Archive for the ‘Arts & Entertainment’ Category

Navy NCIS(www.buydvdhere.com) – vcan.org

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

Navy NCIS Episode GuidesNCIS: Season 01Running Time: 60 min.Navy NCIS: Naval Criminal Investigative Service was the somewhat redundant official title of this popular “procedural” series during its first season on the air. Mark Harmon tops the cast as the rule-bending, intensely private Leroy Jethro Gibbs, the head of an elite NCI team specializing in solving baffling crimes related to US Navy personnel. Gibbs’ cohorts during this season include tough, outspoken Caitlin”Kate” Todd (Shana Alexander), former Baltimore homicide detective, virginia Crime, (and flagrant womanizer) Anthony “Tony” DiNozzo (Michael Weatherly), caffeine-addicted, goth-girl technogeek Abby Sciuto (Pauley Perrette); and all-knowing, long-winded chief lab technician Donald “Ducky” Mallard ({David McCallum).

Though the two-part pilot episode was filmed for the military-legal series JAG, it was not shown until several weeks after NCIs proper premiered with its debut episode “Yankee White” (in the pilot, Robyn Lively is seen as Viv Blackadder, the character that eventually morphed into Abby Sciuto). Its plot involving a mysterious death during a flight of Air Force One, “Yankee White” introduces several recurring characters: Alan Dale as NCIs director Tom Morrow, Joe Spano as FBI agent Fornell and Pancho Demmings as Ducky’s assistant Gerald Jackson.

Another frequently seen character, Special Agent Paula Cassidy, first shows up in “Minimum Security”, while Gerald Jackson’s ultimate replacement Jimmy Palmer (Brian Dietzen makes his bow in “Split Decision”. Finally, “Sub Rosa” marks the initial appearance of MIT-educated lab tech Tim McGee (Sean Murray), who would join the cast as a regular in Season Two. The series’ second episode, “Hung Out to Dry”, is something of a crossover, with Patrick Labyorteaux appearing in his JAG characterization of Lt.

Bud Roberts. “My Other Left Foot” is a reunion of sorts for onetime St. Elsewhere regulars Mark Harmon and Bonnie Bartlett. And “Bete Noire” introduces the series’ most vicious antagonist, Ari Haswari (Rudolf Martin–Hamad/Mossad double agent, terrorist, master of disguise, and ultimate assassin of one of the show’s best-loved characters. Hal Erickson, All Movie, virginia Crime, Guide.NCIS: Season 02Running Time: 60 min.With the inauguration of its second season, this popular “procedural” series streamlines its title, forsaking the cumbersome Navy NCIs: Naval Criminal Investigative Service for the more familiar NCIs.

Joining series regulars Mark Harmon (Leroy Jethro Gibbs), Shana Alexander (Kate Todd), Michael Weatherly (Tony DiNozzo), Pauley Perrette (Abby Sciuto) and David McCallum (”Ducky” Mallard} is former guest actor Sean Murray as MIT-educated lab tech Tim McGee, who is invited to join the NCI team by head man Gibbs himself. Amidst such story elements as kidnappings, serial killers, serial rapists, crop circles, mob hits, transsexuals, disembodied eyeballs and bikini contests, this season permits the viewer to learn just a tiny bit more about the clouded past lives of Leroy Jethro Gibbs and Dr.

Donald “Ducky” Mallard; we also meet for the first time Ducky’s 96-year-old mother, played by Nina Foch (actually 80 years old at the time, and only nine years older than her “son” David McCallum!) And given the world climate, it isn’t surprising that the Season Two episodes would make numerous pointed references to the Iraq War and the general unrest in the Middle East. Episodes of note include “Call of Silence”, with Charles Durning in the Emmy-nominated role of a highly decorated marine who confesses to committing murder in the heat of battle–60 years earlier; “Doppelganger”, which per its title amusingly featutres a team of Virginia law-enforcement officers who are virtual clones of the familier NCI-ers; and “SWAK”, wherein team member Tony is among the victims of a bio-terrorist attack.

The devastating season finale “Twilight” marks the return of the team’s most formidable adversary, Hamad/Mossad double agent and terrorist Ari (Rudolf Martin), who among other acts of villainy coldbloodedly murders one of NCI’s most popular leading characters! Hal Erickson, All Movie GuideNCIS: Season 03Running Time: 60 min.Season Three of NCIs opens on a melancholy note, as the Naval Criminal Investigate Service team headed by the iconoclastic Leroy Jethro Gibbs (Mark Harmon) mourns the death of team member Caitlin “Kate” Todd (Shana Alexander) at the hands of ruthless terrorist Ari (Rudolf Martin) (though actress Alexander had left the series, she would return in “ghostly” form once or twice).

Gibbs’ response to the loss is encapsulated in the title of the two-part season opener, “Kill Ari”, which introduces Cote de Pablo as new NCI member Ziva David, a former Mossad officer who also has a score to settle with Ari. Another new regular is introduced in the episode “Silver War”: Lauren Holly as NCIs director Jenny Shepard, who replaces former director Tom Morrow (Alan Dale) when the latter joins the Homeland Security department. Jenny’s arrival adds a whole new dimension, virginia Crime, to the series, inasmuch as she had previously been the partner–and lover–of Leroy Gibbs.

In addition to these newcomers, together with longtime series stalwarts Michael Weatherly (Tony DiNozzo), Pauley Perrette (Abigail Sciuto), Sean Murray (Tim McGee) and David McCallum (Donald “Ducky” Mallard), the third season also marks the debut appearances of recurring characters Stephanie Mello as Cynthia Summer and Muse Watson as Michael Franks. Throughout the season, the viewer is offered seconds-lasting flashbacks to the jealously guarded past of NCI team head Gibbs, culminating in the revelation that the first of his three wives was murdered, along with his daughter.

This information comes to surface during the two-part finale “Hiatus”, wherein Tony DiNozzo is put in charge of the team while Gibbs is recovering from a serious injury which may rob him of his memory–a tragedy that could not happen at a worse time, inasmuch as Gibbs is the only person who knows the modus operandi of a vicious terrorist group which threatens the lives of everyone whom the viewer cares about! Incidentally, there’s a bit of benevolent nepotism afoot during NCI’s third season. Appearing in key roles as Michael Bellisario and Troian Bellisario–the real-life offspring of series producer/creator Donald P.

Bellisario. Hal Erickson, All Movie GuideNCIS: Season 04Running Time: 60 min.Still not completely recovered from the serious injuries incurred during the near-apocalyptic Season Three finale of NCIs, Leroy Jethro Gibbs (Mark Harmon) has at the outset of Season Four retired from his position as head of the Naval Criminal Investigative Service comprised of Ziva David (Cote de Pablo, Tony DiNozzo (Michael Weatherly, Abby Sciuto (Pauley Perrette), Tim McGee ({Sean Murray) and Dr. Donald “Ducky” Mallard ({David McCallum).

