Posted on 12/28/2018 7:54:50 PM PST by Drew68
Edited on 12/29/2018 12:16:02 AM PST by Jim Robinson. [history]
NEW YORK (AP)
(Excerpt) Read more at apnews.com ...
FMCDH(BITS)
The elites are leftists and leftists command the forces of death. The marginalization and polarization is happening now.
THE EIGHT STAGES OF GENOCIDE ARE
CLASSIFICATION,
SYMBOLIZATION,
DEHUMANIZATION,
ORGANIZATION,
POLARIZATION,
PREPARATION,
EXTERMINATION,
AND DENIAL.
Stages of Genocide. Seems we are entering into the polarization phase.
These stages use Alinksys Rules for Radicals to further the agenda.
I rewatched die hard over Xmas and was pleased to see Bruce Willis smoking in the airport.
Exactly. This is all part of a very bad trend that doesnt bode well for the future.
That’s what she said.
I never miss “Best Days of Our Lives” when TCM runs this old jewel.
She's really troubled by it, and the fact that these movies remain popular.
Here's the article Molly Ringwald wrote for New Yorker. It's worth the read.
What About The Breakfast Club? Revisiting the movies of my youth in the age of #MeToo.
To your point about the Khmer Rouge, that is exactly the plan liberals have for us, if they ever truly get power and get us disarmed ("good luck" with that attempt, since so many of us know the history of repressive regimes).
My DVD collection is ME-TV on steroids.
It’s much “easier” to go “forward” when all memories of the past are erradicated.
Those archive materials.
Those works by dead white males.
Those who remember details.
I think that that might be banned because an Authority figure( Ray Walston) literally eats Sean Penn’s lunch. We can’t have anyone out smarting the announced one.
“Don’t Think I’ve Forgotten: Cambodia’s Lost Rock and Roll” [Official Documentary Trailer]
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ipq4FefX5Ps
https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/dont_think_ive_forgotten_cambodias_lost_rock_and_roll_2014
TOMATOMETER
100%
All Critics
Average Rating: 7.7/10
Reviews Counted: 19
Fresh: 19
Rotten: 0
AUDIENCE SCORE
84%
liked it
Average Rating: 4.2/5
User Ratings: 173
the KR insurgency gained power and eventually took over. No more rock ‘n’ roll, no more anything. By some estimates as many as three million Cambodians were killed by their own countrymen, a quarter of the country’s population.
Cities were emptied out, “bourgeois” citizens were eliminated (including teachers, writers, or anyone who so much as wore glasses), and the entire country was forced into farm labor in an effort to stamp out “corrupt” influences. Pop records were burned; the KR instead elevated rural folk songs. Former popsters who managed to live through the terror still have a shocked expression on their faces today. As they tell their stories, the film’s music and montage combine for a strong emotional effect, reflecting the guilty sadness of those who lived.
the 1968 radicals in America never stopped.
They pushed this crap in the 70s, 80s, 90s, 2000s, and still in the 2010s.
There was push back in the 70s, 80s, 90s, and started waning in the 2000s.
Academia, institutions of history (art, science, and history), and media are overrun by this group think.
Kaywin Feldman Becomes the First Woman to Direct the National Gallery of Art (social justice in DC)artnet ^ | December 11, 2018 | Eileen Kinsell
http://freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/3714064/posts
Feldman will have to contend with the politics of leading an institution in DC that is largely federally funded. In an essay for Apollo magazine published earlier this year, she wrote: “Art museums are intensely political organizationspolitical with a small p. Art is political because it is an expression of lived human experience; identity, love, sex, religion, death, home, happiness, and trauma have always been subjects for artists. A concerned trustee at the Minneapolis Institute of Art, where I am the director, recently asked me if we would ever be the focus of protest. I assured him that we would, and urged him to walk around the galleries if he wanted to find offense. We have it all on our walls: imperialism, colonialism, war, oppression, discrimination, slavery, misogyny, rape, and more.”
In a statement provided by the NGA, Feldman said the museum is arguably Americas greatest treasure. To be chosen to lead it into its next decades is a profound honor. As I prepare to take on the responsibility for this magnificent institution, I want to express my gratitude to the trustees for putting their faith in me, and to Rusty Powell for the example of his years of enlightened stewardship. I am eager to work with the talented team at the Gallery in taking the institution to even greater heights.
>>... especially when attending church
What is this “church” you speak of?
Red Nightmare (Jack Webb/1962)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bHv-83x58B8
I’d love to be a college professor who could lock up about 150 of todays SJWs and make them watch Blazing Saddles.
“We need a cleanup in room 307 due to exploding heads.”
and watch “Airplane” the movie
What else were former slaves going to do? Tending crops was all they knew how to do. Later generations of blacks would head north to work in the factories, but in the years immediately after the Civil War, white people would not tolerate the competition.
If you hated your former master and his family so much then why would so many freedmen take the last name of their former owner?
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