min cut down version)

Unfortunately, this documentary is more propaganda than truth, blaming the public for the decline of fossil fuels and contemplating whether today's suburbs are destined to become the slums of the future? What this documentary does not show is how the public and WWII Vets were herded into the suburbs to hook us on oil and social security, mostly through media propanda, favorable construction loans for housing and retails establishments in the suburbs, and revise county zoning.

So, while the documentary attempts to assign blame on the public, it's not too difficult to extract from the video the techniques that were used to move the public to the suburbs, and now the propaganda that is being published to blame the public.

YouTube - The End of Suburbia - 52 minute documentary on oil (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q3uvzcY2Xug)


Legendary Sin Cities: Paris, Berlin and Shanghai (CBC Documentary)

The three-part Canadian CBC documentary Sin Cities focuses on the most notoriously decadent cities in modern history: Berlin, Paris and Shanghai during the 1920s and 1930s. And if you think rampant drug use, openly promiscuous behavior, sado-masochism and bizarre fetishes are modern phenomena, you may be surprised of what was going in the early 20th century. What made these notoriously sinful cities flourish was a unique gathering of artists, revolutionary political ideas, highly valued foreign money, and an overwhelming feeling of abandonment which was a direct byproduct of World War I's ending. These variables bred a unique tolerance that allowed and encouraged eroticism, permissiveness and deviant indulgences to openly flourish. This documentary does an excellent job at explaining how these cities rose, why they attracted the brightest and wealthiest, how the cities flourished, their ultimate decline and why their infamous pasts are still an integral part of their modern-day allure.

The Berlin installment is interesting because it gives us much more blunt exposition of the kinds of freedom the city had before Hitler arrived. You get more explicit portrayals of the sex and freedom in all cases, plus drinking, drugs, pedophilia and a virtually endless list and variety of combinations that allow all three cities to truly qualify for the title.

What's important to extract from this video is that the decadence peaked prior to WWII, as they were conditioning the public for what was to come, which included horrendous bigotry and treatment toward one element of the population, and purpatrating war against innocent neighbors and civilian populations. Only a debauched public would allow such leadership and events to occur, and as you can see, the public was certainly in the necessary state to facilitate such events.

Netflix: http://www.netflix.com/Movie/Legendary_Sin_Cities_Paris_Berlin_and_Shanghai/70045987
CBC: http://www.cbc.ca/documentaries/sincities/berlin.html
Fulvu Drive-in: http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/3642/Legendary+Sin+Cities+Berlin+Paris+Shanghai+Documen tary+
Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000CSUNTI?ie=UTF8&tag=matterikcom-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=B000CSUNTI