Steve M.
Jedi Master
I just watched this movie (documentary) "The Secret of Oz" and thought it was pretty good. I thought I'd read a reference here recently to the movie but am unable to find it. I did a search of the forum but came up with only one reference which was dated back in August. That wasn't what I read in the last 2-3 days. It might have been something on the signs page, since I haven't checked there. I looked on facebook to no avail.
It was an interesting movie that's relatively new. It makes references to what's happened in Iceland recently (economically). The movie http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U71-KsDArFM is nearly 2 hours and goes into the history of currency (Rome, UK..) and was pretty insightful to my understanding. I used a program called Cucusoft to download a version of (.mp4 I think) it from youtube. Anyhow I was curious what others thought of this mans -narrator/speakers- view of the financial situation. Not real sure I understood him entirely. It was as if he were not saying invest in Gold/Silver, but rather that we need to change the economy by changing the banking system. Personally, I liked the movie and think the guy had some good historic ideas about improving things, though I doubt there is time for it.
Has anyone else seen it? If yes, would you care to share your perspective(s)?
It was an interesting movie that's relatively new. It makes references to what's happened in Iceland recently (economically). The movie http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U71-KsDArFM is nearly 2 hours and goes into the history of currency (Rome, UK..) and was pretty insightful to my understanding. I used a program called Cucusoft to download a version of (.mp4 I think) it from youtube. Anyhow I was curious what others thought of this mans -narrator/speakers- view of the financial situation. Not real sure I understood him entirely. It was as if he were not saying invest in Gold/Silver, but rather that we need to change the economy by changing the banking system. Personally, I liked the movie and think the guy had some good historic ideas about improving things, though I doubt there is time for it.
Has anyone else seen it? If yes, would you care to share your perspective(s)?