- Last week I saw two films, one that captures truth, and
another that distorts it. The first is a new release "Heights"
which shows how the spread of homosexuality is impacting heterosexuals
as one woman struggles to save her marriage. http://www.sonyclassics.com/heights
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- Movies like "Heights" inform and inspire us.
But too often, movies are used as propaganda. "The Way We Were"
(1973) depicts a love affair between Katie played by Barbara Streisand,
an Emma Goldman-like Communist dupe, and an "all-American" gentile,
Hubbell played by Robert Redford.
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- It treats US Communism as though it was a benign force,
and eulogizes the traitorous behavior of misguided Jewish idealists. This
weird cultural artifact exemplifies how Hollywood brainwashes America.
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- HEIGHTS
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- Featuring an ensemble cast, "Heights" focuses
on an attractive young New York City couple, Isabel and Jonathan, who plan
to marry in a month.
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- Isabel is torn between her career as a photographer and
the demands of her impending marriage. An old boyfriend hopes to rekindle
their affair by landing her a career-making assignment in Eastern Europe
with The New York Times magazine.
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- A more serious danger to their marriage is a homosexual
episode in Jonathan's past. He is afraid that Isabel will reject him if
it surfaces. Isabel's mother, Dianna, a famous actress disappointed in
love, eventually learns of it. Can the couple overcome this obstacle?
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- Jonathan, an assimilated Jew, is a sincere and likeable
character but his sexual ambivalence is seen in his failure to take possession
of his future wife. In post- Feminist America, men are afraid of women.
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- "Heights" offers a detached portrait of the
contemporary NYC cultural scene. Career advancement seems to depend on
putting out sexually. People are plagued by an emptiness they try to assuage
with sex. The New York scene is seen as decadent and cutthroat.
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- Even in this urban cesspool, Isabel salvages her vision
of marriage and finds the old-fashioned masculinity real women naturally
require.
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- The fact that Isabel is not Jewish is a minor factor
in the story. Jonathan's rabbi, played by George Segal, asks him, "Why
are you breaking your mother's heart by marrying a shiksa?" But then
he pretends he is only kidding. There is an amusing scene where Segal administers
a quiz for inter-religious couples to Jonathan and Isabel. Clearly religion
means nothing to either of them.
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- THE WAY WE WERE
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- In the perspective of time, it is painful to watch this
propaganda, put over on unsuspecting Americans as a classic romance.
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- In the movie, the Redford and Streisand characters were
classmates in Class of 1937. Streisand was a Jewish Communist activist
and Redford an athlete with writing talent. Later during the war she finds
her classmate, now a dashing naval officer, in a bar stone drunk. She takes
him home for "coffee." When he passes out in her bed, she strips
and seduces/rapes him.
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- Don't kid yourself; this was a deliberate assault on
the sensibilities and values of Americans at the height of the elite media-induced
sexual revolution. Movies define what is socially acceptable. What was
it telling young women? What if a male did the same thing to a female in
that condition?
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- The sponsorship of Communism by the Rockefellers and
the Anglo American elite is exposed by the fact that it was treated as
just another political party entitled to participation in the democratic
system it sought to destroy. http://www.savethemales.ca/160303.html
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- There is a particularly creepy scene where Katie addresses
a political rally and forces the mostly gentile student body to repeat
in unison: "I will not go to war for my country." Of course,
five years later, the USA is saving the Stalin's bacon, and Katie is working
for the war propaganda department.
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- The American Communist party was completely funded and
controlled by Moscow. Yet the movie depicts American conservatives and
patriots as witch hunters, anti-Semites and fascists. This has not abated.
The movie "Mona Lisa Smile"(2004) starring Julia Roberts presents
the family of a girl who upholds traditional marriage as anti-Semitic.
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- Stalin murdered 20 million people, mostly Christians.
Yet Katie has a big poster of Uncle Joe in her apartment. Yes, the Soviets
were U.S allies during World War Two. Nevertheless this benign attitude
to Communism has been pushed by Hollywood ever since and is bearing fruit
as totalitarianism in 2005.
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- Without mentioning the "J" word, the film depicts
a cultural divide between Jews and Christians who are portrayed (Howard
Dean-style) as well heeled rubes who gather around the piano to sing and
tell inane jokes.
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- "Is everything a joke for you people?" Katie
rails when Hubbell's Republican friends fail to adequately mourn FDR's
death. Their sin is to enjoy life and not want to "change the world."
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- To the movie's credit, Hubbell calls her self-cantered,
inconsiderate, too serious and yes "pushy." Characteristically
Katie doesn't listen, learn or change.
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- "Behave," he tells her." I won't,"
she answers. Hubbell divorces her but inexplicably retains affection for
her.
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- As Professor Kevin McDonald explains in his "Culture
of Critique", Liberal, Socialist and especially Communist Jews have
been on the vanguard of the disintegration of Christian culture, family,
race and nationhood. http://www.savethemales.ca/000164.html
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- These Jews have been dupes and pawns of central bankers
intent on creating a one-world dictatorship. Their "secular humanism"
is really Luciferianism, the deification of human "reason" and
appetite; and the rejection of moral absolutes and natural order. In the
NWO, man and not God defines reality. This means the central bankers who
fund the Hollywood studios will continue to use the mass media to deceive
and corrupt us.
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- CONCLUSION
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- There is a dire shortage of honest movies about our lives
as if we are being deliberately denied the perspective and spiritual sustenance
art provides.
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- As you know, most movies today are about crime, sex and
catastrophe. Where once movies were based on novels, now they are based
on comic books ("Spiderman,"etc.). Most would have been banned
as obscene as recently as 30 years ago. Popular culture is seeking the
lowest common denominator instead of the highest.
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- That is why increasingly rare movies like "Heights,"
that accurately reflect our precarious world, must be seen and appreciated.
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- _____
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- Henry Makow Ph.D. is the inventor of the game "Scruples"
and author of "A Long Way to go for a Date." His articles exposing
fe-manism and the New World Order are archived on his web site www.savethemales.ca
He enjoys receiving your comments, some of which he posts on his site
using first name only. hmakow@gmail.com
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