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  <item rdf:about="http://onebigtorrent.org/details.php?id=6605">
    <title>Discovery-Nostradamus Decoded (2009).WS-PDTV.XviD.Ekolb</title>
    <link>http://onebigtorrent.org/details.php?id=6605</link>
    <description>&lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Category:&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt; Documentary&lt;br /&gt;&lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Description:&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/font&gt; Nostradamus Decoded (2009) &#13;
&#13;
He is the world?s most famous prophet. But what secrets did Nostradamus hide in his famously obscure words? And what mysteries do the words trigger in the minds that read them? Nostradamus Decoded unlocks the genius of the greatest seer of all time. &#13;
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Format : AVI &#13;
Length : 698 MiB for 1h 25mn 27s 432ms &#13;
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Codec : XviD &#13;
Source : PDTV &#13;
Language : English US &#13;
Subtitles : None &#13;
Genre : Documentary &#13;
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Video #0 : MPEG-4 Visual at 997 Kbps &#13;
Aspect : 592 x 336 (1.762) at 29.970 fps &#13;
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Audio #0 : MPEG Audio at 131 Kbps &#13;
Infos : 2 channels, 48.0 KHz &#13;
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Enjoy! &#13;
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    <title>Ryan (2004) Director Chris Landreth</title>
    <link>http://onebigtorrent.org/details.php?id=6278</link>
    <description>&lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Category:&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt; Documentary&lt;br /&gt;&lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Description:&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/font&gt; &#13;
Ryan (2004) Director Chris Landreth&#13;
&#13;
A gentleman panhandler. One of the pioneers of Canadian animation. Oscar nominee. Poor beggar. An artist unable to create. God observing the world. Fallen angel. Arrogant. Shy. Broken. Not destroyed. Ryan hovers between animation and documentary, and defies easy definition. Ryan Larkin who produced some of the most influential animated films of his time today lives on welfare and panhandles in Montreal. How could such an artistic genius follow this path?&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
 Ryan brings to life the story of Canadian animator Ryan Larkin, who produced some of the most influential animated films of the early 1970s. In this Oscar winning short film, celebrated director Chris Landreth uses a hand-animated, three dimensional technique he calls &amp;quot;psychological realism&amp;quot; to tell Ryan's story. Today, Ryan Larkin lives on welfare and panhandles for spare change in downtown Montreal, Canada. This film explores Ryan's early works and asks how an artistic genius could follow such an unfortunate path.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Stars: Ryan Larkin, Chris Landreth&#13;
Other Stars: Derek Lamb, Felicity Fanjoy, Laurence Green&#13;
Director: Chris Landreth, Laurence Green, Ryan Larkin&#13;
Music by: Fergus Marsh, Michael White&#13;
Edited by: Alan Code&#13;
Genre: animation&#13;
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  <item rdf:about="http://onebigtorrent.org/details.php?id=5988">
    <title>60 Minutes Special Don Hewitt August 23 2009</title>
    <link>http://onebigtorrent.org/details.php?id=5988</link>
    <description>&lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Category:&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt; News &amp; Current Affairs&lt;br /&gt;&lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Description:&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/font&gt;  &#13;
&#13;
60 Minutes Special Don Hewitt August 23 2009&#13;
&#13;
(CBS)&amp;nbsp;  This has not been a happy summer for those of us who work at CBS News: last month Walter Cronkite died, and this past week we lost Don Hewitt, the man who created 60 Minutes 41 years ago. &#13;
&#13;
Don was 86, but in his head and in his heart he was a kid. Words like &amp;quot;passion&amp;quot; and &amp;quot;enthusiasm&amp;quot; are too weak to describe this human dynamo. &#13;
&#13;
As correspondent Morley Safer explains, Don was his boss for most of the 45 years he has worked at the network and he was not an easy man to please. But when you did please him, you were on top of the world. And so was he. &#13;
&#13;
He was also a thorn in the side of his corporate bosses, though he liked to describe himself as a pain in the ass. &#13;
&#13;
And he was madly in love with broadcast journalism.  &#13;
&#13;
We take a look at Don Hewitt - this founder, producer and above all, ringmaster of what he regarded as the greatest show on earth. &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;I once said to CBS, 'In my next contract I want a gun, and a whip and a chair,' because it's like being in a cage full of tigers. And there are temperaments. Not the least of which is mine,&amp;quot; Don Hewitt once said. &#13;
&#13;
Ringmaster and lion tamer - Don became a show unto himself. Since the very beginning of television news more than six decades ago, he lived by a deceptively simple motto: &amp;quot;It's four little words. Tell me a story. And that's all we do. Tell 'em a story,&amp;quot; he explained. &#13;
&#13;
Years before 60 Minutes, he was at Edward R. Murrow's side as television expanded its reach to broadcast live, from coast to coast. &#13;
&#13;
He produced the very first televised presidential debate, Kennedy vs. Nixon, in 1960.  &#13;
&#13;
He was with Walter Cronkite the day John F. Kennedy was shot. &#13;
&#13;
And with 60 Minutes, he revolutionized broadcast news, dispatching what he called his &amp;quot;team of tigers&amp;quot; to the four corners of the globe to carry out that four-word mandate: Tell me a story. &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;There is no place on Earth that you haven&amp;rsquo;t been,&amp;quot; Hewitt said when the broadcast turned 25. &amp;quot;And there's nobody on Earth that you haven't met. &amp;hellip;And that is the great value of what we do, I think.&amp;quot; &#13;
&#13;
He was, in fact, the boy wonder of CBS News, and remained the awestruck kid well past retirement age. He was opinionated, outrageous, with a quick wit and a short fuse. &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;The only problem is that when you've been around as long as I have, you get to be kind of a pain in the ass,&amp;quot; Hewitt once said. &#13;
&#13;
And as his friends and colleagues will tell you, on balance, the pleasure of Don's company was mostly worth the pain.   &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;I mean, he put on a show in the control room. And it was just wonderful. It was hypnotic,&amp;quot; Phil Scheffler remembered, who worked at Don's side for over half a century. &#13;
&#13;
60 Minutes Executive Producer Jeff Fager remembers his first meeting with Hewitt. &amp;quot;I remember it well. He said, 'Listen kid. All you need to do is bring us good stories.'&amp;quot; &#13;
&#13;
Fager succeeded Don in 2004 as executive producer, and he remembers all too well being the new kid on the block, 20 years ago: screening one of his first 60 Minutes stories for the ringmaster. &#13;
&#13;
It was a somewhat dry report on the Polish economy. &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;The first thing he said was, 'Where do you want it kid, right between the eyes?' He hated it. And what really was amazing is a couple of hours later he called and he said, 'I have some ideas for how we can make this story better.' And he did,&amp;quot; Fager remembered. &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;He was like P.T. Barnum in the sense that he would bring the circus truck to town every time he got to talk to you,&amp;quot; actor Alan Alda said. &#13;
&#13;
Don called Alda his best friend; Alda says that even after hours, Don talked constantly about work. &amp;quot;Because it excited him so much that he was, I think he was still a boy who was amazed at his success.&amp;quot; &#13;
&#13;
The boy grew up in New Rochelle, N.Y., 45 minutes from Broadway. Fifteen cents would buy him a Saturday afternoon of cartoons, newsreels and melodramas. The movies got under his skin and stayed there. &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;He once said to me that when he goes to a Western movie, he comes out walking bowlegged,&amp;quot; Safer remembered, laughing.  &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;He told us many times how when he was in the war, he had seen so many war movies that when he was finally standing on the ship, and the enemy planes were coming at him, he thought 'Where's the music?'&amp;quot; Alda added. &#13;
&#13;
The movies gave him his role models: rascals who had the moxie to beat the system during the Great Depression. &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;I never knew whether I wanted to be Julian Marsh, the Broadway producer on 42nd Street, or Hildy Johnson, the reporter in Front Page,&amp;quot; Hewitt said. &#13;
&#13;
Johnson came from the newspaper world, just as Don's father did. It was a whiskey soaked jungle of snappy talk and scooping the competition. &#13;
&#13;
And impresario Julian Marsh in 42nd Street was surrounded by bright lights and Broadway babes - Don's kind of world. &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;We always thought if Don Hewitt went into Broadway, he would have been just as big and just as successful,&amp;quot; Fager said. &amp;quot;I mean, he had that way, he had that showmanship.&amp;quot; &#13;
&#13;
In 1948, CBS put on its first TV newscast; Don was 25, with some wartime reporting experience under his belt. Somebody suggested he check out the CBS News studio, upstairs at Grand Central Station. &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;And I walked in. I couldn't believe it. You know, there are lights and cameras and makeup people and it looked like a Hollywood set. And I fell in love,&amp;quot; Hewitt remembered. &#13;
&#13;
And the best thing was: no longer did he have to choose between being ace reporter Hildy Johnson or Broadway star maker Julian Marsh. &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;I thought, 'Oh my God, in television you can be both of them.' And I got hired,&amp;quot; Hewitt remembered. &#13;
&#13;
Soon, he was producing Douglas Edwards' newscast, the forerunner of the CBS Evening News. There were no satellites, no computers - nothing much except huge, bulky cameras and Don's manic enthusiasm. &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;It wasn't very good, but it was respectable. I always thought it was the infancy of television. Like we were making those shows out of Play-Doh,&amp;quot; Hewitt said when the Evening News turned 50. &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;Don has described those early days as playing with Play-Doh. Kind of making it up as you go along,&amp;quot; Safer remarked. &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;No question about that. There were no signposts. No rules,&amp;quot; Scheffler agreed. &amp;quot;Nobody had any experience in this before. And so he really was the inventor of the kind of television news that we do now.&amp;quot; &#13;
&#13;
In the summer of 1956, the ocean liner Andrea Doria collided with a ship off Nantucket.  &#13;
&#13;
Don, Doug Edwards and a cameraman flew off to have a look. The other networks had already come and gone, beating them to the first pictures of the crippled ship, dead in the water. &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;I said, 'Well, what the hell. We're here. Let's go anyway,'&amp;quot; Hewitt remembered. &amp;quot;We're flying over the Andrea Doria, it turns over, and like a big dead elephant, it sank right beneath us.&amp;quot; &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;Dumb luck. By being late, we got the story,&amp;quot; he added. &#13;
&#13;
Hewitt would do just about anything to get the story and shaft the competition. When Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev visited a farm in Coon Rapids, Iowa in 1959, Don put one over on NBC. &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;He stole their truck, their video truck,&amp;quot; Alda explained. &amp;quot;And drove it into the middle of a corn field, where no one could find it. Now that's not Mr. Nice Guy, you know. He did return it, eventually.&amp;quot; &#13;
&#13;
But Hewitt clashed often with CBS News President Fred Friendly, who found him too brash and too unpredictable. In 1965, Friendly figured out a way to get Don off the Evening News; Don thought it was a promotion. &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;His wife told me later that he came home and said, told her the story about how Friendly had come to see him and said, 'You know, Don, this Evening News is not big enough for you. We're gonna find really great projects for you to do.' And his wife said to him: 'Idiot. You just got fired,'&amp;quot; Scheffler said. &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;It was devastating at the time. You know, I had my legs cut off,&amp;quot; Hewitt remembered. &#13;