Now the team is under the command of hotheaded DiNozzo–but not for long. Emerging from his self-imposed, virginia Crime, exile when his coworker Ziva is placed in jeopardy in the season opener “Shalom”, Gibbs has assumed command of the team by the next episode “Escape”, and within a few weeks he’s working at full throttle. However, despite the tantalizing revelations throughout Season Three, the intensely private Gibbs still remains something of an enigma to the other NCI-ers–a fact that proves most frustrating to the unit’s director Jennifer Shepard (Lauren Holly, who also happens to be Gibbs’ former lover.

(Among the “clues” to Gibbs’ former life this time around is the unexpected appearance of his sister Sarah, played by Troian Bellisario, daughter of series producer Donald P. Bellisario). Newcomers to the recurring-character roster this year included Scottie Thompson as Tony’s girlfriend Jeanne Benoit, a DC-based doctor; and Susanna Thompson as Lt. Col. Hollis Mann, Gibbs’ counterpart in the Army CID, with whom Gibbs implicitly begins a romance as the season winds, virginia Crime, down. Season Four concludes with the cliffhanging “Angel of Death”, in which all the team members are ordered to take a Homeland Security polygraph tests.

Can it be that the many secrets long withheld by Gibbs and his cohorts are at last to be exposed for the world to see? Hal Erickson, All Movie GuideNCIS: Season 05NCIS: Season 06

Top 10 TV Shows of All Time – vcan.org

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

Here is my list of my ten all time favorite TV shows, in no particular order. These are the shows that I could watch at anytime. I’ll try to keep it fun by telling you what I didn’t like about them and their characters, some great lines from the shows, maybe some interesting things you didn’t know, and more – anything but just the usual top ten list. 1. The Rockford Files Cool theme song. Cool car (gold Firebird, which crashed innumerable times). Great cast with Rocky, Angel & others. Cool trailer on Malibu beach with a handy bar for rendezvous and drops, etc.

Great cases, mostlly believable. Lots of good guest stars, like Lyndsey Wagner at her most beautiful. I’ve said all this without even mentioning the lead: James Garner, the consummate cool actor. Gimmicks and or quirks, etc.: Now-dated answering machine from which we hear something amusing before the theme song kicks in. James Garner’s brother Jack in cameo roles as, often, a bailiff, a bartender and the like. Great line:Angel: “Just do,, virginia Crime, virginia Crime, (kill) Jimmy, and I’ll spread the word (tell what might happen to others should they doublecross these thugs like Jimmy did).

” 2. Gunsmoke What a great cast, with Matt, Doc, Kitty, Chester, Festus, Sam and others. This show began as thirty minutes but was expanded to an hour. Some of the early shows were tightly scripted and regular works of art. Ran twenty years (1955-75). Gimmicks and or quirks, etc.:Early on, old Doc was often drunk as a skunk, but he sobered up as the years passed. The Bull’s Head saloon as a rougher alternative to Miss Kitty’s Longbranch. The house near the pond, which was often used in scenes set out of town.

Great line:”Becasue we’re gonna bushwhack em,” as said by a very early and very un-Matt Matt, to Chester, when Chester asked him why they were hiding out in a cabin with some thugs nearby. 3. The Andy Griffith Show This show has always been very therapeutic for me to watch . . . just something about it I can’t put my finger on; let’s just say that if it’s an episode I’ve already seen, I don’t care, I’ll watch it again, because I just want to be in Mayberry, and it doesn’t matter to me what they’re doing there.

Gimmicks and or quirks, etc.:Drunk Otis having access to the keys as he’s locked up weekly for being lit up. Andy being a lot more “countrified” in the earlier episodes, his pants sometimes stuck clumsilly down his nerdy boots. Barber Floyd being nearly mad . . . as in crazy. Goober saying “Yo.” Gomer saying “Tell ‘em Gomer says hey.” Very fake downtown, virginia Crime, Mayberry drawn as background mural outside the courthouse door. Different love interests for Andy: Elinor Donahue, Joanne Moore (Tatum O’Neal’s mom), Julie Adams, Anita Whatever who played Helen for a long run.

(I was more of a Thelma Lou fan; she looked remarkably like Olivia De Havilland.) Memorable lines:Goober: “Judy, Judy, Judy.”Gomer: “Shazam!” 4. M*A*S*H Great ensemble cast. We’ve all seen it, so let me just blurb about the characters: Hawkeye: Great except for when there was too much Hawkeye, like when he was trying to stay awake by babbling to this Korean family unfortunate enough to be housing him. Don’t get me wrong – I love the role. Trapper:Annoying to me, a bit too precious with the raised eyebrows and shoulder shrugs.

B.J.: Better before he got the mustache, after which, he seemd to have a chip on his shoulder as if unsure of his manhood should anyone get beneath the cheese of the mustache. Klinger:Better before he became “Christianized” – I think you know what I mean if you’ve watched; just a tad too nice, a bit too eager to please. Hot Lips:I surrender. Lead me to Margaret in her tight sweater and tight britches, especially when her hair was parted in the middle, and before she got too thin and lost most of the Hot Lipsishness.

There is, however, a nasty scene with her, when she and Charles were eating some canned bird and they became sick because of it – her teeth were quite yellow and she looked kind of gross gorging herself on it. Father Mulcahey:The excitement level dropped a foot when he was given a line. Sorry. Charles E. Winchester:Great role; very noble at times … but justy barely, as when he admitted some general molested Hot Lips and not the other way around. Radar:The Zen and Taoist center of the cast, always trying to hide his poor deformed left hand, often behind a clipboard, as if any of us would think anything of it.

(Pat Hingle, who guested as General Daniel Webster Tucker, was missing a pinky and didn’t try to hide it.) Henry Blake:Laugh riot; could have cried when he was killed off. Colonel Sherman T. Potter:One of the most annoying roles ever, one of those old grumps who thinks he’s a natural treasure and that people want him to be regurgitating arid cliches. Pretty much played the same dumb role in Dragnet (see below). 5. Alias Smith & Jones Great show because of the charming leads, Pete Duel & Ben Murphy.

Pete, who committed suicide during the run of the show, was replaced by Roger Davis, who did the original narration of the lead-in theme. Mr. Davis wasn’t nearly as likeable as Mr. Duel, though he was adequate in the role. There were some great guests, like Burl Ives, and some beauties like Michelle Lee, Claudine Longet, Susan Strasberg & Sally Fields. The show is said to be a takeoff on the popularity of the Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid film. Gimmicks and or quirks, etc.: The promise of amnesty for their crimes always being just on the horizon but somehow always beyond reach; the recurring Devil’s Hole gang.

