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#kevin sanders
mercymccann · 9 months
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MECHAT friend referral code: VR-G5N-YZN
COMMENT YOUR FRIEND CODE SO I CAN SEND YOU 30 DIAMONDS 💎💎💎
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evil-wawe-form · 2 years
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thefailurecult · 2 years
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honkhonk-ducky · 2 months
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Me: "I don't think I have a type when it comes to favourite characters..."
My Favourite Characters:
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In order:
- Michael (The Magnus Archives)
- Needles (The Magnus Protocol)
- Kevin (Welcome to Night Vale)
- Bill Cipher (Gravity Falls)
- Funtime Freddy (FNAF: Sister Location)
- Caine (The Amazing Digital Circus)
- Remus (Sanders Sides)
- Archangel Gabriel (Supernatural)
- Kokichi Ouma (Danganronpa V3: Killing Harmony)
- Nagito Komaeda (Danganronpa 2: Goodbye Despair)
- Douma (Demon Slayer)
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admireforever · 2 months
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Moonlight
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iasikaijutopia · 1 year
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My favourite crime men 🥰
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90smovies · 1 year
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mylegendaryicons · 7 months
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brokehorrorfan · 9 months
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The Girl from Rio will be released on 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray on September 26 via Blue Underground. The 1969 sci-fi/action spy movie is a loose sequel to 1967's The Million Eyes of Sumuru.
Jess Franco (Vampyros Lesbos, A Virgin Among the Living Dead) directs from a script by Harry Alan Towers (The Mangler). Shirley Eaton, Richard Wyler, George Sanders, and Maria Rohm star.
The Girl from Rio has been newly restored in 4K from the uncensored camera negative with Dolby Vision/HDR and 1.0 DTS-HD MA sound. The first pressing includes an embossed slipcover.
Special features - including a RiffTrax edition of the film - are detailed below.
Special features:
The Girl from Rio: RiffTrax Edition - Riffed by Mike Nelson, Bill Corbett, and Kevin Murphy (new)
Audio commentary with film historians Nathaniel Thompson and Troy Howarth (new)
Interview with Murderous Passions: The Delirious Cinema of Jesus Franco author Stephen Thrower (new)
Additional scenes from German version (new)
Rolling in Rio – Interviews with director Jess Franco, writer/producer Harry Alan Towers, and star Shirley Eaton
Trim reel
Poster & still gallery
Bisexual super-villain Sumitra (Shirley Eaton) launches a diabolical plan to enslave the male species with her army of lusty warrior women. But when Sumitra kidnaps a fugitive American playboy, she crosses a sadistic crime boss (George Sanders) and ignites a battle of the sexes that will bring Brazil to its knees in more ways than one. Get ready to experience director Jess Franco at his most erotic, exotic and bizarre.
Pre-order The Girl from Rio.
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If Republicans take control of the House this fall, they plan on using debt limit talks — and the possibility of throwing the U.S. into default — if they don’t get their way on slashing government programs.
According to a new interview with House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-California), the party is planning on using must-pass debt ceiling legislation to force through the GOP’s agenda.
“You can’t just continue down the path to keep spending and adding to the debt,” McCarthy said in an interview with Punchbowl News, ignoring the fact that economists view national debt obligations as often signaling the health of the economy. “We’re not just going to keep lifting your credit card limit, right,” he continued. “And we should seriously sit together and [figure out] where can we eliminate some waste? Where can we make the economy grow stronger?”
When McCarthy refers to eliminating so-called waste, it is likely that he is referring to, among other things, the GOP’s plans to cut Medicare and Social Security, two of the most popular and vital anti-poverty government programs in the U.S.
Republicans have been attacking the programs over the past months. Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wisconsin) has threatened to put budgets up to congressional debate every year, which would almost definitely lead to cuts. Alarmingly, earlier this year, the Republican Study Committee, the largest Republican caucus in the House, put out a plan to raise the age at which people receive full benefits from both programs to 70, while implementing a rule that would raise the eligibility age over time.
The debt ceiling is an effective bludgeon for Republicans to use for this purpose. The debt ceiling accounts for government funding to provide promised payments for programs like Medicare and Social Security, as well as military salaries and other “existing legal obligations,” according to the Treasury Department.
Republicans had threatened to put the U.S. in default last September, after former President Donald Trump urged the party to do so. They appeared to be posing as deficit hawks — something they only do when a Democrat is in charge — while Democrats were debating the Build Back Better Act.