&#13;
He remained at CBS, but sought solace out on his beloved beach. Next to television, he worshiped the sun and his kids. He produced a few earnest documentaries, but hungered after something with a little more punch. &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;He got bored easily, is the problem,&amp;quot; Scheffler said. &#13;
&#13;
And out of that boredom came Don's greatest idea: 60 Minutes. In a sense, it should have been called &amp;quot;15 minutes.&amp;quot; Don couldn't sit still for anything longer than that. &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;It's really a reflection, I think, of his attention span,&amp;quot; Scheffler said. &amp;quot;His attention span was 15 minutes. And so he said 'We'll do a program that has three 15-minute stories on it.&amp;quot; &#13;
&#13;
It began in the fall of 1968, without, at first, Phil Scheffler. &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;I turned him down. I said, 'You know, Don, I don't think your show's gonna be serious enough.' And I said, 'Besides, you know, it's not gonna last very long,'&amp;quot; Scheffler remembered. &#13;
&#13;
That was more than 40 years ago. Scheffler eventually came on board, as did any number of oddballs. &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;Don managed to attract the best people in the business. And he kept this ensemble full of crazy egos all working towards the same end,&amp;quot; Fager said. &#13;
&#13;
Asked what he means by crazy egos, Fager said, &amp;quot;More like tigers in a cage, and every once in a while they'd jump out of their cages and Don would have to figure out a way to coax them back in.&amp;quot; &#13;
&#13;
With Don cracking the whip, it was not a place for the fainthearted.   &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;I saw him fire the same producer three times in the halls,&amp;quot; Fager recalled. &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;He fired Mike [Wallace] at least 50 times,&amp;quot; Safer added. &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;Well, Mike probably deserved it,&amp;quot; Fager joked. &#13;
&#13;
Alan Alda wondered if all that high drama achieved any purpose. &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;Was it successful in getting you to think on another level?&amp;quot; Alda asked. &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;Oh, absolutely,&amp;quot; Safer replied. &amp;quot;I think it made the pieces, the stories, in the final analysis, much leaner and much more direct.&amp;quot; &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;And would he turn out to be right?&amp;quot; Alda asked. &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;Mainly he was right,&amp;quot; Safer said, laughing. &#13;
&#13;
But there were some rough moments in an otherwise brilliant career. In 1995, the then CBS management suppressed a 60 Minutes expose of the tobacco industry. &#13;
&#13;
The story eventually was broadcast, after it was reported in The Wall Street Journal.  &#13;
&#13;
                                                                Though the tobacco story haunted him for years, Don continued masterminding the broadcast for another decade. &#13;
 &#13;
&amp;quot;His job was his life. And that's what made it so hard for him to give it up. In fact, he said quite publicly 'I wanna die at my desk,'&amp;quot; Fager said. &#13;
&#13;
Don left the broadcast - reluctantly - in 2004, at age 81, and slowly made peace with the idea of having more time for the grandchildren. And of watching 60 Minutes not in the screening room, but in his own living room. &#13;
&#13;
Asked what he thinks Hewitt's legacy is, Phil Scheffler said, &amp;quot;His legacy is 60 Minutes. There's no question. I mean, this was his shining, his crowning success.&amp;quot; &#13;
&#13;
Fager said, &amp;quot;It's a great legacy, this broadcast, and it hasn't strayed much from what he envisioned in the first place more than 40 years ago.&amp;quot; &#13;
&#13;
&amp;quot;He gave the country nourishment but in the form of, to a great extent in the form of entertainment. It wasn't like eating your broccoli. What he gave us was a good old-fashioned hot dog, but somehow it nourished us like broccoli,&amp;quot; Alda added. &amp;quot;There is some kind of genius in that. He was able to fuse those two things.&amp;quot;&#13;
&lt;br /&gt; &lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Seeders: &lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt;0&lt;br /&gt; &lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Leeches: &lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt;0</description>
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  <item rdf:about="http://onebigtorrent.org/details.php?id=5886">
    <title>Anti-Authoritarian Politics Books - Anarchism, Democratic Socialism</title>
    <link>http://onebigtorrent.org/details.php?id=5886</link>
    <description>&lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Category:&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt; eBooks, Magazines, Audio Books&lt;br /&gt;&lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Description:&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/font&gt; &#13;
|-- Acharya S - Zeitgeist - Christian Mythlogy - Jesus and Horus - Companion Guide.pdf&#13;
|-- Ahmed - The War on Freedom - How and Why America Was Attacked [911, WTC, Bush, neocons] (2002).pdf&#13;
|-- Albert - Liberating Theory [poor layout] (South End, 1986).pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Antipsychiatry&#13;
|   |-- Cleckley - The Mask of Sanity.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Farber - Madness, Heresy and The Rumor of Angels.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Foucault - Madness and civilization.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Laing - The Divided Self - An Existential Study in Sanity and Madness.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Pridmore - Madness of Psychiatry.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Szasz - Psychiatric Slavery.djvu&#13;
|   `-- Szasz - The Theology of Medicine.djvu&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Avrich - The Russian Anarchists.pdf&#13;
|-- Bamford - NSA - Body of Secrets - Anatomy of the Ultra-Secret National Security Agency [possibly unreliable] (2002).pdf&#13;
|-- Bertrand Russell - In Praise of Idleness (1932).html&#13;
|-- Bertrand Russell - Political Ideals (1917).pdf&#13;
|-- Bertrand Russell - Political Ideals (1917).txt&#13;
|-- Bertrand Russell - Proposed Roads To Freedom (1919).pdf&#13;
|-- Bertrand Russell - Proposed Roads To Freedom (1919).txt&#13;
|-- Bolz - The Counterterrorism Handbook - Tactics, Procedures and Techniques 2e (CRC, 2001).pdf&#13;
|-- Bregman - Israel's Wars 1947-1993 (Routledge, 2000).pdf&#13;
|-- Brown - Web of Debt - The Shocking Truth about our Money System 3e (Third Millenium, 2007).pdf&#13;
|-- Carlisle - Encyclopedia of Politics (Sage, 2005)&#13;
|   |-- Carlisle - Encyclopedia of Politics - The Left (Sage, 2005).pdf&#13;
|   `-- Carlisle - Encyclopedia of Politics - The Right (Sage, 2005).pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Chomsky Noam&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - 5 books.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - America's war on terror.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - An Open Media Book (9-11).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - An exchange on Manufacturing Consent 2002.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Anarchism &amp;amp; Marxism.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Class Warfare.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Confronting the Empire.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Democracy And Education.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Deterring Democracy.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Fateful Triangle - The United States, Israel and the Palestinians.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Hegemony or Survival - America's Quest for Global Dominance.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Imperial Ambitions.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Iraq is a Trial Run (04.02.2003).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Keeping The Rabble In Line (1994).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Liberating the Mind from Orthodoxies.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Manufacturing Consent - The Political Economy of Mass Media.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Market Democracy in a Neoliberal Order.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Media Control.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Necessary Illusions.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Nine Eleven (9-11).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - On Osama Bin Laden.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - On War in  Afganistan.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Philosophers and Public Philosophy.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Philosophy of Cognitive Science.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Pirates and Emperors, Old and New.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Powers and Prospects.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Preventive War - The Supreme Crime.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Profit over People.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Secrets Lies And Democracy.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - The Culture of Terrorism.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - The Iraq war and contempt for Democracy.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - The Propaganda System.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - The prosperous Few and the restless Many (1994).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Torturing Democracy.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Turning the Tide  U.S. intervention in Central America and the Struggle for Peace.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Understanding Power (2002).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - War Against People.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - What Makes Mainstream Media Mainstream.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - What Uncle Sam Really Wants.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - What the Linguist is Talking About.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Who are the Global Terrorists.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Year 501 The Conquest Continues.pdf&#13;
|   `-- Chomsky - You Are Being Lied To (The Disinformation Guide).pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Cook - The Long Sexual Revolution (Oxford, 2004).pdf&#13;
|-- Creveld - The Rise and Decline of the State (1999).pdf&#13;
|-- Crook - Revolutionary France 1788-1880 (Oxford, 2002).pdf&#13;
|-- Dasgupta - Economics - A Very Short Introduction.pdf&#13;
|-- Dawisha - Arab Nationalism in the 20th Century (Princeton, 2003).pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Dawkins Richard&#13;
|   |-- Dawkins - The God Delusion.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Dawkins - The Selfish Gene (1976).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Richard Dawkins - A Devil's Chaplain (2003).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Richard Dawkins - Extended Phenotype (2004).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Richard Dawkins - River Out Of Eden (1995).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Richard Dawkins - The Blind Watchmaker.pdf&#13;
|   `-- Richard Dawkins - Unweaving The Rainbow.pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Dissident Voice - Intellectual Cleansing I - Keeping the Media Safe for Big Business.html&#13;
|-- Dissident Voice - Intellectual Cleansing II - Jonathan Cook Responds.html&#13;
|-- Edward Bernays - Propaganda (1928).pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Emma Goldman&#13;
|   |-- EMMA GOLDMAN.gif&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - 1908 - What I Believe.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - 1909 - A New Declaration of Independence.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - 1910 - Anarchism  What It Really Stands For.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - 1911 - Francisco Ferrer and The Modern School.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - 1914 - Voltairine De Cleyre.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - 1917 - Address To The Jury.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - 1918 - The Truth About the Bolsheviki.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - 1923 - My Disillusionment in Russia.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - 1924 - My Further Disillusionment in Russia.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - 1931 - Living My Life.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - 1934 - Was My Life Worth Living.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - Anarchy Defended by Anarchists.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - Socialism Caught in the Political Trap.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - The Social Importance of the Modern School.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Hippolyte Havel - 1911 - EMMA GOLDMAN (Biography).pdf&#13;
