Amistad – a ship of kidnapped Africans destined for slavery rebel against their owners on board the ship transporting them from market to the plantation, but are re-captured and several people claim ownership. After several trials which the slaves win but are appealed, and a defence speech that lasted two days from former President John Quincy Adams, the Africans eventually gain their freedom.
Amazing Grace – the story of William Wilberforce and the struggle to get slavery abolished in the British Empire. How anyone, after watching this, can be proud of being British is beyond me. The British East India Company, The Royal African Trading Company, The South Sea Company and our royal family at the time all contributed to making Great Britain the greatest slave trading nation in the world. Puke!
8mm – Nicholas Cage plays a private investigator hired to find out the authenticity and origin of an apparent snuff film, which was found among the belongings of a recently deceased very wealthy man of British origin. Cage descends into the sexually depraved underground of American society to uncover a sick tale of murder and sexual exploitation, and turns from family man into vengeful murderer.
These films are not my favourites because they reveal the sick side of the human race, the side that the New World Order want introduced to mainstream society in a very, very big way, because they are sick of it going on behind their closed doors. However both Amazing Grace and Amistad show that these sick activities can be beaten if we put our minds to it and try.
8MM is perhaps the most relevant today with the news regarding Madeleine McCann’s apparent ordered kidnap for a Belgian paedophile network, which when investigated in the 1990’s led to revelations of orgies, black masses and satanic ritual sacrifices involving the so-called elite of society. The way the Portuguese authorities tried to pin the disappearance of Madeleine on her parents, together with the reluctance of the Jersey police to open a murder inquiry into the Haut de la Garenne, indicates that this network is at least European, but probably global, and can influence government investigations.
What is it about Portugal? It started the trans-Atlantic slave trade, and is now considered to be the worst place to take your children for a holiday.
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