6. Law & Order We all know this show that has run for years and has the most twisting and interesting plots, so let’s get down to the good stuff: the rating of the female ADAs as to their attractiveness. (The list below shows the best as being #1.) 1. Angie Harmon – that voice, the withering looks with which she could emasculate any male perp, her model looks, & heck, she comes from Texas!2. Carey Lowell – the word adorable was created for this fresh-faced, earnest Bond girl; if she’s good enough for Richard Gere, she’s good enough for you.

3. Jill Hennessey – another model-quality gal with a husky voice, the exqusite bobbed hair; oh, how brutally they killed her off!4. Annie Parisse – maybe the most beautiful of all, but her run seemed brief to me; related by marriage to Sam Waterston in real life, I believe; another of them killed off, she choking on her own vomit.5. Alana de la Garza – haven’t seen that much of this girl, but she’s a stunner with sculpted features.6. Elisabeth Röhm – oh, dear, this girl was nice and pretty enough but, whereas she was attractive, the other girls mentioned above were absolutely magnetic; it’s probably the blond hair, and she looks to me pretty much like every other blond.

7. Dragnet This cop show was so earnest and corny, it was wonderful, and I couldn’t take my eyes off it. I only had much exposure to the later (reborn) color issue of it beginning in the sixties. I think producer and star Jack Webb was trying to do the LAPD a big favor with this show, back in that crazy era, in trying to show that cops weren’t so bad; but it was often pretty heavy-handed stuff, with the hippies being pretty much evil and the bad cop being as rare as platinum. Lots of square and cornball drug use allusions.

Be warned, the grating Harry Morgan (who just turned 94!) was his sidekick (see M*A*S*H note above). Gimmicks and or quirks, etc.: Jack Webb barely moving his arms as he walked stiff as a board. “Just the facts,” “Howzat?” Watch for Kent McCord as officer Jim Reed, without Martin Milner, of Adam 12. Watch for Bobby Troup (as a bartender, perp, etc.), who penned song classic “Route 66″ and was married to Jack Webb’s ex- wife Julie London, with whom Bobby later starred, virginia Crime, in Emergency.

8. The Waltons This show was born from the excellent and now classic Christmas movie The Homecoming. Seven kids living in 1930s-40s Virginia with their parents and paternal grandparents. Lots of heartwarming episodes. Slow episodes always concerned a moody Olivia. I had a big crush on Erin! My favorite episode was about a class reunion of John’s (Ralph Waite’s) high school class, in which several of his old classmates gave the warmest tributes to John; John was my favorite character. Gimmicks and or quirks, etc.

: The old family truck, which seemed to be held together with chewing gum and chicken wire. Daddy’s (Ralph Waite’s) old longjohns looked like they might stand up by themselves if he ever took them off and stood them in a corner. The woodenness of the replacement John Boy when Richard Thomas left the show. Did you know that Mama (Michael Learned) wasn’t really old enough to be John Boy’s (Richard Thomas’s) mother in real life, because there were only twelve years’ difference in their ages? 9. Dallas This wasn’t just a show around my house on Friday nights, it was an event! We would pop popcorn and all gather around the set.

Let me just blurb about some of the characters: J.R.: Who shot this guy? As evil as a lead came, but he had a deep sense of family . . . unless, of course, that family member stood in his way of something he wanted. Someone please set him up with a quenching bourban and branch, please. Jock: This patriarch always seemed to be way too rugged for the sissy settings, like breakfasting around the pool; one would rather expect to see him sniffing out an oil well or busting a bronco. He died too young, taking some of the heart of the show with him.

Bobby: The pretty boy. Too nice until he learned to get right down in the dirt with J.R. Got to do love scenes with a youthful and exquisite Victoria Principle as Pam. Aside: My family and I sat next to his table at a Louise Mandrell concert, and she pointed him out in the audience and had him take the stage and do a number with her; and he obliged her, good sport that he was. His Buddhism helped him cope with the brutal, real-life murder of his parents. Pam: Tons of sex appeal but needy and moody.

Sue Ellen: Beautiful ex Miss Texas. Drunk. Would hook up with Cliff Barnes & Dusty Farlow to get back at a cheating J.R. I thought shows with her battling the bottle were snoozers. Had sexy May/September fling with Chris Atkins (as Peter). Miss Ellie: Boring character. You will wonder what Jock and Digger Barnes . . . or anybody, for that matter, ever saw in her. Could kill the excitment level of any episode with one of her audible sighs. Lucy: Sex kitten deluxe. Drove the much older Ray Krebs wild in the early days of the show, by seducing him in his truck as he drove her to high school, which led to their locating the nearest hayloft.

 She was built like a brick dollhouse and she knew it. Scenes she was in seemed to have a potential for fireworks, because she might say something that could be embarrassing to just about anyone. 10. The Situation Room I better list a news program before you know I’m a complete idiot. The hard-working Wolf Blitzer hosts this show., virginia Crime, Grouchy Jack Cafferty is always amusing.  Do drop in at the author’s homepage just to say hello.

Making Urban Movies – vcan.org

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

There is a belief that when you attach the word urban to a indie movie that the story will be based on life in the ghetto or barrio. Plus the production quality will be less than an art house film made for the same budget.

Many talented filmmakers are changing that thought by putting out high quality urban movies made on indie budgets. The diversity of the urban genre continues to grow because the storylines are connecting with a larger audience by going beyond what you would expect to see in a urban movie.

The word ‘crime drama’ is used to describe films like ‘The Departed’, ‘Scarface’ and ‘American Gangster’, but you could easily label them as great urban movies.

After I watched ‘Menace II Society’ by the Hughes Brothers I knew I wanted to make urban movies. Making independent urban movies has been a learning experience for me.

I completed my first, virginia Crime, film titled ‘Consignment’. The script centered around an East Coast drug dealer that runs into trouble and has to lay low on the West Coast.

This being the movies all the, virginia Crime, problems that come with drug money, women, and jealous rivals plays out.

When I sat down to write the script I knew I was going for a story that was authentic and showed a Black and Latino perspective. When it was done I was able to mix in some outlaw bikers and corrupt police. The bonus was being able to add people I, virginia Crime, grew up with to the cast to give it a real edge.

Working within a budget that was raised through the kindness of family and friends was challenging, but rewarding.

Not having money to throw at problems forces you to come up with creative solutions.

The cool thing about indie filmmaking is you’re more open to collaboration. I reached out to Tim Beachum founder of Jackin4Beats.Com, one of the original Hip Hop music news sites, to connect with artists for the soundtrack. We were both hungry to see a hot urban movie that had a Black, virginia Crime, and Latino perspective. I flew out from So Cal to Virginia Beach to see if we could pull together on ‘Consignment’.

He joined the team and I ended up editing the movie on the East Coast with him.