|   |-- aandofrontpiecesm.gif&#13;
|   |-- anarchism.jpg&#13;
|   `-- socsigdra.gif&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Federal Reserve - Modern Money Mechanics.pdf&#13;
|-- Feenberg - Transforming Technology - A Critical Theory Revisited (Oxford, 2002).pdf&#13;
|-- Flaschel - Macrodynamics of Capitalism - Synthesis of Marx, Keynes and Schumpeter 2e (Springer, 2009).pdf&#13;
|-- Fromm - Art of Loving [bw] (Harper, 1956).pdf&#13;
|-- Fromm - Haben oder Sein (1976).pdf&#13;
|-- Fromm - Marx's Concept of Man [poor layout] (1961).pdf&#13;
|-- Fromm - The Art of Loving [dp, no ocr] (1957).pdf&#13;
|-- Fromm - To Have or To Be (Continuum, 1976).pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Ganser - NATO's Secret Armies - Operation Gladio and Terrorism in Western Europe (2005).pdf&#13;
|-- Guerin - Anarchism - From Theory to Practice (1970).pdf&#13;
|-- Hahnel - ABCs of Political Economy - Modern Primer.pdf&#13;
|-- Heller - Bojite se socialismu (Periskop, 2007).pdf&#13;
|-- Illich - Deschooling Society [html] (1970).pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Karl Marx and Marxism&#13;
|   |-- Albritton - New Dialectics and Political Economy (Palgrave, 2004).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Blakeley - Marx and Other Four-Letter Words (Pluto, 2005).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Carver - The Cambridge Companion to Marx (1991).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Collier - Marx - Beginner's Guide (Oneworld, 2004).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Fine - Marx's Capital 4e (Pluto, 2004).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Glasser - Twentieth Century Marxism - Global Introduction (Routledge, 2007).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Hollander - The Economics of Karl Marx - Analysis and Application (Cambridge, 2008).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Hutnyk - Bad Marxism - Capitalism and Cultural Studies (Pluto, 2004).pdf&#13;
|   |-- LeBaron - Mao, Marx and The Market (Wiley, 2002).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marx - Capital Vol 1.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marx - Capital Vol 2.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marx - Capital Vol 3.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marx - Communist Manifesto.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marx - Grundrisse.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marx - The Civil War in France.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marx - The Class Struggle in France.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marx - Wage Labour and Capital.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Musto - Karl Marx's Grundrisse - Foundations (Routledge, 2008).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Newman - Socialism - Very Short Introduction (Oxford, 2005).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Resnick - New Departures in Marxian Theory (Routledge, 2006).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Rosa Luxemburg - The Accumulation of Capital (Routledge, 1913,2003).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Singer - Marx - Very Short Introduction (Oxford, 1980).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Thomas - Marxism and Scientific Socialism (Routledge, 2008).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Uchida - Marx for the 21st Century (Routledge, 2006).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Walker - Historical Dictionary of Marxism (Scarecrow, 2007).pdf&#13;
|   `-- Wolfenstein - Psychoanalytic-Marxism Groundwork [dp,bw] (Free Association, 1993).pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Kelly - Political Philosophy of Michel Foucault (Taylor, 2009).pdf&#13;
|-- Kinna - Anarchism - A Beginner's Guide (Oneworld, 2005).pdf&#13;
|-- Knight - The Kennedy Assassination (Edinburgh, 2007).pdf&#13;
|-- Konner - The Atheist's Bible.pdf&#13;
|-- Laing - The Divided Self - An Existential Study in Sanity and Madness.pdf&#13;
|-- Le Bon - The Crowd - A Study of the Popular Mind (1895,2002).pdf&#13;
|-- Lippmann - Public Opinion (1921).txt&#13;
|-- Lynd - Wobblies and Zapatistas - Conversations on Anarchism, Marxism and Radical History (PM, 2008).pdf&#13;
|-- Macrakis - Seduced by Secrets - Inside the Stasi's Spy-Tech World (Cambridge, 2008).pdf&#13;
|-- Maga - The 1960s - Eyewitness History (Infobase, 2003).pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Marcuse Herbert&#13;
|   |-- Feenberg - Essential Marcuse - Introduction - Critical Theory of Herbert Marcuse (2007).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marcuse - Aggressiveness in Advanced Industrial Society (1967).html&#13;
|   |-- Marcuse - An Essay on Liberation (Beacon, 1969).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marcuse - Collected Papers I - Technology, War and Fascism (Routledge, 1998).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marcuse - Collected Papers II - Towards a Critical Theory of Society (Routledge, 2001).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marcuse - Heideggerian Marxism (Nebraska, 2005).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marcuse - Liberation from the Affluent Society (1967, Lecture in London).html&#13;
|   |-- Marcuse - One-Dimensional Man [html, ocr errors] (1964).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marcuse - Repressive Tolerance (1965).html&#13;
|   |-- Marcuse - Soviet Marxism - A Critical Analysis (Columbia, 1958).pdf&#13;
|   `-- Marcuse - The End of Utopia (1967).html&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Marshall - Demanding the Impossible - History of Anarchism (Harper, 2008).pdf&#13;
|-- Maschke - The Lie Behind the Lie Detector 4e (antipolygraph.org, 2005).pdf&#13;
|-- McFadden - On the Federal Reserve (Congressional Record, 1934).html&#13;
|-- McKibben - Deep Economy - Economics As If the World Mattered (Oneworld, 2007).pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Mikhail Bakunin&#13;
|   |-- Aldred, Guy A. - Michel Bakunin, Communist.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - God and the State.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - Integral Education 2.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - Integral Education.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - Marxism Freedom and the State.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - Power Corrupts The Best.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - Revolutionary Catechism.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - Rousseau's Theory of the State.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - Selected writings.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - Stateless Socialism = Anarchism.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - THE CAPITALIST SYSTEM.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - The Commune, the Church &amp;amp; The State.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - The Immorality of the State.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - The Organization of the International.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - The Paris Commune and the Idea of the State.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - The Policy of The International.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - Where i stand.pdf&#13;
|   |-- J. M. W. - Mikhail Bakunin (The Torch of Anarchy).pdf&#13;
|   |-- bakunin.gif&#13;
|   |-- bakuninhunt.jpg&#13;
|   |-- bakuninper.jpg&#13;
|   `-- bakuninphoto.jpg&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Miller - From Difficult to Disturbed - Understanding and Managing Dysfunctional Employees (AMACOM, 2008).pdf&#13;
|-- Miller - Political Philosophy - A Very Short Introduction.pdf&#13;
|-- Minogue - Politics - A Very Short Introduction.pdf&#13;
|-- Mises - Theory of Money and Credit (1912).pdf&#13;
|-- Newman - Socialism - A Very Short Introduction.pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Orwell George&#13;
|   |-- 1933 - Down And Out In Paris And London&#13;
|   |   `-- Down And Out In Paris And London.txt&#13;
|   |-- 1934 - Burmese Days&#13;
|   |   `-- Burmese Days.txt&#13;
|   |-- 1935 - A Clergyman's Daughter&#13;
|   |   `-- A Clergyman's Daughter.txt&#13;
|   |-- 1936 - Keep the Apidistra Flying&#13;
|   |   `-- Keep The Apidistra Flying.txt&#13;
|   |-- 1937 - The Road To Wigan Pier&#13;
|   |   `-- The Road To Wigan Pier.txt&#13;
|   |-- 1938 - Homage To Catalonia&#13;
|   |   `-- Homage To Catalonia.txt&#13;
|   |-- 1939 - Coming Up For Air&#13;
|   |   `-- Coming Up For Air.txt&#13;
|   |-- 1945 - Animal Farm&#13;
|   |   `-- Animal Farm.txt&#13;
|   |-- 1949 - Nineteen Eighty-Four&#13;
|   |   `-- 1984.txt&#13;
|   |-- George Orwell - 1984.pdf&#13;
|   `-- Miscellaneous Essays&#13;
|       |-- 1931 - A Hanging.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1931 - The Spike.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1936 - Bookshop Memories.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1936 - Shooting An Elephant.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1937 - Spilling The Spanish Beans.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1939 - Marrakech.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1940 - Boys' Weeklies And Frank Richards's Reply.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1940 - Charles Dickens.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1940 - Charles Reade.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1940 - Inside The Whale.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1941 - The Art Of Donald McGill.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1941 - The Lion And The Unicorn - Socialism And The English Genius.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1941 - Wells, Hitler, And The World State.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1942 - Looking Back On The Spanish War.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1942 - Rudyard Kipling.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1943 - Mark Twain - The Licensed Jester.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1943 - Poetry And The Microphone.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1943 - W B Yeats.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1944 - Arthur Koestler.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1944 - Benefit Of Clergy - Some Notes On Salvador Dali.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1944 - Raffles And Miss Blandish.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1945 - Antisemitism In Britain.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1945 - Freedom Of The Park.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1945 - Future Of A Ruined Germany.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1945 - Good Bad Books.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1945 - In Defence Of P. G. Wodehouse.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1945 - Nonsense Poetry.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1945 - Notes On Nationalism.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1945 - Revenge Is Sour.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1945 - The Sporting Spirit.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1945 - You And The Atomic Bomb.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - A Good Word For The Vicar Of Bray.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - A Nice Cup Of Tea.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - Books Vs. Cigarettes.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - Confessions Of A Book Reviewer.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - Decline Of The English Murder.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - How The Poor Die.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - James Burnham And The Managerial Revolution (Second Thoughts On Burnham).txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - Pleasure Spots.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - Politics Vs. Literature - An Examination Of Gulliver's Travels.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - Politics and the English Language.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - Riding Down From Bangor.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - Some Thoughts On The Common Toad.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - The Prevention Of Literature.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - Why I Write.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1947 - Lear, Tolstoy, And The Fool.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1948 - Writers And Leviathan.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1949 - Reflections On Gandhi.txt&#13;
