Posted on 01/18/2018 8:36:20 PM PST by nickcarraway
Tipping point past which you do not care a fig?
Does Redford really think that Hollyweird women are any less scummy than Hollyweird men?
Sundance Film Festival director John Cooper... made special mention of a short film by Marshall Curry called A Night at the Garden, which unearthed footage of a Nazi rally held in Madison Square Garden in 1939 with a man standing onstage talking about how to make a better America, America has to change and how its all the fault of the journalists. It is the most shocking thing Ive seen of all the movies so far. Its horrifying.Gosh, I wonder why he brought that up?
I would argue that the massive problems we face in society today are because women have been given too much control over things and have been allowed to muck things up based on emotions, the good looks of candidates, and liberal feel-goodism.
Won’t go into details, but Redford is a hypocrite - personal experience.
Hypocrite? Really! I wonder what the carbon footprint of The Sundance Film Festival is.
>>Its kind of a tipping point, he said. Its changing the order of things so that women will have a stronger voice. They didnt have it before. Too much control by the male dominance. Now I think its going to be more even-handed. I think the role for women to be able to step forward and exercise their voices more is a really wonderful thing, and I think the role for men is to listen, let womens voices be heard, and think about it.
Does this mean women will no longer be having sex with and giving liquor and drugs to the children in their classrooms?
I wonder if it includes any footage of folkie Communists like Woody Gutherie and Pete Seeger protesting against going to war against NAZI Germany. #ThisMachineDoesntKillFascistsUntilAfterDec7
http://www.nysun.com/arts/time-for-pete-seeger-to-repent/56379/
In the “John Doe” album, Mr. Seeger accused FDR of being a warmongering fascist working for J.P. Morgan. He sang, “I hate war, and so does Eleanor, and we won’t be safe till everybody’s dead.” Another song, to the tune of “Cripple Creek” and the sound of Mr. Seeger’s galloping banjo, said, “Franklin D., Franklin D., You ain’t a-gonna send us across the sea,” and “Wendell Willkie and Franklin D., both agree on killing me.”
He is so full of it.
Am I the only one who saw this and wondered what Redford was doing on Conservative Treehouse?
Charisma?
http://articles.latimes.com/1988-09-07/news/vw-1508_1_robert-redford
The Redford Factor: Do Looks Really Sway Voters?
September 07, 1988|GARRY ABRAMS | Times Staff Writer
From the moment Dan Quayle was picked by George Bush last month, comparisons between the young, blond Indiana senator and actor Robert Redford made the presidential campaign suddenly sound like a casting call...
...The mythic appeal of the dead President is so strong that it probably played a role in Quayle’s selection for the 1988 Republican ticket, Glassner said. “The subliminal appeal of someone like Quayle is his resemblance to Kennedy.”
In fact, American voters’ penchant for pleasing faces and figures has driven many a politician to the beauty parlor and the gym...
Probably because most of the perps and victims are card-carrying Democrats?
>> with a man standing onstage talking about how to make a better America, America has to change and how its all the fault of the journalists. It is the most shocking thing Ive seen of all the movies so far. Its horrifying.
“Forward with Roosevelt” Franklin Roosevelt 1936 campaign slogan
In 1939, the Depression was still on, didn’t FDR promise Americans that he was going to bring a better America? (via Fascism/Socialism and dictatorship)
Didn’t FDR attack journalists who disagreed with his policies and methods?
http://reason.com/archives/2017/04/05/roosevelts-war-against-the-pre
FDR’s War Against the Press
Franklin Roosevelt had his own Breitbart, and radio was his Twitter.
David Beito from the May 2017 issue - view article in the Digital Edition
Roosevelt, like Trump, had a good relationship with the press at the start of his public career. Journalists found him quotable and amusing. But by 1934 this honeymoon had frayed, and a year later it had given way to a war of words. Roosevelt complained constantly about the press’s “poisonous propaganda.” With a tone of mock sympathy, he reassured reporters that he understood they were not to blame, because publishers told them what to write.
