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timmycav73
Reviews
One Night in Miami... (2020)
Of course it's fictional
Why does inspiring moments have to be made up? Why do colors of people have to be altered in statues ? That's not real history. It's stolen valor. Enough good things have been done by every community where things shouldn't have to be conjured out of thin air.
Any Which Way You Can (1980)
Not as charming as first one
Still a great flick for nostalgia. It's better than any cgi fest that's put out these days. I'd rather watch this over and over than anything made by Hollywood these days . These reviews are tainted by liberal reviewers who rate any movie with violence below 5.
Paratroop Command (1959)
Low reviews are from perfectionists
This is the type of b movie you would love when you were a kid . Soldiers just shooting at each other a lot 😂😂. If Quentin terrantino thinks it's great then what do those other reviewers know?
Don't Look Up (2021)
Of course a high rating because the stupid people voted first
This could have been great . It's hilarious that all of the roles are actually reversed in real life . Liberals are too stupid to realize that they're actually the ones in charge that worship tv and Hollywood.
Programming the Nation? (2011)
Ohhh the irony !!
Documentary with a bunch of left wing loons trying to convince Americans that it's the conservatives who control the media and who are corrupt . This didn't age well at all 😂😂
Money for Nothing: Inside the Federal Reserve (2013)
how can you not have a documentary about the federal reserve and not have Ron Paul in it?
End the Fed is a 2009 book by Congressman Ron Paul of Texas. The book debuted at number six on the New York Times Best Seller list[1] and advocates the abolition of the United States Federal Reserve System. Summary
Paul argues that "in the post-meltdown world, it is irresponsible, ineffective, and ultimately useless to have a serious economic debate without considering and challenging the role of the Federal Reserve."[2]
In End the Fed, Ron Paul draws on American history, economics, and anecdotes from his own political life to argue that the Fed is both corrupt and unconstitutional. He states that the Federal Reserve System is inflating currency today at nearly a Weimar or Zimbabwe level, which Paul asserts is a practice that threatens to put the United States into an inflationary depression where the US dollar, which is the reserve currency of the world, would suffer severe devaluation.
A major theme throughout the work also revolves around the idea of inflation as a hidden tax making warfare much easier to wage. Because people will reject the notion of increasing direct taxes, inflation is then used to help service the overwhelming debts incurred through warfare. In turn the purchasing power of the masses is diminished, yet most people are unaware. Under Ron Paul's theory, this diminution has the biggest impact on low income individuals since it is a regressive tax. Paul argues that the CPI presently does not include food and energy, yet the these items are the items on which the majority of poor peoples' income is spent.
He further maintains that most people are not aware that the Fed – created (he asserts) by the Morgans and Rockefellers at a private club off the coast of Georgia[3] – is actually working against their own personal interests. Instead of protecting the people, Paul contends that the Fed now serves as a cartel where the name of the game is bailout -- or otherwise known as privatized profits but socialized losses.
Paul also draws on what he argues are historical links between the creation of central banks and war, explaining how inflation and devaluations have been used as war financing tools in the past by many governments from monarchies to democracies.