|       `-- 1952 - Such, Such Were The Joys.txt&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Passmore - Fascism - A Very Short Introduction.pdf&#13;
|-- Perkins - Confessions of an Economic Hitman (BK, 2004).pdf&#13;
|-- Perlman - Manufacturing Discontent - The Trap of Individualism in Corporate Society (Pluto, 2005).pdf&#13;
|-- Peter Kropotkin - The Anarchist Prince&#13;
|   |-- Anarchism - 1910 - from The Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1910.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Peter Kropotkin - 1880 - The Commune of Paris.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Peter Kropotkin - 1880 - The Spirit of Revolt.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Peter Kropotkin - 1890 - Brain Work and Manual Work.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Peter Kropotkin - 1892 - Revolutionary Studies.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Peter Kropotkin - 1898 - Anarchism its philosophy and ideal.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Peter Kropotkin - 1901 - Communism and Anarchy.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Peter Kropotkin - 1913 - The Coming War.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Peter Kropotkin - 1920 - The Wage System.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Peter Kropotkin - Anarchist Morality.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Peter Kropotkin - On Order.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Peter Kropotkin - The Place of Anarchism in Socialistic Evolution.pdf&#13;
|   |-- anarchism.jpg&#13;
|   |-- kropotkin3.gif&#13;
|   |-- memfront.jpg&#13;
|   `-- szabl032.jpg&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Pierre-Joseph Proudhon&#13;
|   |-- 180px-Hw-proudhon.jpg&#13;
|   |-- D.W. Brogan - 1934 - Proudhon.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Proudhon - 1840 - What is Property.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Proudhon - 1845 - Interest and Principal (letters).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Proudhon - 1846 - The Philosophy of Misery.pdf&#13;
|   |-- anarchism.jpg&#13;
|   |-- proudhon.gif&#13;
|   `-- proudhon3.gif&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Piper - Final Judgment - The Missing Link in the JFK Assassination Conspiracy 6e [Kennedy] (AFP, 2004).pdf&#13;
|-- Prouty - Secret Team - The CIA and Its Allies in Control of the United States and the World (1973).pdf&#13;
|-- RAND - Deterrence - From Cold War to Long War (2008).pdf&#13;
|-- Rapport - 1848 - Year of Revolution (Basic Books, 2008).pdf&#13;
|-- Reed - The Art of Protest (Minnesota, 2005).pdf&#13;
|-- Roncaglia - The Wealth of Ideas - A History of Economic Thought (Cambridge, 2005).pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Rothbard Murray&#13;
|   |-- America's Great Depression - Rothbard.pdf&#13;
|   |-- For a New Liberty - Rothbard.pdf&#13;
|   |-- History Of Money And Banking In The United States - Rothbard.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Making Economic Sense - Rothbard.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Man Economy and State - Rothbard.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Power And Market Government And The Economy - Rothbard.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Rothbard - The Case Against the Federal Reserve.pdf&#13;
|   |-- The Anatomy of the State - Rothbard.pdf&#13;
|   |-- The Ethics of Liberty - Rothbard.pdf&#13;
|   |-- The Mystery Of Banking - Rothbard.pdf&#13;
|   `-- What has Government done to our Money - Rothbard.pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Ruppert - Crossing the Rubicon - The Decline of the American Empire (New Society, 2004).pdf&#13;
|-- Sherratt - Adorno's Positive Dialectic (Cambridge, 2002).pdf&#13;
|-- Smail - Power, Responsibility and Freedom - Internet Publication (2005).pdf&#13;
|-- Smith - Red Barcelona - Social Protest and Labour Mobilization in the 20th Century (Routledge, 2002).pdf&#13;
|-- Stackelberg - Routledge Companion to Nazi Germany (2007).pdf&#13;
|-- Stone - Prime Green - Remembering the Sixties (2007).pdf&#13;
|-- Tarpley - 911 Synthetic Terrorism Made in USA (2004).pdf&#13;
|-- Tarpley - Barack H. Obama - The Unauthorized Biography (Progressive, 2008).pdf&#13;
|-- Tarpley - George Bush - The Unauthorized Biography.pdf&#13;
|-- Tarpley - Surviving the Cataclysm - Your Guide Through the Greatest Financial Crisis in Human History (1999).pdf&#13;
|-- Tawney - The Acquisitive Society (1921).pdf&#13;
|-- Thrift - Knowing Capitalism (Sage, 2005).pdf&#13;
|-- Tietje - Is Lookism Unjust (Journal of Libertarian Studies vol. 19-2, 2005).pdf&#13;
|-- US Government - 911 Commission Report.pdf&#13;
|-- Vail - A Theory of Power (iUniverse, 2004).pdf&#13;
|-- Vance Packard - The Hidden Persuaders (IG, 1957,2007).pdf&#13;
|-- Veblen - The Theory of the Leisure Class (Oxford, 1899,2007).pdf&#13;
|-- Voegelin - From Enlightenment to Revolution (Duke, 1975).pdf&#13;
|-- Ward - Anarchism - A Very Short Introduction.pdf&#13;
|-- Wilkinson - International Relations - A Very Short Introduction.pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Zerzan John&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - Against Civilization - Readings and Reflections (1999).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - Agriculture.html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - Future Primitive.html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - Globalization and Its Apologists.html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - No Way Out (2003).html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - Number - Its Origin and Evolution.html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - Patriarchy, Civilization, and the Origins of Gender.html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - Running on Emptiness - The Failure of Symbolic Thought.html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - Seize the Day (2006).html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - The Mass Psychology of Misery.html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - The Modern Anti-World.html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - The Origins of War.html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - Time and Its Discontents.html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - Too Marvelous for Words.html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - Twilight of the Machines.html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - We Have To Dismantle All This.html&#13;
|   `-- Zerzan - Why Primitivism.html&#13;
`-- Zinn - People's History of the United States (Harper, 2003).pdf&lt;br /&gt; &lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Seeders: &lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt;36&lt;br /&gt; &lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Leeches: &lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt;13</description>
    <seeders>36</seeders>
    <leechers>13</leechers>
  </item>
  <item rdf:about="http://onebigtorrent.org/details.php?id=5799">
    <title>Doomsday Gun (R. Young, 1994)-aNaRCHo</title>
    <link>http://onebigtorrent.org/details.php?id=5799</link>
    <description>&lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Category:&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt; Misc&lt;br /&gt;&lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Description:&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/font&gt; &amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Doomsday Gun (R. Young, 1994)-aNaRCHo&#13;
&amp;nbsp;&#13;
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;(FILM IS IN ENGLISH, ENGLISH AND FRENCH SUBTITLES INCLUDED)&#13;
&amp;nbsp;&#13;
This HBO docudrama tells the real-life story of Canadian scientist Dr. Gerald Bull (played by Frank Langella), a genius weapons designer whose services were used by the CIA for some highly suspect operations. After these operations were exposed, the CIA denied all knowledge of them and Bull was put in prison; following his release, he began to work with Saddam Hussein on Project Babylon, a project in which he was to build an extremely dangerous supergun that threatened the security of Israel and terrified the world. Also starring Kevin Spacey &amp;amp; Alan Arkin.&#13;
&amp;nbsp;&#13;
PLEASE SEED AND ENJOY!!!&lt;br /&gt; &lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Seeders: &lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt;0&lt;br /&gt; &lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Leeches: &lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt;0</description>
    <seeders>0</seeders>
    <leechers>0</leechers>
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  <item rdf:about="http://onebigtorrent.org/details.php?id=5503">
    <title>An Introduction to Primitivism, Green Anarchy, Anti-Authoritarian and Anti-Civilization anarchist thought and practice</title>
    <link>http://onebigtorrent.org/details.php?id=5503</link>
    <description>&lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Category:&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt; eBooks, Magazines, Audio Books&lt;br /&gt;&lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Description:&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/font&gt; EBOOKS and AUDIOBOOKS COLLECTION&#13;
&#13;
An Introduction to Primitivism, Green Anarchy, Anti-Authoritarian and Anti-Civilization anarchist thought and practice.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Bob Black &#13;
&amp;bull;	The Abolition of Work (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Anarchism and Other Impediments to Anarchy (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Primitive Affluence: A Postscript to Sahlins (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Withered Anarchism: A Surrebuttal to Murray Bookchin (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
Jacques Camatte &#13;
&amp;bull;	Against Domestication (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	The Democratic Mystification (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	The Wandering of Humanity (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
Chrystos &#13;
&amp;bull;	They\'re Always Telling Me I\'m Too Angry (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
Mark Nathan Cohen &#13;
&amp;bull;	Health and the Rise of Civilization (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
John Connor &#13;
&amp;bull;	Surveillance and Domestication (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
CrimethInc. &#13;
&amp;bull;	AlieNation: The Map of Despair (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	The Contents of Your Daily Life (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	The Dead Hand of the Past (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	The Domestication of Animals and of Man (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Expect Resistance: A Field Manual (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Join the Resistance: Fall in Love (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	No Gods (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	No Masters (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Recipes for Disaster: An Anarchist Cookbook (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Seduced by the Image of Reality (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	The Unabomber: A Hero for Our Time (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Why I Love Shoplifting From Big Corporations (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
Guy Debord &#13;
&amp;bull;	The Society of the Spectacle (.pdf) &#13;
Thomas J. Elpel &#13;
&amp;bull;	The Art of Nothing (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
Keith Farnish &#13;
&amp;bull;	A Matter of Scale (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Power Station Sabotaged... But Was It Worth It? (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	The Problem With...Civilization (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
Brian Ferguson &#13;
&amp;bull;	Archaeology, Cultural Anthropology, and the Origins and Intensificatons of War (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	The Birth of War (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Evolved Motivations for War (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Explaining Yanomami Warfare: Alternatives and Implications (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Tribal Warfare (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	War Before History (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Whatever Happened to the Stone Age? Steel Tools and Yanomami Historical Ecology (.pdf) &#13;
John Filiss &#13;
&amp;bull;	What is Primitivism? (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
Sigmund Freud &#13;
&amp;bull;	Civilization and Its Discontents (.pdf) &#13;
Chellis Glendinning &#13;
