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The Fool (II) (2018 Video)
10/10
God uses the foolish things of the world to teach the wise
28 August 2018
Great movie! It was good to see how God is working through this flawed man, Ray Comfort. It makes me think God can esven use this flawed person: me! I hope atheists around the worpent view this. spent most of my life as an atheiist, but I married a born-again Christian and he gave me the Are you a good person? quiz that Comfort put out. A few years after that, I was convicted of my many sins and cried out to God for mercy. My life had never been the same since! Thanks Ray Comfort!
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The Atheist Delusion (2016 Video)
10/10
Great movie!
23 October 2016
The love and caring that Ray Comfort shows to atheists is amazing! Watch this movie, even if you're only doing it to blast it. It will give you a lot to think about :) DNA is the smoking gun for creationism. I thought it was really interesting, though, that it was the moral arguments that had more effect on people than the intellectual arguments did. I guess the conviction of the spirit must work on the heart rather than the mind. I hope that many atheists watch the movie and are moved by it, because eternity is a really really long time to be mistaken. Our God is full of love and mercy. Read the Bible and talk to Him, and you'll find out for yourself!
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Audacity (2015)
10/10
Audacity couldn't have come at a better time.
13 July 2015
Ray Comfort brings a message that people desperately need to hear now: that we are all sinners, that God sends unrepentant sinners to hell, but that God loved people so much, He sent His only Son to earth to pay the penalty for our sins, the penalty of death. This movie brings hope to those destined to spend an eternity in the lake of fire: that is, everyone who rejects Jesus' substitutionary death and resurrection. Put your trust in Jesus today!

I liked the action and suspense in the movie. There was a twist in it I didn't expect. My husband and I have a blast watching it. The message was presented in a loving way and was right on target for the times we are living it. Give it a try, great movie!
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10/10
Review from Keene Free Press
18 April 2006
Hundreds turn out for screening of Aaron Russo's "America: From Freedom to Fascism" By Kat Dillon About 300 people attended the We the People Foundation (http://givemeliberty.org) screening of Aaron Russo's new movie, "America: From Freedom to Fascism" in Londonderry on Sunday March 26th. Russo's movie delved into a wide array of subjects, from the Federal Reserve system, lack of accountability from Fort Knox gold reserves, the legality of the Federal Income Tax, IRS abuses of the innocent, lack of constitutional restraint, similarities of the US to a police state, The New World Order, the upcoming National ID Card, to abuses of Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) technology.

The film's impetus was the Truth-in-Taxation Movement's claim that the Federal Income Tax does not apply to most people living and working in American. The We the People Foundation has been asking the government a simple question, "Where is the law that says average Americans have to pay taxes on their wages?" Easy question, right? But since 2002, the Federal Government and the IRS have refused to answer this straightforward question. The Supreme Court has ruled that the 16th Amendment did not confer to the government any new taxation powers (Stanton v. Baltic Mining Co.) The movie points to lower court judges blatantly refusing to allow this Supreme Court decision be entered into evidence in trials of tax resisters. Ex-IRS Commissioner Sheldon Cohen ended the interview when asked about this Supreme Court decision, rather than answer Russo's questions about it.

The issue of the Federal Reserve has surprises for even those familiar with the subject. In 1913, the power allotted to Congress to coin money was handed over to a private group of banks otherwise known as the Federal Reserve. Author Franklin Saunders asks, "Why have we given a monopoly of creating money out of thin air to a private corporation?" That the public is not allowed to even know what banks are a part of the Federal Reserve is driven home by author Michael Ruppert. Toward the end of the movie, it is revealed that there has not been an accounting of the gold in Fort Knox in recent history.

In an interview with Congressman Ron Paul of Texas, Paul states, "You have to get permission for almost everything. If that's a definition of a police state, that you can't do anything unless the government gives you permission, we're well on our way." Dramatic footage brings the police state into focus with a Florida woman being repeatedly tasered to her pitiful screams of pain. Her crime? Driving with a suspended license. Another woman is tasered while huddled on the ground. She had been protesting.

Programmer Clinton Eugene Curtis is questioned at a hearing about programs for the new electronic voting machines, "Mr. Curtis, are there programs that can be used to fix elections?" Curtis replies with a definitive, "Yes." And when asked if he thought the Ohio presidential election in 2004 was rigged, he said that it appeared to have been.

New Hampshire activist and Spychips author Katherine Albrecht is interviewed in the movie about the dangers of RFID technology. She paints a frightening picture of our every move, our every purchase being tracked by the government in the near future. With the use of RFID in money, you could not make purchases with regular money without the approval or knowledge of the government. To be a political dissident would be a condemnation to live completely outside normal society.

At the end of the movie, Russo poses the very apt question, "What are you going to do about it?" He first poses the idea of civil disobedience, a great suggestion, which I think he should have stuck with. The movie screams for revolt. But he dilutes the whole message of the movie by then suggesting electing people who will not do these horrible things to us, even after making it clear that the elections are rigged. He would have done well to stick with the idea of non-violent, non-cooperation in the tradition of Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr. I wonder if Mr. Russo realizes the power of such action. It cannot be ignored, and puts pressure on everyone to act. It is feared by government more than any other means of resistance, for good reason. They must have our consent to enslave us. They are too few, and we too many for it to be otherwise.

You can view a preview of the movie online at http://www.freedomtofascism.com/. Russo plans to release the movie to theaters this summer.
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5/10
An emotional experience
11 August 2005
This movie takes you to incredible highs and the lowest of lows. It's exhausting! There are scenes of unbelievable beauty interspersed with completely revolting scenes. The scene with the young boy singing in the kitchen is certainly one of the most touching things I've seen in the cinema ever. I won't spoil the "fun" by talking about any of the disgusting scenes.

This is the only movie I've seen that made me physically sick to my stomach, and I think it had more to do with the ups and downs of the movie, rather than just the revolting scenes. Somehow I managed to now throw up in the theater. I'll certainly never forget this one.
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