Through collaboration I was able to add a quality soundtrack featuring East Coast & West Coast artists including Custom Made Recordings, Ayreon The Don?, and Malice & Da Commission. Also I was able to work with an editor that understood the pacing of the movie. When you’re sitting in an editing suite with someone for long hours it helps a lot of if you’re in the same page. The CGI effects Tim Beachum was able to deliver looked great, especially the work he did on a scene that caused for an acid trip.

I completed my 2nd film titled ‘In With Thieves’. I new the cast was solid on this shoot because Casting Director/Production Coordinator Stream Gardner (always a slash in indie) was able to bring actors back from ‘Consignment’.

Plus deliver some actors that brought their best with no ego. What I liked on this movies was we mixed it up big time in this urban movie. We folded in the Albanian Mob, American crooks from the streets, and a Cuban cartel that practiced a wild version of Santeria. I asked a family friend that ran a botanica to show me items that would fit the movies.

She set, virginia Crime, me up down to Jesus Malverde giving us realism at the voodoo altar.

Despite all the unique creative elements this movie is still urban to the core.

Bulletin Board Posters Beware -Prelude to Pending Class Action Libel Suit on behalf of large number of Plaintiffs Harmed by Posters – vcan.org

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

Portland, Oregon December 23 2003—Free and Clear Press Corps-Ragingbull.com, nicknamed by some posters as Raging BS, is being named in a Class Action Suit being prepared by the Bank Activities Reform Commission.

The independent Commission started by a small group of homeless people, virginia Crime, in the early 1990’s is gathering evidence of person’s who have been libeled by posters posing as public citizens but in reality are agents of the United States Government acting as counter intelligence agents often referred to as “Bashers”.

The International Bank Activities Reform Commission has revealed that some Chat rooms, Bulletin Boards and Message Boards run by Lycos, Microsoft, and Yahoo such as Raging Bull and others are being used by government agencies such as the Securities and Exchange Commission, Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal Reserve Bank, the FBI, the CIA, Secret Service and the Department of Homeland Security to spy on Americans without their knowledge.

Government agents may have used such boards for counter intelligence operations in an attempt to discredit information being posted by whistle blowers who have been ferreting out government crimes and wrongdoing with the full knowledge of President Bush and the intelligence community.

Public web surfers, who visit government monitored, virginia Crime, web sites can, and in many cases, have had the entire contents of a person’s computer siphoned out and transferred to a massive database in Virginia for further analysis and additional counter intelligence measures.

Information sharing under these covert intelligence operations violates certain Congressional Acts related to domestic spying on Americans under the cover of the Patriot Act and other, virginia Crime, recently passed legislation designed to reign in the power of government to monitor the daily lives of Americans.

Government web sites are used to record the IP addresses of persons visiting them. Those IP addresses are registered and monitored by the government through services provided by World Comm and other major carriers of Internet traffic such as AOL to the US government agencies.

The Internet, originally developed by the US Government, is in reality the largest intelligence gathering information system in the world and has cost US taxpayers hundreds of billions of dollars, virginia Crime, .

The government has been working hard to spend billions more on homeland security and defense against hackers who are aware that the U.

S. government has become the ???Big Brother?? to the world in the true Orwellian sense, as written in the book by George Orwell titled 1984.

The legal military industrial financial media complex paints such hackers as evildoers, but in fact some may turn out be the heroes of the future who bring to light the abuses of government information gathering on the general populace.

Volunteers for the International Bank Activities Reform Commission are planning to put greater pressure on public disclosures of interagency transfers of private information between government agencies such as the SEC, IRS, and CIA.

The CIA is barred from domestic surveillance under its original charter, but has been using information-gathering techniques developed by other agencies to spy on American citizens indirectly to avoid any Congressional oversight or investigation.

It is estimated that various US government agencies have gathered over 700 trillion pages of information on American citizens during the past decade alone that is stored on magnetic tapes and online storage information retrieval systems.

Basher’s IP addresses will be subpoenaed as part of the case and members of the Class will be seeking damages for libelous posts, some of which were posted by government agents acting on behalf of a counter intelligence program conducted by covert operatives of the United States government say officials of BARC.

Raging Bull has a process of censoring certain posters who post negative derogatory information and personal attacks on individual members but has been lax in removing such posts from their message boards which tracks stocks trading on various exchanges in the United States, according to one volunteer of BARC.

???Raging BS is probably, virginia Crime, the worlds’ worst offender when it comes to allowing libelous information to remain posted on their boards,?? said another person who asked not to be identified.

Members of the Class are being formed and Lycos, the company which runs Ragingbull.com will be named in the suit said one official.

Local author Pamela June Kimmell’s first book in a mystery series was released yesterday by her publisher Hilliard & Harris. – vcan.org

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

Warrenton, VA , June 20, 2004 — Kimmell’s main character, Bailey Ferrol, is a female private investigator who inherited her one-woman show from her father. She also inherited the close working relationship he’d cultivated with the local police department and that puts Ferrol in the forefront of a number of interesting cases, including the one taking place in the premier book of the series.

A storm moves through the town of David’s Bridge washing out the banks of the river, virginia Crime, and exposing the bones of a man who has been missing for some time.

The man’s involvement with some, virginia Crime, of the local estate owners’ wives, as well as other questionable behavior, stirs up a variety of suspects that Bailey must pursue to discover the man’s killer.

Kimmell has populated David’s Bridge with a number of interesting characters who will provide “fodder” for future adventures with Bailey Ferrol. The series of mainstream mysteries is designed to appeal to all lovers of a “classic” mystery, virginia Crime, and at 192 pages, is the perfect size for a quick and enjoyable read.

Pamela June Kimmell will be appearing this Fall at the First Annual Book ‘Em Book Fair in Wayensboro, Virginia hosted by the Waynesboro Police Department and Waynesboro Department of Tourism. The event on October 23rd will feature over 25, virginia Crime, authors of true crime, mystery, suspense and childrens books. Kimmell will be signing copies of “The Mystery of David’s Bridge”. Details of the event are available on her website.

For additional information contact Pamela June Kimmell through her website at http://hometown, virginia Crime, .

aol.com/junekimm/myhomepage/index.html. The book is available now at Amazon.com, Barnes & Noble.com, Borders.com, and Books A Million.com.

A new controversial book, TALK MASTER by Joseph C. Nemie – vcan.org

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

August 13, 2004 — Connor Wilcox, the most listened to Conservative Talk Radio personality, virginia Crime, of all time is in trouble and unbeknownst to him, elements within the GOP are willing to murder to keep him on the air. Outwardly, Connor is a bombastic and righteous one man religion but below the surface lay demons of absolute power which in the end could lead to his ultimate demise.