&amp;bull;	Brave New Postmodern World (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Discovery (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	A Lesson In Earth Civics (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Loss of Health (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Technology, Trauma, and the Wild (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
Aileen Goodson &#13;
&amp;bull;	Nudity in Ancient to Modern Cultures (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
Richard Heinberg &#13;
&amp;bull;	A Primitivist Critique of Civilization (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
Derrick Jensen &#13;
&amp;bull;	Abuse (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Abusers (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Civilization: Ongoing Holocausts (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Dismantle Globally, Renew Locally (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Hope (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Identity (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Nothing To Fear (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Premises Of Endgame (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Psychopathology (.pdf) &#13;
Theodore Kaczynski &#13;
&amp;bull;	Industrial Society and Its Future (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Ship of Fools (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
Richard B. Lee &#13;
&amp;bull;	What Hunters Do for a Living, or, How to Make Out on Scarce Resources (.pdf) &#13;
Carlos Marighella &#13;
&amp;bull;	Minimanual of the Urban Guerrilla (.pdf) &#13;
Jason McQuinn &#13;
&amp;bull;	Why I Am Not A Primitivist (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
John Moore &#13;
&amp;bull;	Beyond the Fragments: A Reaction to Industrial Civilization and Its Future (.rtf)(.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Comin\' Home: Defining Anarcho-Primitivism (.rtf)(.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	A Primitivist Primer (.rtf)(.odt) &#13;
Fredy Perlman &#13;
&amp;bull;	Against His-Story, Against Leviathan! (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	The Reproduction of Daily Life (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
Ran Prieur &#13;
&amp;bull;	Don\'t Fear The Singularity (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Science The Destroyer (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
Tamarack Song &#13;
&amp;bull;	The Old Way and Civilization (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
Robert David Steele &#13;
&amp;bull;	Takedown: Targets, Tools, &amp;amp; Technocracy (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
David Watson &#13;
&amp;bull;	Civilization In Bulk (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
James Woodburn &#13;
&amp;bull;	Egalitarian Societies (.rtf) (.odt) &#13;
John Zerzan &#13;
&amp;bull;	Against Civilization: Readings &amp;amp; Reflections (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Anarchy After September 11 (.rtf)(.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	The Case Against Art (.rtf)(.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Future Primitive And Other Essays (.rtf)(.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Language: Origin and Meaning(.rtf)(.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	No Way Out? (.rtf)(.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Number: Its Origin and Evolution (.rtf)(.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Time and Its Discontents (.rtf)(.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	What is Anarchism? (.rtf)(.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Who is Chomsky? (.rtf)(.odt) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Zerzan and Media: An Ignominious Tale (.rtf)(.odt) &#13;
Zines &#13;
&amp;bull;	An Activist\'s Guide to Basic First Aid (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Arson #1 (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Arson #2 (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	D.I.Y. Guide #1 (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	D.I.Y. Guide #2 (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Direct Action Survival Guide (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Dropping Out (For Students) (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Feral Forager (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Fertility Awareness For Non-Invasive Birth Control (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Fighting For Our Lives (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Foraging Wild Edibles Safely and Sustainably (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Green Anarchy #6 Cover: (.pdf) Issue Part 1: (.pdf) Issue Part 2: (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Green Anarchy #7 Cover: (.pdf) Issue Part 1: (.pdf) Issue Part 2: (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Green Anarchy #8 Cover: (.pdf) Issue Part 1: (.pdf) Issue Part 2: (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Green Anarchy #9 Cover: (.pdf) Issue Part 1: (.pdf) Issue Part 2: (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Green Anarchy #10 Cover: (.pdf) Issue: (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Green Anarchy #11 Cover: (.pdf) Issue Part 1: (.pdf) Issue Part 2: (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Green Anarchy #12 Cover: (.pdf) Issue Part 1: (.pdf) Issue Part 2: (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Green Anarchy #13 Cover: (.pdf) Issue Part 1: (.pdf) Issue Part 2: (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Green Anarchy #14 Cover: (.pdf) Issue Part 1: (.pdf) Issue Part 2: (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Green Anarchy #15 Issue Part 1: (.pdf) Issue Part 2: (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Green Anarchy #16 Cover: (.pdf) Issue Part 1: (.pdf) Issue Part 2: (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Green Anarchy #17 Cover: (.pdf) Issue: (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Green Anarchy #18 Cover: (.pdf) Issue: (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Green Anarchy #19 Cover: (.pdf) Issue: (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Harbinger #3 (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Harbinger #4 (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Harbinger #5 (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Herbs For Trauma (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	How To Hide Anything (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Hunter/Gatherer #1 (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Memories of Freedom (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	The Nighttime Gardener\'s Guide (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Rolling Thunder #1 (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Rolling Thunder #2 (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Rolling Thunder #3 (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Rolling Thunder #4 (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Security And Counter-Surveillance (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Security Culture: A Handbook for Activists (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Species Traitor #4 (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Squatter\'s Handbook: Political Squatting Tips (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	A Steampunk\'s Guide to the Apocalypse (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	Stop Paying For Shit: The College Edition (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	White Shark Tales (.pdf) &#13;
&amp;bull;	The Worst: A Compilation Zine on Grief and Loss (.pdf) &#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Acharya S - Zeitgeist - Christian Mythlogy - Jesus and Horus - Companion Guide.pdf&#13;
|-- Ahmed - The War on Freedom - How and Why America Was Attacked [911, WTC, Bush, neocons] (2002).pdf&#13;
|-- Albert - Liberating Theory [poor layout] (South End, 1986).pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Antipsychiatry&#13;
|   |-- Cleckley - The Mask of Sanity.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Farber - Madness, Heresy and The Rumor of Angels.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Foucault - Madness and civilization.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Laing - The Divided Self - An Existential Study in Sanity and Madness.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Pridmore - Madness of Psychiatry.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Szasz - Psychiatric Slavery.djvu&#13;
|   `-- Szasz - The Theology of Medicine.djvu&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Avrich - The Russian Anarchists.pdf&#13;
|-- Bamford - NSA - Body of Secrets - Anatomy of the Ultra-Secret National Security Agency [possibly unreliable] (2002).pdf&#13;
|-- Bertrand Russell - In Praise of Idleness (1932).html&#13;
|-- Bertrand Russell - Political Ideals (1917).pdf&#13;
|-- Bertrand Russell - Political Ideals (1917).txt&#13;
|-- Bertrand Russell - Proposed Roads To Freedom (1919).pdf&#13;
|-- Bertrand Russell - Proposed Roads To Freedom (1919).txt&#13;
|-- Bolz - The Counterterrorism Handbook - Tactics, Procedures and Techniques 2e (CRC, 2001).pdf&#13;
|-- Bregman - Israel\'s Wars 1947-1993 (Routledge, 2000).pdf&#13;
|-- Brown - Web of Debt - The Shocking Truth about our Money System 3e (Third Millenium, 2007).pdf&#13;
|-- Carlisle - Encyclopedia of Politics (Sage, 2005)&#13;
|   |-- Carlisle - Encyclopedia of Politics - The Left (Sage, 2005).pdf&#13;
|   `-- Carlisle - Encyclopedia of Politics - The Right (Sage, 2005).pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Chomsky Noam&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - 5 books.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - America\'s war on terror.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - An Open Media Book (9-11).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - An exchange on Manufacturing Consent 2002.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Anarchism &amp;amp; Marxism.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Class Warfare.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Confronting the Empire.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Democracy And Education.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Deterring Democracy.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Fateful Triangle - The United States, Israel and the Palestinians.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Hegemony or Survival - America\'s Quest for Global Dominance.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Imperial Ambitions.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Iraq is a Trial Run (04.02.2003).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Keeping The Rabble In Line (1994).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Liberating the Mind from Orthodoxies.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Manufacturing Consent - The Political Economy of Mass Media.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Market Democracy in a Neoliberal Order.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Media Control.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Necessary Illusions.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Nine Eleven (9-11).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - On Osama Bin Laden.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - On War in  Afganistan.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Philosophers and Public Philosophy.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Philosophy of Cognitive Science.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Pirates and Emperors, Old and New.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Powers and Prospects.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Preventive War - The Supreme Crime.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Profit over People.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Secrets Lies And Democracy.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - The Culture of Terrorism.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - The Iraq war and contempt for Democracy.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - The Propaganda System.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - The prosperous Few and the restless Many (1994).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Torturing Democracy.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Turning the Tide  U.S. intervention in Central America and the Struggle for Peace.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Understanding Power (2002).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - War Against People.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - What Makes Mainstream Media Mainstream.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - What Uncle Sam Really Wants.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - What the Linguist is Talking About.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Who are the Global Terrorists.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Chomsky - Year 501 The Conquest Continues.pdf&#13;