If they pull a similar move in 2023, it could be similar to 2011, when the GOP manufactured a debt ceiling crisis that ultimately “led directly to the worst recovery following a recession since World War II,” according to the Economic Policy Institute.
If the debt ceiling isn’t raised by fall of 2023, when the government is slated to run out of funding, the U.S. could find itself in a situation similar to last year, when it was at risk of defaulting on its loans. This could have triggered a global recession and would have disastrous short- and long-term consequences for the U.S., as the creditworthiness of the country would be ruined.
In other words, Republicans appear to be willing to hold the U.S. and global economy on the brink of disaster in order to force Democrats to capitulate to their demands.
This way, too, Republicans can blame whatever economic fallout will come with either a default, government shutdown or cuts to Medicare and Social Security on Democrats. By pursuing these cuts during a Democratic presidency, they can point fingers at President Joe Biden if they are pushed through — potentially providing the GOP with a weapon come the 2024 election.
Republicans are laying out other plans for if they take the House, which polls say they are likely to do. GOP members of the House Education and Labor Committee have made a list of prominent labor officials like Labor Secretary Marty Walsh and National Labor Relations Board General Counsel Jennifer Abruzzo as well as Biden’s pro-worker task force to target with hearings and attacks if they take control of the House.
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abs0luteb4stard · 2 months
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🔸️W A T C H E D🔸️
First time watching (2-19-2024).
The closest I came to angsty teen was not watching cartoon or Disney movies 20 odd years ago. So I skipped this lovely little movie. Now I see why it is so beloved.
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zachfett · 5 months
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Captive State (2019) directed by Rupert Wyatt
Been putting off watching Captive State for years after it got a lot of negative reception.
I loved it and I'm baffled by a lot of the complaints I've read in old threads. I'm convinced these people fell asleep during the movie or something.
Highly recommended if you like District 9 and slow-burns. Also the soundtrack is fantastic.
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admireforever · 3 months
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Moonlight
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kevinfrommoonlight · 1 year
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"...I'll cook you something. Maybe... Maybe play that song for you..."
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argyrocratie · 8 months
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"Sanders’ framing still largely ignores the role of the state in capitalism. For example, the chapter “Billionaires Should Not Exist” repeatedly uses the cliched expression “unfettered capitalism” and focuses largely on wealth taxation as the actual means for ensuring billionaires do not, in fact, exist. 
Now, so long as capitalism exists, I’ll take the New Deal or Social Democratic version of state capitalism over the Reagan-Thatcher version of state capitalism any day of the week. But simply taxing billionaire wealth is by no means to use Sanders’ own language at the beginning of the book, dealing with “systemic problems” or “root causes”; it’s a slightly more ambitious way to “tinker around the edges.”
There’s no such thing as “unfettered capitalism,” and never was — any more than there was “unfettered feudalism” or an “unfettered latifundist slave economy.” The overwhelming majority of billionaire wealth and large corporate profits results either from direct government subsidies or from economic rents on artificial property rights, artificial scarcity, and entry barriers enforced by the state.
So the very phrase “rethink our adherence to the system of unfettered capitalism” amounts to a set of self-imposed blinders that limits us to the kind of incrementalism Sanders claims to oppose. By its very terms, it misleads us into believing that concentrated wealth and corporate power are spontaneous phenomena that occur in a “laissez-faire” environment if the state doesn’t actively prevent them, and misdirects us into limiting ourselves entirely to redistributionist policies after the fact.
Since billionaire wealth is unearned, a system in which billionaire wealth exists to be taxed in the first place has already failed. Instead of taxing billionaire wealth after the fact, we should systematically dismantle all the structures that facilitate such income levels in the first place. 
We should be radically scaling back and then eliminating intellectual property — particularly patents, the primary legal tool by which international trade and outsourced production are enclosed within corporate walls. We should be breaking the power of landlords and absentee owners of natural resources and replacing them with community land trusts and Ostromite resource commons. We should eliminate the legal monopolies by which owners of stockpiled wealth are enabled to monopolize the credit and investment functions. And we should eliminate the massive subsidies to long-distance transportation and energy extraction, which facilitate supply chains and scales of production far beyond what would be the point of negative returns if all costs were internalized. 
And all these things should be accompanied by direct actions from below, like squats taking over landlord property, workers taking over ownership and control of workplaces, file-sharing sites, and hardware hackers making intellectual property unenforceable, etc., rather than merely relying on state policy."
-Kevin Carson, Book Review: It’s OK To Be Angry About Capitalism
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90smovies · 1 year
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