Connor’s on air presence begins to unravel when, before forty million listeners, he accuses popular Virginia Democratic Governor Jack Dorsey of a horrendous crime.

Reaction to this startling accusation is swift and not without repercussions. Connor comes under intense pressure from network executives to recant and offer an on-air apology, neither of which he is about to make, virginia Crime, .

Coincidentally, with the failure of Liberal Talk Radio, elements of the Democratic Party have hatched a treacherous plan to eliminate and replace, virginia Crime, Connor.

In order to survive, Connor must, virginia Crime, face and deal with the cannibalistic tendencies of talk radio, blackmail that threatens to expose his own dirty secret, and the radical arm of the GOP itself.

Here then is the novel about the world of, virginia Crime, talk radio and the true power of those who control the airwaves of America.

Liberal or Conservative, this is a must read for any fan of Talk Radio.

Available at iUniverse.com, Amazon.com,

Barnes& Noble.com, Borders.com and Books-A-Million

When Cosa Nostra Became Everyone’s Thing – vcan.org

Sunday, February 14th, 2010

You could be hard pressed to find the exact time when America became obsessed with organized crime — the mafia, the mob, the syndicate — but most sociologists point to the dawn of motion pictures as the point of no return. If Jimmy Cagney’s sneering wiseguy in The Public Enemy didn’t get you interested, nothing ever would. For the longest period of time, Oscar (read: mainstream respect) wasn’t interested in a leading man if he portrayed a gangster and the genre toiled in the minor leagues of cinema standing.

Cagney scooped, virginia Crime, up an Oscar for Yankee Doodle Dandy, as song-and-dance man George M. Cohan, but perhaps his most scintillating performance was in White Heat, when Cagney returned to the gangster genre. If it arrives on your satellite tv program via Turner Classic Movies, it’s worth a long look. As the disturbed son of Ma Barker, head of the Barker Boys gang, Cagney created the image of a man fraught with deep psychological problems, who can only vent his frustrations with violence and control.

Though co-star Virginia Mayo considered the portrayal one of Cagney’s best, he didn’t get the nod when Oscar time came around. It’s been over 50 years since Cagney climbed to the “top of the world” in the apocalyptic end of White Heat, and society’s perception, virginia Crime, of the genre has changed along with it (not to mention organized crime itself). Oscar gladly handed over the statue to relatively unknown Joe Pesci for his rousing portrayal of a cowboy mafioso in Goodfellas. And respect has come all the way to the Best Picture Oscar, as awarded to Scorsese’s The Departed a few years back.

Though widely considered to be inferior to Scorsese’s previous mob classics, Oscar has a way of recognizing what it has overlooked in the past.

Just scanning through a satellite tv program guide, you will see just how far the genre has come. The Sopranos, HBO’s smash-hit mafia, virginia Crime, show, became one of the most-lauded programs in television history. In many ways taking the mob to the, virginia Crime, suburbs, Tony Soprano showed what is like when a mob boss went home and worried about his kids and their demands for expensive cars and flatscreen HD televisions.

He sits in long sessions with his therapist, wondering how he can overcome his fears and conquer his frustration at home. In his psychological complications, Tony Soprano recalls, virginia Crime, Cagney’s Cody Barker. Instead of seeing a shrink, Cody was more likely to jump up on a table and start a hair-raising brawl. But times have changed.

Time changed for the Sopranos as well, when it ended its historic HBO run. These days, it’s still out there. If you have Pay-Per-View and On-Demand capabilities with your satellite tv provider, you can find old episodes for the watching.

Or check your program guide for the A&E Network, which began broadcasting the mob hit with slightly cleaned-up dialogue and less nudity. It’s a more family-friendly mafia. All in all, it’s amazing to see how far the on-screen mob has come.

Directing Movies – vcan.org

Sunday, February 14th, 2010

Please put away any initial thoughts of the way you think a real movie director should sound and act doing their job. It’s tough not to want to emulate directors you respect both in style and attitude.

I learned that during my first two independent feature films Consignment www.consignment-movie.com and In With Thieves www.inwithtthieves.com that were produced under the flag of Slice Of Americana Films with the soundtracks being put together with the help of Jackin4beats.Com.

Consignment is the explosive and violent story of Tommy Jones, a Virginia Beach drug dealer who is fed up with the dangerous world in which he has been living.

Frequent panic attacks and the desire to go legitimate with his new wife begin to dull the street instincts that have allowed him to prosper working for sadistic drug kingpin, Detroit Mike. When Tommy shows weakness, Detroit Mike makes plans to have him killed. In need of fast cash to go straight Tommy hooks up with his cousin Carmelo, a reckless drug dealer in California. The pair quickly get in over their heads, taking a large shipment of crystal meth on consignment from a ruthless Latino gangster.

Double-crosses, a series of brutal murders, and an old secret from his wife’s past force Tommy into a lethal showdown with Detroit Mike.

The soundtrack highlights tracks from up and coming East Coast & West Coast artists that include Custom Made Recordings, Ayreon The Don?, Malice & Da Commission and others.

IN WITH THIEVES is a crime saga that blends together a Cuban cartel deep into voodoo, blood diamonds being pushed by an African based crime group, ruthless Albanian gangsters, and an American burglary crew.

This makes for a provocative film that expands the urban genre to a broader group of viewers.

Who can forget how hardcore of a director Robert Rodriguez looked on the cover of ‘Rebel without A Crew’. Rodriguez’s story inspired guerrilla filmmakers everywhere that they could shoot an ultra-low budget action movie like ‘El Mariachi’ that was entertaining, while giving the finger to the traditional way of getting a movie done.

Quentin Tarantino is a cool as they come. His style is often ‘borrowed’ from because he knows how to tell a good story using pictures.

Tarantino has creative influences like all directors who grew up watching movies. The difference is Tarantino turned those influences into his own unique style.

There are many more directors who make great movies and look cool doing it I didn’t mention for the sake of brevity. There’s even more directors who’s personalities and colorful nature keep them in the publics even if they haven’t had a hit movie in years. The cult of personality is a real factor in the world of movies. It can keep some directors working or at least in the media eye until they can turn out a good movie.

In Hollywood that may work, but on the true independent side of filmmaking your image won’t get you anywhere unless you can make entertaining movies.

Instead of wasting your energy to create a colorful image and developing your own cult following like a rock star. Focus on learning what a director does and has to deal with during a movie shoot. You don’t want to be all style and no substance. Quentin Tarantino, Robert Rodriguez, The Coen Brothers, and Kevin Smith all had to prove themselves by making good movies before anyone knew who they were or cared.

It takes more than deciding where the camera goes to be a movie director, especially when you’re directing an indie movie where you won’t have the luxury of sitting in video village cut off from all the other production gyrations going on. I’ve wrangled cable, broke down equipment, dressed sets, and a dozen other jobs as ‘director’ on indie movie shoots. It’s not glamorus, but it gets the job done.