|   `-- Chomsky - You Are Being Lied To (The Disinformation Guide).pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Cook - The Long Sexual Revolution (Oxford, 2004).pdf&#13;
|-- Creveld - The Rise and Decline of the State (1999).pdf&#13;
|-- Crook - Revolutionary France 1788-1880 (Oxford, 2002).pdf&#13;
|-- Dasgupta - Economics - A Very Short Introduction.pdf&#13;
|-- Dawisha - Arab Nationalism in the 20th Century (Princeton, 2003).pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Dawkins Richard&#13;
|   |-- Dawkins - The God Delusion.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Dawkins - The Selfish Gene (1976).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Richard Dawkins - A Devil\'s Chaplain (2003).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Richard Dawkins - Extended Phenotype (2004).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Richard Dawkins - River Out Of Eden (1995).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Richard Dawkins - The Blind Watchmaker.pdf&#13;
|   `-- Richard Dawkins - Unweaving The Rainbow.pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Dissident Voice - Intellectual Cleansing I - Keeping the Media Safe for Big Business.html&#13;
|-- Dissident Voice - Intellectual Cleansing II - Jonathan Cook Responds.html&#13;
|-- Edward Bernays - Propaganda (1928).pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Emma Goldman&#13;
|   |-- EMMA GOLDMAN.gif&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - 1908 - What I Believe.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - 1909 - A New Declaration of Independence.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - 1910 - Anarchism  What It Really Stands For.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - 1911 - Francisco Ferrer and The Modern School.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - 1914 - Voltairine De Cleyre.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - 1917 - Address To The Jury.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - 1918 - The Truth About the Bolsheviki.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - 1923 - My Disillusionment in Russia.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - 1924 - My Further Disillusionment in Russia.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - 1931 - Living My Life.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - 1934 - Was My Life Worth Living.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - Anarchy Defended by Anarchists.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - Socialism Caught in the Political Trap.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Emma Goldman - The Social Importance of the Modern School.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Hippolyte Havel - 1911 - EMMA GOLDMAN (Biography).pdf&#13;
|   |-- aandofrontpiecesm.gif&#13;
|   |-- anarchism.jpg&#13;
|   `-- socsigdra.gif&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Federal Reserve - Modern Money Mechanics.pdf&#13;
|-- Feenberg - Transforming Technology - A Critical Theory Revisited (Oxford, 2002).pdf&#13;
|-- Flaschel - Macrodynamics of Capitalism - Synthesis of Marx, Keynes and Schumpeter 2e (Springer, 2009).pdf&#13;
|-- Fromm - Art of Loving [bw] (Harper, 1956).pdf&#13;
|-- Fromm - Haben oder Sein (1976).pdf&#13;
|-- Fromm - Marx\'s Concept of Man [poor layout] (1961).pdf&#13;
|-- Fromm - The Art of Loving [dp, no ocr] (1957).pdf&#13;
|-- Fromm - To Have or To Be (Continuum, 1976).pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Ganser - NATO\'s Secret Armies - Operation Gladio and Terrorism in Western Europe (2005).pdf&#13;
|-- Guerin - Anarchism - From Theory to Practice (1970).pdf&#13;
|-- Hahnel - ABCs of Political Economy - Modern Primer.pdf&#13;
|-- Heller - Bojite se socialismu (Periskop, 2007).pdf&#13;
|-- Illich - Deschooling Society [html] (1970).pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Karl Marx and Marxism&#13;
|   |-- Albritton - New Dialectics and Political Economy (Palgrave, 2004).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Blakeley - Marx and Other Four-Letter Words (Pluto, 2005).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Carver - The Cambridge Companion to Marx (1991).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Collier - Marx - Beginner\'s Guide (Oneworld, 2004).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Fine - Marx\'s Capital 4e (Pluto, 2004).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Glasser - Twentieth Century Marxism - Global Introduction (Routledge, 2007).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Hollander - The Economics of Karl Marx - Analysis and Application (Cambridge, 2008).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Hutnyk - Bad Marxism - Capitalism and Cultural Studies (Pluto, 2004).pdf&#13;
|   |-- LeBaron - Mao, Marx and The Market (Wiley, 2002).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marx - Capital Vol 1.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marx - Capital Vol 2.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marx - Capital Vol 3.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marx - Communist Manifesto.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marx - Grundrisse.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marx - The Civil War in France.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marx - The Class Struggle in France.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marx - Wage Labour and Capital.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Musto - Karl Marx\'s Grundrisse - Foundations (Routledge, 2008).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Newman - Socialism - Very Short Introduction (Oxford, 2005).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Resnick - New Departures in Marxian Theory (Routledge, 2006).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Rosa Luxemburg - The Accumulation of Capital (Routledge, 1913,2003).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Singer - Marx - Very Short Introduction (Oxford, 1980).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Thomas - Marxism and Scientific Socialism (Routledge, 2008).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Uchida - Marx for the 21st Century (Routledge, 2006).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Walker - Historical Dictionary of Marxism (Scarecrow, 2007).pdf&#13;
|   `-- Wolfenstein - Psychoanalytic-Marxism Groundwork [dp,bw] (Free Association, 1993).pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Kelly - Political Philosophy of Michel Foucault (Taylor, 2009).pdf&#13;
|-- Kinna - Anarchism - A Beginner\'s Guide (Oneworld, 2005).pdf&#13;
|-- Knight - The Kennedy Assassination (Edinburgh, 2007).pdf&#13;
|-- Konner - The Atheist\'s Bible.pdf&#13;
|-- Laing - The Divided Self - An Existential Study in Sanity and Madness.pdf&#13;
|-- Le Bon - The Crowd - A Study of the Popular Mind (1895,2002).pdf&#13;
|-- Lippmann - Public Opinion (1921).txt&#13;
|-- Lynd - Wobblies and Zapatistas - Conversations on Anarchism, Marxism and Radical History (PM, 2008).pdf&#13;
|-- Macrakis - Seduced by Secrets - Inside the Stasi\'s Spy-Tech World (Cambridge, 2008).pdf&#13;
|-- Maga - The 1960s - Eyewitness History (Infobase, 2003).pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Marcuse Herbert&#13;
|   |-- Feenberg - Essential Marcuse - Introduction - Critical Theory of Herbert Marcuse (2007).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marcuse - Aggressiveness in Advanced Industrial Society (1967).html&#13;
|   |-- Marcuse - An Essay on Liberation (Beacon, 1969).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marcuse - Collected Papers I - Technology, War and Fascism (Routledge, 1998).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marcuse - Collected Papers II - Towards a Critical Theory of Society (Routledge, 2001).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marcuse - Heideggerian Marxism (Nebraska, 2005).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marcuse - Liberation from the Affluent Society (1967, Lecture in London).html&#13;
|   |-- Marcuse - One-Dimensional Man [html, ocr errors] (1964).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Marcuse - Repressive Tolerance (1965).html&#13;
|   |-- Marcuse - Soviet Marxism - A Critical Analysis (Columbia, 1958).pdf&#13;
|   `-- Marcuse - The End of Utopia (1967).html&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Marshall - Demanding the Impossible - History of Anarchism (Harper, 2008).pdf&#13;
|-- Maschke - The Lie Behind the Lie Detector 4e (antipolygraph.org, 2005).pdf&#13;
|-- McFadden - On the Federal Reserve (Congressional Record, 1934).html&#13;
|-- McKibben - Deep Economy - Economics As If the World Mattered (Oneworld, 2007).pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Mikhail Bakunin&#13;
|   |-- Aldred, Guy A. - Michel Bakunin, Communist.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - God and the State.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - Integral Education 2.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - Integral Education.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - Marxism Freedom and the State.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - Power Corrupts The Best.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - Revolutionary Catechism.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - Rousseau\'s Theory of the State.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - Selected writings.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - Stateless Socialism = Anarchism.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - THE CAPITALIST SYSTEM.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - The Commune, the Church &amp;amp; The State.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - The Immorality of the State.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - The Organization of the International.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - The Paris Commune and the Idea of the State.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - The Policy of The International.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Bakunin - Where i stand.pdf&#13;
|   |-- J. M. W. - Mikhail Bakunin (The Torch of Anarchy).pdf&#13;
|   |-- bakunin.gif&#13;
|   |-- bakuninhunt.jpg&#13;
|   |-- bakuninper.jpg&#13;
|   `-- bakuninphoto.jpg&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Miller - From Difficult to Disturbed - Understanding and Managing Dysfunctional Employees (AMACOM, 2008).pdf&#13;
|-- Miller - Political Philosophy - A Very Short Introduction.pdf&#13;
|-- Minogue - Politics - A Very Short Introduction.pdf&#13;
|-- Mises - Theory of Money and Credit (1912).pdf&#13;
|-- Newman - Socialism - A Very Short Introduction.pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Orwell George&#13;
|   |-- 1933 - Down And Out In Paris And London&#13;
|   |   `-- Down And Out In Paris And London.txt&#13;
|   |-- 1934 - Burmese Days&#13;
|   |   `-- Burmese Days.txt&#13;
|   |-- 1935 - A Clergyman\'s Daughter&#13;
|   |   `-- A Clergyman\'s Daughter.txt&#13;
|   |-- 1936 - Keep the Apidistra Flying&#13;
|   |   `-- Keep The Apidistra Flying.txt&#13;
|   |-- 1937 - The Road To Wigan Pier&#13;
|   |   `-- The Road To Wigan Pier.txt&#13;
|   |-- 1938 - Homage To Catalonia&#13;
|   |   `-- Homage To Catalonia.txt&#13;
|   |-- 1939 - Coming Up For Air&#13;
|   |   `-- Coming Up For Air.txt&#13;
|   |-- 1945 - Animal Farm&#13;
|   |   `-- Animal Farm.txt&#13;
|   |-- 1949 - Nineteen Eighty-Four&#13;
|   |   `-- 1984.txt&#13;
|   |-- George Orwell - 1984.pdf&#13;
|   `-- Miscellaneous Essays&#13;
