NOTE: It is very important you READ the purpose of this thread. It is very important that you understand the movie was funded and produced by George Soros Shadow Party" ("SSP") Participant Productions, the same company that backed Al Gore's highly fraudulent movie "An Inconvenient Truth" and the barf-fest movie "Jimmy Carter Man From Plains". Both men were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize - in different years - in which George Soros has significant friendships and influences with key members of the Noble selection committee in both awards. If you visit the movie's official website do not respond or send money to the "Act Now" request by TakePart.com. TakePart.com: Social Action Network is a SSP organization like ultra radical MoveOn.org: Democracy in Action.
TakePart states your Charlie Wilsons War (CWW) donation will go to Fulfilling Charlies hope of rebuilding Afghanistan and supporting causes that help veterans through Roots of Peace.org, which is another SSP front organization. In my and other highly knowledgeable individuals opinion, and it is only our opinions, the purpose of both SSP CWW related organization are fraudulent and your donations will go to directly funding Democratic candidates along with an SSP agenda and mission that is destroying our great Country. - FlAttorney. --------------
It is important to understand that Charlie Wilsons War is the second Afghanistan conflict movie to be produced and released by the same Democrats-Soros Shadow Party funded company being Participant Productions. There are many similarities between the two movies which were released within seven (7) days of each other. - 12.21.07, FlA & Co.
Posted for FlAttorney by TAB
Thanks for info. I didn't know it was the same "production house". The film's screenwriter, David Benioff (of
Troy fame) recently married to Amanda Peet; his father, Stephen Friedman, used to be a chief of Goldman Sachs.
The Kite Runner book was recommended to me about a year ago, I looked briefly at the subject matter and was not interested; to my surprise, book seemed highly praised and celebrated in literati circles - I don't understand the reason, but I don't travel in those circles.
Movie was also fairly widely advertised, though not nearly with as much vigor as CWW, and it's not doing much in BO - less than $3M to date, though I assume the budget for it was very small. Whatever they are trying to say in this particular movie (something about Afghans and their culture, maybe?), it doesn't seem to have a widespread audience, and from a momentary familiarity with the subject of the book, I didn't think it would.