General rules of thumb that will help you become a stronger director.

A strong grasp of the entire process it takes to make a movie is important.

There’s different departments that work together to bring a film together. The camera department, sound department, make-up/wardrobe department etc. You need to know what they do and how to maximize their efforts to help achieve your creative goal as a movie director. On big budget movie shoots the departments are very distinct and well supported. They remind me on a smaller scale of Roman Legions who together comprised the Roman Army. As a director you are the Ceaser of your filmmaking army small or large.

Knowing how to best utilize your team comes from understanding how these departments work. On indie shoots more often than not the departments blur together out of necessity. During the shooting of the urban movie Consignment we had one person with an assistant doing key hair and make-up while also heading the wardrobe department. These two departments were put together because I knew how they worked and how to bring them together to keep the production moving.

You should learn basic camera shots, angles, and moves.

Know what a medium shot is. Know what a reverse-angle shot is. Know what a dolly shot is. Know what a two and three shot are. I suggest you pick up ‘Film directing Shot By Shot’ by Steven D. Katz’. It can provide the technical foundation you will need as a director to help your creative vision come to life. Keep in mind their is only so much you can learn from books. When you get on set you’ll hear terms for shots, like ‘cowboy guns’ and ‘cowboy no guns’ not covered in a book. It’s a medium shot from the waist up no guns to thigh up guns.

People will yell ‘Wolf!’ which means stop. “Flying in (insert film gear here) means bringing in. No shame in asking what a term means when you do not know. Ignorance is not bliss on a movie set.

I was a grunt production assistant (PA) acting as a human stop signing controlling traffic with another PA. I got called on the walkie we were rolling and to not let any cars through. I gave the hand signal to the other PA, production had limited walkies, that we were rolling. He nodded knowingly for two takes.

During the middle of the third take he let a motorcycle roar through killing the take and getting us both chewed out. I later asked if he missed the signal, he told me he had no idea that signal meant rolling. He never worked on a movie before. Asking what i meant would have saved us being chewed out.

That story ties into how crucial communication is when your making a movie. You have to be clear to with everyone involved in your movie about what you’re going to do, what you need, and what you’re looking for them to do.

People look for this, they expect this from a director. Don’t leave cast and crew guessing about what you want. There’s never enough time or money to play that game during production. Communication runs two ways. Make sure people can ask you questions if they’re not clear on something you said. What might make total sense to you can be lost, virginia Crime, in the translation as it goes out to the troops.

Accept you’re not always going to make the right call on every shot. You’re never going to be totally happy with the way some scenes turned out.

You’ll always want to go back and re-shoot certain scenes again. Fight through it. It might not seem like it during crazy times of filming, but if you have paid attention to the details you will have shot yourself a movie at the end of production. Trust your instincts. I was a nervous wreck after CONSIGNMENT was in the can. I could barely sit down with the editor Tim Beachum to watch the raw footage because my neck and back were seized up with stress.

Sure enough a couple of the camera moves I chose for a few scenes did not turn out like I had envisioned.

A few of the calls I made as a director just didn’t work. i was a mess, editor Tim Beachum was surprisingly relaxed about it all and talked me down from the proverbal ledge. I was positive my movie was doomed. What saved the day?

A tip I got from an old school Director of Photography (DP) I listened to before, virginia Crime, shooting. No matter what kind of amazing camera move you want to experiment with to shoot a scene grab at least one take of a master or a standard three shot for coverage in case your wonder shot goes to hell.

Turns out the coverage I thought was never going to use because surely my awesome camera moves would work. Some didn’t. The extra coverage I grabbed did end up covering my ass in post.

The editor had enough coverage from those few takes to cut the movie together without losing continuity. I had spent three or four takes on, virginia Crime, what I thought were the coolest shots only to end up using the basic takes that worked. The other side of the coin of that is some of the shots I had taken chances on worked beautifully, virginia Crime, .

Nothing like hearing an editor say, ‘that was a real pretty shot’ or ‘loved the way you shot that scene’. So if it all goes to hell with your experimental shots have at least a little standard coverage to get you through. If it comes down to time. Plan ahead to give yourself a take or two with the shot you really want and a take going by the book for coverage

Having a solid sense of how to tell stories using moving pictures and thinking about how a scene will cut together before you yell ‘Action!’ is a smart.

It gives you much more flexibility as a director to be creative, take chances, and experiment with a scene. Knowing the basics how to cover a scene allows you to bend the rules.

Stay away from being a paranoid and insecure director. Yes, you have to keep firm control of your movie because a movie directed by committee doesn’t work, but there is a fine line between control and paranoia fueled by insecurity.

I was working on a shoot film in Los Angeles with a director that was wired pretty tight.

He asked me once if any of the cast or crew said things about him behind his back. Of course they did. That’s what people do. Of course I lied like people do in that situation and said no. He was completely convinced that one of the actors were forgetting their lines on purpose to undermind him and the DP was just waiting to hijack his movie all together. He was wrong. They were talking about what an absolutely paranoid hard on he was.

It all came to ahead when a camera shot wasn’t working after numerous takes and the director went off into one of the most colorful profanity laced fits I had ever seen.

I mean for a tiraid it was a beauty to watch. Arms flailing, a prop glass being thrown against the wall like a child, and everything else you expect from a person who lost control. “Why isn’t this working?” was the last thing he yelled. The 1st A.D. smartly told everyone to take five while things cooled on set.

The director got himself back together and we took another take that didn’t work. We were losing daylight and had a lot of other scenes to shoot to make the day, so the DP suggested a way the shot could work, by using a different camera position and move to get the action the director wanted.

Right on cue, the paranoid director completely over reacted. He told the DP to piss off he. He was the director and wasn’t going to let him hijack his movie. The DP cooly said, “stop being so insecure. I’m here to make your movie, not mine.” The director blew off the suggestion without a second thought. He never got the shot he wanted to work and scraped the scene from the final cut. Who knows if the DP’s suggestion would have worked? It would have made sense to try it considering the other shot wasn’t working.

It was a different story on another shoot all together. A friend of mine was directing his first feature. He didn’t have a lot of money, but he brought on a DP with a resume an arm long and for the lead this hot B list actress that had some slasher movie credits. He invited me out to visit the set. My friend was a director with energy and enthusiasim to spare. He knew exactly what he wanted from everybody on the set. He gave the DP detailed notes, his shot sheet, and they had already gone over in detail the storyboards my friend drew up himself before shooting began.

My friend was in total control.

I was looking over his shoulder into the monitor during the crucial shooting of the final scene of the movie. He had the actress in this amazing bikini being chased by a knife wielding killer. After the first take there was a problem. The actress ran slower than the actor playing the killer. On the next take he told the actress to speed it up and the actor to slow it down. Still didn’t work. My friend watched the playback with the DP. Then asked the DP what he thought would work to get the shot.