|       |-- 1931 - A Hanging.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1931 - The Spike.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1936 - Bookshop Memories.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1936 - Shooting An Elephant.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1937 - Spilling The Spanish Beans.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1939 - Marrakech.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1940 - Boys\' Weeklies And Frank Richards\'s Reply.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1940 - Charles Dickens.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1940 - Charles Reade.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1940 - Inside The Whale.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1941 - The Art Of Donald McGill.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1941 - The Lion And The Unicorn - Socialism And The English Genius.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1941 - Wells, Hitler, And The World State.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1942 - Looking Back On The Spanish War.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1942 - Rudyard Kipling.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1943 - Mark Twain - The Licensed Jester.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1943 - Poetry And The Microphone.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1943 - W B Yeats.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1944 - Arthur Koestler.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1944 - Benefit Of Clergy - Some Notes On Salvador Dali.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1944 - Raffles And Miss Blandish.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1945 - Antisemitism In Britain.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1945 - Freedom Of The Park.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1945 - Future Of A Ruined Germany.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1945 - Good Bad Books.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1945 - In Defence Of P. G. Wodehouse.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1945 - Nonsense Poetry.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1945 - Notes On Nationalism.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1945 - Revenge Is Sour.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1945 - The Sporting Spirit.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1945 - You And The Atomic Bomb.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - A Good Word For The Vicar Of Bray.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - A Nice Cup Of Tea.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - Books Vs. Cigarettes.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - Confessions Of A Book Reviewer.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - Decline Of The English Murder.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - How The Poor Die.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - James Burnham And The Managerial Revolution (Second Thoughts On Burnham).txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - Pleasure Spots.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - Politics Vs. Literature - An Examination Of Gulliver\'s Travels.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - Politics and the English Language.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - Riding Down From Bangor.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - Some Thoughts On The Common Toad.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - The Prevention Of Literature.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1946 - Why I Write.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1947 - Lear, Tolstoy, And The Fool.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1948 - Writers And Leviathan.txt&#13;
|       |-- 1949 - Reflections On Gandhi.txt&#13;
|       `-- 1952 - Such, Such Were The Joys.txt&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Passmore - Fascism - A Very Short Introduction.pdf&#13;
|-- Perkins - Confessions of an Economic Hitman (BK, 2004).pdf&#13;
|-- Perlman - Manufacturing Discontent - The Trap of Individualism in Corporate Society (Pluto, 2005).pdf&#13;
|-- Peter Kropotkin - The Anarchist Prince&#13;
|   |-- Anarchism - 1910 - from The Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1910.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Peter Kropotkin - 1880 - The Commune of Paris.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Peter Kropotkin - 1880 - The Spirit of Revolt.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Peter Kropotkin - 1890 - Brain Work and Manual Work.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Peter Kropotkin - 1892 - Revolutionary Studies.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Peter Kropotkin - 1898 - Anarchism its philosophy and ideal.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Peter Kropotkin - 1901 - Communism and Anarchy.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Peter Kropotkin - 1913 - The Coming War.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Peter Kropotkin - 1920 - The Wage System.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Peter Kropotkin - Anarchist Morality.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Peter Kropotkin - On Order.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Peter Kropotkin - The Place of Anarchism in Socialistic Evolution.pdf&#13;
|   |-- anarchism.jpg&#13;
|   |-- kropotkin3.gif&#13;
|   |-- memfront.jpg&#13;
|   `-- szabl032.jpg&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Pierre-Joseph Proudhon&#13;
|   |-- 180px-Hw-proudhon.jpg&#13;
|   |-- D.W. Brogan - 1934 - Proudhon.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Proudhon - 1840 - What is Property.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Proudhon - 1845 - Interest and Principal (letters).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Proudhon - 1846 - The Philosophy of Misery.pdf&#13;
|   |-- anarchism.jpg&#13;
|   |-- proudhon.gif&#13;
|   `-- proudhon3.gif&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Piper - Final Judgment - The Missing Link in the JFK Assassination Conspiracy 6e [Kennedy] (AFP, 2004).pdf&#13;
|-- Prouty - Secret Team - The CIA and Its Allies in Control of the United States and the World (1973).pdf&#13;
|-- RAND - Deterrence - From Cold War to Long War (2008).pdf&#13;
|-- Rapport - 1848 - Year of Revolution (Basic Books, 2008).pdf&#13;
|-- Reed - The Art of Protest (Minnesota, 2005).pdf&#13;
|-- Roncaglia - The Wealth of Ideas - A History of Economic Thought (Cambridge, 2005).pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Rothbard Murray&#13;
|   |-- America\'s Great Depression - Rothbard.pdf&#13;
|   |-- For a New Liberty - Rothbard.pdf&#13;
|   |-- History Of Money And Banking In The United States - Rothbard.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Making Economic Sense - Rothbard.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Man Economy and State - Rothbard.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Power And Market Government And The Economy - Rothbard.pdf&#13;
|   |-- Rothbard - The Case Against the Federal Reserve.pdf&#13;
|   |-- The Anatomy of the State - Rothbard.pdf&#13;
|   |-- The Ethics of Liberty - Rothbard.pdf&#13;
|   |-- The Mystery Of Banking - Rothbard.pdf&#13;
|   `-- What has Government done to our Money - Rothbard.pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Ruppert - Crossing the Rubicon - The Decline of the American Empire (New Society, 2004).pdf&#13;
|-- Sherratt - Adorno\'s Positive Dialectic (Cambridge, 2002).pdf&#13;
|-- Smail - Power, Responsibility and Freedom - Internet Publication (2005).pdf&#13;
|-- Smith - Red Barcelona - Social Protest and Labour Mobilization in the 20th Century (Routledge, 2002).pdf&#13;
|-- Stackelberg - Routledge Companion to Nazi Germany (2007).pdf&#13;
|-- Stone - Prime Green - Remembering the Sixties (2007).pdf&#13;
|-- Tarpley - 911 Synthetic Terrorism Made in USA (2004).pdf&#13;
|-- Tarpley - Barack H. Obama - The Unauthorized Biography (Progressive, 2008).pdf&#13;
|-- Tarpley - George Bush - The Unauthorized Biography.pdf&#13;
|-- Tarpley - Surviving the Cataclysm - Your Guide Through the Greatest Financial Crisis in Human History (1999).pdf&#13;
|-- Tawney - The Acquisitive Society (1921).pdf&#13;
|-- Thrift - Knowing Capitalism (Sage, 2005).pdf&#13;
|-- Tietje - Is Lookism Unjust (Journal of Libertarian Studies vol. 19-2, 2005).pdf&#13;
|-- US Government - 911 Commission Report.pdf&#13;
|-- Vail - A Theory of Power (iUniverse, 2004).pdf&#13;
|-- Vance Packard - The Hidden Persuaders (IG, 1957,2007).pdf&#13;
|-- Veblen - The Theory of the Leisure Class (Oxford, 1899,2007).pdf&#13;
|-- Voegelin - From Enlightenment to Revolution (Duke, 1975).pdf&#13;
|-- Ward - Anarchism - A Very Short Introduction.pdf&#13;
|-- Wilkinson - International Relations - A Very Short Introduction.pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
|-- Zerzan John&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - Against Civilization - Readings and Reflections (1999).pdf&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - Agriculture.html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - Future Primitive.html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - Globalization and Its Apologists.html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - No Way Out (2003).html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - Number - Its Origin and Evolution.html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - Patriarchy, Civilization, and the Origins of Gender.html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - Running on Emptiness - The Failure of Symbolic Thought.html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - Seize the Day (2006).html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - The Mass Psychology of Misery.html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - The Modern Anti-World.html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - The Origins of War.html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - Time and Its Discontents.html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - Too Marvelous for Words.html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - Twilight of the Machines.html&#13;
|   |-- Zerzan - We Have To Dismantle All This.html&#13;
|   `-- Zerzan - Why Primitivism.html&#13;
`-- Zinn - People\'s History of the United States (Harper, 2003).pdf&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
AND OTHER ARTICLES&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
visit:&#13;
&#13;
http://anticivnet.blogspot.com/&#13;
&#13;
http://www.greenanarchy.org/&#13;
&#13;
http://www.greenanarchy.info/&lt;br /&gt; &lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Seeders: &lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt;0&lt;br /&gt; &lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Leeches: &lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt;13</description>
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    <title>FRONTLINE - Boogie Man-The Lee Atwater Story</title>
    <link>http://onebigtorrent.org/details.php?id=4250</link>
    <description>&lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Category:&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt; Documentary&lt;br /&gt;&lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Description:&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/font&gt; In 1989, Lee Atwater was a political rock star. After masterminding George H.W. Bush's presidential victory over Michael Dukakis, the colorful, blues guitar-playing Atwater was relishing his new role as chairman of the Republican National Committee as he redefined the role of the political operative. &#13;
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Two years later, the political strategist would be dead from a brain tumor at the age of 40, cast aside by the Washington power players he'd helped create and wracked with remorse for the tactics he'd employed in his political ascent. &#13;
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In Boogie Man: The Lee Atwater Story, producer Stefan Forbes reveals new information about the meteoric rise and tragic demise of a man both admired and reviled for the controversial, sometimes racially-charged political tactics that helped elect George H.W. Bush president and inspired prot&amp;eacute;g&amp;eacute;s such as Karl Rove. Through a wealth of compelling, never-before-seen footage and photos, as well as interviews with boyhood friends, elite Republican strategists and political adversaries, the documentary examines Atwater's impact on the way modern political campaigns are waged. &#13;
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&amp;quot;[Lee Atwater] mattered in American politics,&amp;quot; Newsweek political writer Howard Fineman says, &amp;quot;because of the man he got elected, because of the party he shaped. He was very important not only to George H.W.'s victory, but to his son's victory.&amp;quot; &#13;
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Boogie Man traces Atwater's rise from his early days masterminding political victories in South Carolina. Among his triumphs was a fiercely contested battle for chairman of the College Republicans between Karl Rove and Robert Edgeworth. Rove lost, but Atwater mounted an appeal of Edgeworth's victory. The contest was ultimately decided by then Republican National Committee chairman George H.W. Bush, who gave the election to Rove. &#13;
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&amp;quot;That was a pretty early lesson for Karl Rove from Lee,&amp;quot; says Joe Conason of The Nation and Salon.com, &amp;quot;that you could play the hardest of hardball and get away with it.&amp;quot; &#13;
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Boogie Man recounts how fellow South Carolinian Sen. Strom Thurmond took an interest in Atwater, tutoring him in the use of highly emotional wedge issues such as abortion and crime that would help Republicans win over disaffected working class voters to a largely pro-business agenda. Says Atwater intimate Tucker Eskew, &amp;quot;Resentment became the future of the Republican Party.&amp;quot; In the documentary, viewers hear from numerous journalists and politicians who say Atwater's use of scurrilous rumors, push polls and other dirty tricks propelled him onto the national scene, where he became assistant to Ed Rollins, campaign manager for Ronald Reagan's 1984 re-election bid. &#13;