In the 1936 election, Roosevelt claimed that 85 percent of the newspapers were against him. In the standard work on the subject, historian Graham J. White finds that the actual percentage was much lower and the print press generally gave FDR balanced news coverage, but most editorialists and columnists were indeed opposed to the administration. Convinced that the media were out to get him, Roosevelt warned in 1938 that “our newspapers cannot be edited in the interests of the general public, from the counting room. And I wish we could have a national symposium on that question, particularly in relation to the freedom of the press. How many bogies are conjured up by invoking that greatly overworked phrase?”
Roosevelt’s relationship with radio was warmer. The key distinction was that broadcasters operated in an entirely different political context: Thanks to federal rules and administrators, they had to tread much more lightly than newspapers did. At its inception in 1934, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) reduced the license renewal period for stations from three years to only six months. Meanwhile, Roosevelt tapped Herbert L. Pettey as secretary of the FCC (and its predecessor, the Federal Radio Commission). Pettey had overseen radio for Roosevelt in the 1932 campaign. After his appointment, he worked in tandem with the Democratic National Committee to handle “radio matters” with both the networks and local stations.
It did not take long for broadcasters to get the message. NBC, for example, announced that it was limiting broadcasts “contrary to the policies of the United States government.” CBS Vice President Henry A. Bellows said that “no broadcast would be permitted over the Columbia Broadcasting System that in any way was critical of any policy of the Administration.” He elaborated “that the Columbia system was at the disposal of President Roosevelt and his administration and they would permit no broadcast that did not have his approval.” Local station owners and network executives alike took it for granted, as Editor and Publisher observed, that each station had “to dance to Government tunes because it is under Government license.” Some dissident radio commentators, such as Father Charles Coughlin and Boake Carter, gained wide audiences. But radio as a whole was firmly pro-Rooseveltand both Coughlin and Carter were eventually forced off the air for pushing the envelope too far.
For Roosevelt, of course, the main advantage of radio was that the networks knew they had to carry his frequent fireside chats and other speeches in full, usually with minimal commentary. In very Trumpian language, Roosevelt praised the new media for restoring “direct contact between the masses and their chosen leaders.” As the media historian Betty Houchin Winfield notes, radio allowed the president to be “the news gatherer, the reporter, as well as the editor,” all at the same time.
Even as he was securing domination of the ether, Roosevelt worked hard to neutralize criticism from the print media. Here he used a combination of manipulation and intimidation. By 1935, the famous Roosevelt charm was much less of a guarantee of success, and his press conferences became increasingly orchestrated. Like Trump, he singled out some reporters who wanted to ask questions and ignored others. Writing for The Washington Post in 1938, Harlan Miller commented that Roosevelt only answered questions which enabled him to “utter an oral editorial. He selects only those on which he can ring the bell.”
He also gave special access to pro-administration outlets, such as J. David Stern’s Philadelphia Record and Marshall Field’s Chicago Sun. Another Field publication, PM, was probably the closest facsimile to a New Deal Breitbart. In both editorials and news reports, PM repeatedly demonized FDR’s enemies, often comparing them to fascists. These proNew Deal outlets had a special entrée to top administration officials, who gave them valuable scoops. The collaboration went both ways. In 1942, Field brought an antitrust complaint against the much less Roosevelt-friendly Associated Press...
(more at the link)
Lol
It is interesting to look at the culture before and after women got the vote.
I see what you are doing there.
Single mother welfare queens encourage their 13 year okd daughters to get pregnant to keep the money checks coming.
I would bet some would abort the male child if possible.
Women have a lock on social decline.
Well, that’s the last thing they needed is for women to have a stronger voice with their pink hats and irrational rage. What they need to do is to burn Hollywood to the ground and start over in a Red State that still has morality and family values.
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