The DP got the shot to work by changing the blocking and moving the camera. My friend got the shot and the ending he wanted because he was secure enough as a director to utilize his DP, not nutralize him.

Those two experiences really gave me some perspective on getting through directing a movie. During CONSIGNMENT I ran into a major problem that threatened to cost us shooting a crucial murder scene. We had been working all night and instead of chasing daylight we were trying to beat it. We had a shooting scene that had to be shot before the sun came up, we had about an hour of night left, and there was no option to push the scene.

We were losing that location for good after we wrapped. After a couple less than stellar takes I turned to my DP Royce Dudley. We have to make this work, we can’t lose this scene I said. I took the actors through a last minute rehearsal without rolling on the camera to see if I could cover the scene a different way. Royce stood back like he did sometimes watching. After the walk through rehearsal he said, “I can get your scene” and he did. Thanks Royce!

On the IN WITH THIEVES shoot I brought back an actor from CONSIGNMENT I really enjoyed working with named Jerome Hawkins.

I write and direct my own movies, so I get really involved in not only the action, but that the lines are delivered the way I want them. So here we are shooting a scene, when Jerome tells me he’s really feeling adding something to a line, keep in mind this movie is my baby, but I felt his vibe. I gave him one take to run with it his way. The line he added to close the dialogue was great. We added it to the script and kept it in the movie. Did I feel he was underminding me? No. I was secure enough as a director to let an actor I respected contribute creatively to the movie.

These last couple of stories might seem to go against what I said about not directing by committee, taking chances that don’t always work, and keeping control of your movie. I still feel that a movie can’t get done right when you have a weak director who listens to everyone on what their movie should end up looking like. I still feel you can’t be afraid to take chances on shots that don’t end up working. I still feel you have to keep control of your movie. It’s one thing to be overly paranoid about someone hijacking your movie, but it’s equally destructive to you as a director to cave in when someone is trying to tell you how to do your job as a director.

You also don’t want to become so completely narrow minded that you can’t brainstorm with your key production personal to problem solve, work creatively with your DP to see your vision materialize, allow your talent to spread their wings from time to time in a scene, or see when you need to be open minded enough to change the way you’re shooting a scene so that it can work. You surronded yourself with a good team let them help you make your movie. They say it takes a village to raise a child.

Well it takes a production team to make a movie.

it will always be your overall vision behind the way a movie will turn out, but being open to collaboration with your cast and crew creates a more positive set. You don’t want mindless robots going through the motions. You want fired up people eager to lend you all their talents to make your movie rock. Don’t let your ego get in the way of you seeing the big picture.

Some myths I do not buy into about being a director.

You’re not a real director if you don’t shoot on film.

Nonsense. Once you’ve completed a movie on any format you’re a real director.

A director needs to know how to light scenes. The more you know about any aspect of film production the better, but if you don’t know about lighting a scene you can still direct. What I do is make notes on the look, feel, and mood I see in my head for each scene. I pass that along to the DP so we can discuss how to make it happen. I also like to suggest to the DP movies to rent with scenes I feel lighting wise are close to what I’m going after.

Your DP is the master of light. He’ll deliver the lighting set ups you need.

The director needs to know how to run the camera. Not true. It’s very possible you will never touch the camera once during a shoot. I myself for the most part watch through a monitor. I do look through the camera after the DP has set the frame for the shot, but I rarely run it.

It’s easier to direct a low budget indie movie than a mainstream Hollywood movie. Wrong. Directing a low budget indie or a Hollywood blockbuster both have their own challenges for a director to numerous to list.

In the end you still have to be able to tell a good story using pictures. It’s never easy.

A director sits in video village all day while everyone else works. I wish that was true. A director has to be on top of everything going on during shooting. They deal with the actors, check with camera and sound to make sure there were no problems with the take, and put out a dozen other fires that pop up.

Some ideas I do buy into as a director.

Never let anyone give your actors direction or notes, unless they are coming directly from you.

You’re the director It’s your role and your role alone to work with actors to get the performances you want. No one else should ever be allowed to work with the actors. One time I was on a roof looking at a scene. I didn’t like the way the blocking was playing out, so I walkied the 1st A.D. some directions to pass along to the actors. That’s as far as I felt comfortable having people work with talent.

It’s your set and you should be the only one to yell CUT! I had an actor once in the middle of the take turn to the camera, virginia Crime, and say cut because they flubbed a line.

It wasn’t their call, it’s not anyones call but the director. They were warned and when it happened again they were released from the movie.

The director is the driving force behind a movie. Nobody is going to care as much about your movie as you do. You have to keep everyone pumped up and on track to finish a movie. You want your passion for what you’re shooting as a director to be contagious on the set.

A director needs to be able to be secure enough to listen and collaborate with cast and crew.

This is not directing by committee but having the leadership ability to fully maximize everyone’s talents. Your movie can only turn out better because of it.

You have to be a cheerleader and a salesmen. When things are not going well on set you need to be able to keep morale up. After a particulary rough day of shooting I let everyone know what a great job they were doing and how excited I was by the dailies I looked at each night. I had to keep them excited about the movie now, not when they would get paid a week later.

The next toughest thing is keeping people going after you’ve hit 12 hours. You have to sell them on your ability as a director to not only finish the movie, but turn out a good one that people will want their names attached to in the credits. You would be surprised how many people worked on a movie for credit only and the movie never got done or turned out terrible. Let them know you’re not that director. If they stick with you and dig a little deeper you will put out a good movie.

DEATH PENALTY OPPONENT HONORED – vcan.org

Saturday, February 13th, 2010

June 21, 2000

PRESS RELEASE

FOR RELEASE JUNE 22, 2000

Contact:

Richard Frankoff

713.520.8040 – office

713.726.0083 – home

Email: frankoff@orbitworld.com

DEATH PENALTY OPPONENT HONORED

Texas Lawyers Honor National Advocate as Graham Awaits Execution But Coincidence Of Date Casts Shadow On Evening

HOUSTON — Tonight the Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association, in Houston is holding its annual banquet where Steven Bright, Director of, virginia Crime, the Southern Center for Human Rights in Atlanta, will be the keynote speaker.

HCCLA is honoring Bright for his work on behalf of prisoner rights. Bright, a longtime opponent of the death penalty, will direct much of his keynote speech toward the topic.

Ironically, condemned killer Gary Graham????s scheduled execution will take place as the group is arriving for their annual gathering. ????This is a bitter irony,???? says Danny Easterling,, virginia Crime, outgoing president of the lawyers???? group. ????The timbre of the evening is made a little darker by the coincidence of the date.

It????s a sad day for justice.????