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&amp;quot;A lot of people told me he wouldn't be loyal to me, told me not to pick him,&amp;quot; Rollins says. &amp;quot;I admired his work ethic.&amp;quot; &#13;
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Not long after, Rollins says, Atwater arranged what turned out to be an ambush media interview, in which Rollins was accused of running a dirty-tricks campaign against the Democratic vice presidential candidate, Geraldine Ferraro. &#13;
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&amp;quot;Lee had put a spear in my back,&amp;quot; Rollins says. &amp;quot;It was just a two-year effort to destroy me. He wanted to run Bush's [presidential] campaign.&amp;quot; &#13;
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Boogie Man takes viewers behind the scenes of the contentious 1988 campaign, remembered for the infamous &amp;quot;Willie Horton&amp;quot; ad, which portrayed Mass. Gov. Michael Dukakis as soft on crime and easy on rapists and murderers. Among the film's revelations is Republican operative Roger Stone's account that, while he was running the Bush campaign, Atwater said he had secretly arranged financing for the Horton ad. &amp;quot;[Atwater] locked the office door,&amp;quot; says Stone, &amp;quot;and he popped the famous Willie Horton spot onto a television. He said, 'I got a couple boys who are going to put up a couple million dollars for this independent.' And I said, 'That's a huge mistake.'&amp;quot; &#13;
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After Atwater was diagnosed with a brain tumor in 1990, some of his closest friends say that, terrified he was going to hell, he embarked on a desperate search for redemption. &amp;quot;Lee really was confronting some very troubling facts,&amp;quot; says Eskew, &amp;quot;that in winning he had hurt people. Fear had been part of his toolkit. That fear came back on him.&amp;quot; But producer Stefan Forbes notes that his reporting reveals a more nuanced story than media accounts of Atwater's remorseful apologies for his tactics. &amp;quot;Lee apologized directly to some of the people he'd hurt,&amp;quot; says Forbes, &amp;quot;but never criticized the GOP, or even disavowed negative campaigning. And his vision of politics as war would continue to affect a new generation of GOP politicians and operatives.&amp;quot; &#13;
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Eskew says Atwater knew how to control media narratives. &amp;quot;Now it's kind of rote in politics, but Lee was saying early: Perception is reality. He was ahead of his time.&amp;quot; &#13;
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&amp;quot;Atwater had a genius for the sticky issue -- simple enough, scary enough that the media could latch onto it,&amp;quot; Conason says. &amp;quot;[George] W. learned that the only thing that really matters is who wins.&amp;quot; &#13;
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While some argue that Atwater's political successes resulted solely from dirty tricks and a win-at-any-cost mentality, former colleagues say that view is an oversimplification. They explain in Boogie Man how Atwater's keen attention to the concerns of middle-class Americans helped him identify issues to which his Democratic opponents were often tone deaf. &#13;
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&amp;quot;It's so much easier to blame dirty tricks than it is to acknowledge hard work,&amp;quot; says Eskew. &amp;quot;Did he give his opponents ammunition to criticize him for negative tactics? Yes. Does that obscure the fact that he outfoxed them at nearly every turn? Not to those of us watching closely.&amp;quot; &#13;
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Former colleague and conservative commentator Mary Matalin agrees. &amp;quot;They had to kill the messenger because they couldn't kill the message,&amp;quot; she says of Atwater's critics. &amp;quot;They had to turn him into the boogie man -- Satan incarnate.&amp;quot; &#13;
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&amp;quot;Lee Atwater made himself a figure of demonology to psych out his opponents and anesthetize people to his tactics,&amp;quot; says Howard Fineman. &amp;quot;And the sad part -- some people would say the justified part -- was that the role that he made for himself literally ended up imprisoning him.&amp;quot; &#13;
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81 mins.&lt;br /&gt; &lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Seeders: &lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt;0&lt;br /&gt; &lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Leeches: &lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt;1</description>
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  <item rdf:about="http://onebigtorrent.org/details.php?id=4105">
    <title>A Huey P. Newton Story</title>
    <link>http://onebigtorrent.org/details.php?id=4105</link>
    <description>&lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Category:&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt; Documentary&lt;br /&gt;&lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Description:&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/font&gt; &#13;
A Huey P. Newton Story&#13;
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Robert G. Smith becomes Huey Newton: the chain smoking hyper active monologue master. He also shows that Newton was not just some slogan spitting radical: he was funny as hell. And when he spoke of revolution, it was with brilliance, passion and clarity. But never was it boring. He could have you in hysterics and furious indignation at the same time. Smith's performance is mesmerizing. It is also woefully under rated. He brings to life a portrayal of Huey not as a martyr or a joke. He shows Huey as a real human being with real weaknesses. A genius junkie who at one point had much of white America in fear because Huey (and the Panthers) represented the antithesis of the MLK approach. To Huey, if they shoot at you, you shoot right back, because dignity means standing up for what you believe, and human rights are inalienable rights to protect or attain by any means necessary.&#13;
&#13;
 http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0278490/	&lt;br /&gt; &lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Seeders: &lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt;1&lt;br /&gt; &lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Leeches: &lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt;2</description>
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  <item rdf:about="http://onebigtorrent.org/details.php?id=4035">
    <title>PBS Special - Stress, Portrait of a Killer (2008. 09 24 HDTV.SoS).avi</title>
    <link>http://onebigtorrent.org/details.php?id=4035</link>
    <description>&lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Category:&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt; Documentary&lt;br /&gt;&lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Description:&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/font&gt; PBS Special - Stress, Portrait of a Killer (2008. 09 24 HDTV.SoS).avi &#13;
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Size: 698 MB &#13;
Runtime: 56:04 &#13;
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Originally aired: 2008.09.24 &#13;
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"The stress response: in the beginning it saved our lives, making us run from predators and enabling us to take down prey. Today, human beings are turning on the same life-saving physical reaction to cope with 30-year mortgages, $4 a gallon gasoline, final exams, difficult bosses and even traffic jams — we can't seem to turn it off. So, we're constantly marinating in corrosive hormones triggered by the stress response. Now, scientists are showing just how measurable — and dangerous — prolonged exposure to stress can be. Stanford University neurobiologist, MacArthur "genius" grant recipient, and renowned author Robert Sapolsky reveals new answers to why and how chronic stress is threatening our lives in 'Stress: Portrait of a Killer'. &#13;
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In this revelatory film, discoveries occur in an extraordinary range of places, from baboon troops on the plains of East Africa to the office cubes of government bureaucrats in London to neuroscience labs at the nation's leading research universities. Groundbreaking research reveals surprising facts about the impact of stress on our bodies: how it can shrink our brains, add fat to our bellies and even unravel our chromosomes. Understanding how stress works can help us figure out ways to combat it and mitigate negative impacts on our health. Scientists from the University of North Carolina, the University of London, Rockefeller University and the University of California, San Francisco share their compelling insights into how stress impacts the body, giving stress a new relevance and urgency to our increasingly complex lives." &#13;
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more info: http://www.pbs.org/stress/ &#13;
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Source: OTA High Definition 1080i &#13;
Encoding: xvid.720x400.1593kbps.mp3.160.vbr &#13;
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Support your local PBS Station by making a contribution or by purchasing their DVDs. To help speed up future releases, please try to seed this torrent as much as possible. Thanks. &#13;
== &#13;
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  <item rdf:about="http://onebigtorrent.org/details.php?id=3816">
    <title>The Genius of Charles Darwin (with Richard Dawkins) Pt. 3/3 2008 08 18 ( Ch.4) </title>
    <link>http://onebigtorrent.org/details.php?id=3816</link>
    <description>&lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Category:&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/font&gt; Documentary&lt;br /&gt;&lt;font size="3"&gt;&lt;b&gt;Description:&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/font&gt; The Genius of Charles Darwin (with Richard Dawkins)  Pt. 3/3 2008 08 18 ( Ch.4) &#13;
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47 mins &#13;
350 mgs &#13;
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http://www.channel4.com/science/microsites/F/fa...series/prog3.html &#13;
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&#13;
Richard Dawkins on natural selection, creationism and intelligent design &#13;
In this final episode Dawkins examines why Darwin's theory remains one of the most controversial ideas in history. &#13;
&#13;
As Darwin set out on the voyage on the Beagle he still believed that god created the world and everything in it. But the evidence he discovered - fossils, patterns of anatomical resemblance, startling similarities of embryos and domestic breeding - demonstrated the truth: that all life forms vary and that some are more likely to reproduce, passing variations on. His wife Emma, however, was deeply religious and Darwin never criticised religion in public but he believed that &amp;quot;science would bring about a gradual illumination of minds&amp;quot;. &#13;
&#13;
Today, Dawkins argues, science has the evidence to prove that evolution is true. Modern discovery of the DNA code which links all life has added to the mountain of evidence showing that evolution is a fact. So why, he wonders as he meets creationists in America, is opposition to evolution more aggressive than ever? &#13;
&#13;
Dawkins is also concerned that back in the UK teaching evolution has become a hugely sensitive issue for science teachers: &amp;quot;This is multicultural Britain. And one of its fault lines runs straight through our children's classrooms. How do we reconcile scientific truth with the deeply held convictions that bind religious communities?&amp;quot; &#13;
&#13;
Returning to the school he visited in episode one, Dawkins confronts the science teachers and challenges their view that they &amp;quot;can't get in to the business of knocking down kid's religions and the religions of families.&amp;quot; &amp;quot;There really is&amp;quot;, he says, &amp;quot;something special about scientific evidence. Science works; planes fly. Magic carpets and broomsticks don't. Gravity isn't a version of the truth; it is the truth. Anybody who doubts it is invited to jump out of a tenth floor window. Evolution too, is reality.&amp;quot; &#13;
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This equivocation, Dawkins says, began with the Church of England who, rather than attack Darwin, embraced him in a &amp;quot;comfortable relativist fudge&amp;quot;. So he meets the Archbishop of Canterbury to ask how he reconciles Darwin and the laws of physics with the miracles described in the bible. &#13;
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Finally, Dawkins travels to meet an old friend, Dan Dennett, who shares many of his own beliefs, to answer the question Darwin himself was confronted with: how can we find solace in a godless world? &#13;
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shunster &#13;
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