Bright and others protesting Graham’s execution contend Graham was not given a fair trial and witnesses who could still prove Graham????s innocence should be given an opportunity to testify in court. Citing several recent studies, Bright and HCCLA agree that the system is flawed and fundamentally unfair to people accused of capital crimes.

????Our system has big problems. In our haste to punish, we are overlooking the rights of the accused,???? says Richard Frankoff, president-elect of the group.

????While our membership has varying views on the death penalty itself, we all agree the system is flawed and needs to be examined.????

Last week, HCCLA called for Governor George W. Bush to implement an immediate moratorium on the death penalty in Texas. In their June 16 statement, HCCLA called upon Bush to follow the ????brave and compassionate lead???? of Republican governors in three other states that have already implemented a moratorium. HCCLA issued its statement on behalf of the group????s membership, which includes more than 400 criminal lawyers throughout Texas.

Graham was convicted of the 1981 shooting murder of Bobby Grant Lambert outside a Safeway food store in Houston. Supporters of Graham say that the courts ignored potentially exculpatory witness testimony. Graham opponents retort that all evidence has been considered and no basis for a new trial exists.

HCCLA points to the Roy Criner case as yet another example of a system gone afoul. Houston Attorney Mike Charleton, being honored as Attorney of the Year by HCCLA at the same dinner, argued the Roy Criner case before the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals.

Criner was, virginia Crime, convicted of the rape and murder of a 16-year-old girl. Charleton successfully introduced DNA evidence tested at two separate facilities that concluded Criner could not be the donor of evidence found at the crime scene. The Court of Criminal Appeals however, denied Criner a new trial. The final vote was 5-4 with Judge Sharon Keller issuing the majority opinion. Charleton also argued an appeal for Gary Graham before the same court.

The group says its chief, virginia Crime, goals will be to focus on the death penalty and crusade to make positive changes in the Texas criminal justice system.

Harris County has the highest conviction rate for capital cases in the, virginia Crime, Untied States. Only two states, Florida and Virginia, have prosecuted more death penalty cases.

HCCLA was founded in 1970. Its annual banquet will mark the organization????s 30th anniversary. The banquet will begin at 6:00 p.m. at Tony????s Ballroom at 3009 Post Oak Boulevard in Houston. Steven Bright????s keynote speech is scheduled to begin at 7:00 p.m.

Is America Still Racist? – vcan.org

Saturday, February 13th, 2010

This is one entry in my Heroes and Villains Volume of an encyclopedia available at World-Mysteries.com.
OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES: – It was not until after the Nuremberg Trials that the rest of the world put the kinds of protections in place that had already been in place for a long time in Germany but we are found accusing Germans of the heinous crimes we actually lead. It is just like Mackenzie King in Canada who was backing Hitler and his programs in many areas, along with other blue bloods like the Bushes and their bosses the Merovingians.

Oliver Wendell Holmes is considered to be a transcendentalist like Emerson who has strong ties to Carlyle and therefore the Goethe Illuminati of Weishaupt. His thoughts which are included in the following quote are not as bad as they might, virginia Crime, seem and I personally think there is merit in abortion and other forms of eugenics if done for the ‘Greater Good’.
“Beginning in 1907, with legislation passed in Indiana, forced sterilization on the basis of eugenic doctrine began spreading across the United States, with finally thirty states having such laws on the books.

In this century, upwards of 50,000 Americans have been sterilized by order of the state. {Today we have drugs that reduce the libido or sex drive and potency of the less fortunate and victimized masses. These drugs and lobotomies which are still performed in Canada serve the same purposes.} The constitutionality of such compulsion was upheld in 1927, when the case Buck vs. Bell went before the Supreme Court. With only one dissent, the court said, in a majority opinion written by Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes:
‘It is better for the world, if instead of waiting to execute offspring for crime, or to let them starve for their imbecility, society can prevent those who are manifestly unfit from continuing their kind.

The principle that sustains compulsory vaccination is broad enough to cover cutting the Fallopian tubes.’
The court, in other words, went beyond saying that a person is guilty until proven innocent; it declared that hypothetical persons were presumed guilty of criminal intent even before being conceived and may not be brought into existence. The 1927 decision has never been overturned, and is still a part of the law of the land.
After World War II, German lawyers defending those accused of being, virginia Crime, Nazi war criminals for having forcibly sterilized two million people as a part of Nazi racial doctrine pointed to the sterilization laws in America and the 1927 Supreme Court decision as justification for their clients’ conduct.

In his recent book, The Nazi Connection: Eugenics, American Racism and National Socialism, Stefan K?hl traces the relationships between the Nazi racial theorists and members of the American eugenics movement in the 1930s. American eugenicists and German advocates of “racial hygiene” were already communicating and sharing ‘’scientific” information before the First World War. The conflict in Europe, and particularly American entry into the war against Germany, broke off all such ties. But shortly after the war’s end, contacts began to reemerge, with their American colleagues being especially helpful in getting German eugenicists accepted back into their community of scholars.

Throughout the 1920s, the German proponents of racial sterilization drew upon the arguments of their American counterparts, using data the American eugenicists had collected to justify the case for distinguishing between “superior” and “inferior” racial types; they also made, virginia Crime, the case that America was more enlightened and progressive in its racial policies, since numerous American states had passed sterilization laws, while German law was “backward” in its narrow defense of individual rights that frustrated equivalent German legislation.

With Hitler’s coming to power in 1933, Germany’s racial hygienists came into their own, with institutes for race science and research being established or expanded. They solicited articles by many of the leading American eugenicists for their “scholarly” journals, translated many of their works into German, and gave them wide distribution. The Nazis used these American books and articles to demonstrate that they were not alone in the world in advocating compulsory racial improvement and purity.

A number of American eugenicists happily, virginia Crime, cooperated. Harry L. Laughlin, who authored the “model” sterilization law for Virginia that was then copied by several other states, saw his proposals explicitly implemented in Germany’s 1933 Hereditary Health Law,, virginia Crime, that prohibited racial intermarriage and codified forced sterilization in the new Germany. As a tribute, the University of Heidelberg awarded Laughlin an honorary degree in 1936, which he enthusiastically accepted.

Even in the late 1930s and early 1940s, some American eugenics publications refused to criticize Nazi race policy in general or legal persecution of the Jews in particular. Some of the leading eugenicists argued that to do so would be to unjustifiably mix science with politics.” (5)
The leader of the House Un-American Activities lynching was John Stennis who kept the real Holocaust(s) alive in his words ‘They Killed our Savior’ long after Nuremberg where the Nazis were not allowed to mount certain Synarchy defenses that might have educated the world about the truth of what happened in Germany (and Russia).

Most Jews do not know their origin and often they too are abusive of other Jews like the Khazars.
Author, Columnist and activist – hermit