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CelluloidKid

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Everything posted by CelluloidKid

  1. *Per Wikipedia:* *_Pro-life_ is a term representing a variety of perspectives and activist movements in bioethics. It is most commonly (especially in the media and popular discourse) refers to opposition to abortion and support for fetal rights. The term describes the political and ethical view which maintains that fetuses and embryos are human beings, and therefore have a right to live. Less commonly, it can be used to indicate opposition to practices such as euthanasia, the death penalty, human cloning, and research involving human embryonic stem cells.* *_Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act_:* *_The Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005_ (Pub.L. 109-8, 119 Stat. 23, enacted 2005-04-20), providing for significant changes in bankruptcy in the United States, was passed by the 109th United States Congress on April 14, 2005 and signed into law by President George W. Bush on April 20, 2005. The effective date for most of its provisions apply to cases commenced on or after October 17, 2005. Referred to colloquially as the "New Bankruptcy Law", the Act of Congress attempts to make it more difficult for consumers to discharge debt under Chapter 7; some of these consumers may instead utilize Chapter 13.* http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bankruptcy_Reform_Act
  2. Acquanetta was in the film _Tarzan and the Leopard Woman_ W./Johnny Weissmuller! *NEW: Johnny Weissmuller!*
  3. Norma Shearer was in _Marie Antoinette_ W./Tyrone Power! *NEW STAR: Tyrone Power!*
  4. Spencer Tracy was in the film _Mannequin_ W./Joan Crawford! *NEW STAR: Joan Crawford!*
  5. Joel McCrea was in _The Palm Beach Story_ W./Claudette Colbert! *NEW STAR: Claudette Colbert!*
  6. Alan Ladd was in _This Gun for Hire_ W./Veronica Lake! *NEW STAR: Veronica Lake!*
  7. Anne Bancroft was in _The Hindenburg_ (I watched this film last night on Encore! Very good movie!) W./George C. Scott! *NEW STAR: George C. Scott!*
  8. You should try to find and read the following book, about Brando! Very good read!
  9. *My Three Sons: Season One, Vol. 1 (1960)* http://www.amazon.com/My-Three-Sons-Season-Vol/dp/B00005JOEB/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=dvd&qid=1220053621&sr=1-1 *DVD Release Date: September 30, 2008*
  10. Myrna Loy was in the film _The April Fools_ (I love this film!) W./Jack Lemmon! *NEW STAR: Jack Lemmon!*
  11. *10 reasons why George W. Bush is a bad president* *He shouldn?t have been elected the first time and only reason he won the 2nd time was because we were in the middle of Iraq war he contrived probably just to get reelected.* *He?s stupid. He can?t talk and is not a good leader. He?s not a role model anyone can look up to.* *He does not inspire confidence that he is doing a good job or the right thing. Morons and idiots should be barred from public office because they are not able to handle complex tasks such as running the most powerful nation in the world.* *He has strong ties to Oil and Gas companies, who think the best solution for becoming less dependant on Foriegn Oil is to invade other countries, spend hundreds of billions of dollars and thousands of American lives in a foolhardy task, rather than make a serious investment in next generation fuels.* *His enviromental policy sucks. He thinks drilling in Alaska Artic preserve is ok. He thinks less restrictions on pollution is ok. He has made no effort to address the Kyoto treaty*. *He vacations alot, which means he is lazy. He expects other people to the job for him. He always looks to blame other people for his mistakes. (Hurricane Katrina)* *He is openly Christian and ties his religion too much to his politics. The USA is about equal representation and diversity. We need to work VERY hard on making people other religions feel like they are welcome in our culture. 9/11 and the backlash by anti-western fundamentalists is proof of this. Occupying another nation is NOT the best way to do this.* *DMCA and the Patriot Act were responsible for the loss of personal freedoms resulting in corporate America and the federal government perscuting the American people unjustly*. *Very, very bad economic policy resulting in a drastic rise of national debt. Privatizing Social Security is a really bad idea. http://zfacts.com/p/318.html* *Other countries do not respect him. He is a poor representation of the quality of people who should be leading this nation.* *Finially, I think he is a horrible president because he starts things but doesn?t finish them (Afganistan/Bin Laden) and also he makes bad decisions and doesn?t admit to them (Iraq).* Thanks, llbbl.com
  12. Patricia Neal was in _Breakfast at Tiffany's_ W./ Mickey Rooney! *NEW STAR: Mickey Rooney!*
  13. Sylvia Sydney was in the film _Miserables, Les_ W./Michael Rennie! *NEW STAR: Michael Rennie!*
  14. I'm sorry but I'm not alone here...I don't support Bush, & our economy is bad, the job market is bad etc. I can't find 1 good to support Bush about! This is article is is my current Rolling Stone Magazine! *The Worst President in History?* *One of America's leading historians assesses George W. Bush* *Flashback: Bush in '99 -- We Warned You!* George W. Bush's presidency appears headed for colossal historical disgrace. Barring a cataclysmic event on the order of the terrorist attacks of September 11th, after which the public might rally around the White House once again, there seems to be little the administration can do to avoid being ranked on the lowest tier of U.S. presidents. And that may be the best-case scenario. Many historians are now wondering whether Bush, in fact, will be remembered as the very worst president in all of American history. From time to time, after hours, I kick back with my colleagues at Princeton to argue idly about which president really was the worst of them all. For years, these perennial debates have largely focused on the same handful of chief executives whom national polls of historians, from across the ideological and political spectrum, routinely cite as the bottom of the presidential barrel. Was the lousiest James Buchanan, who, confronted with Southern secession in 1860, dithered to a degree that, as his most recent biographer has said, probably amounted to disloyalty -- and who handed to his successor, Abraham Lincoln, a nation already torn asunder? Was it Lincoln's successor, Andrew Johnson, who actively sided with former Confederates and undermined Reconstruction? What about the amiably incompetent Warren G. Harding, whose administration was fabulously corrupt? Or, though he has his defenders, Herbert Hoover, who tried some reforms but remained imprisoned in his own outmoded individualist ethic and collapsed under the weight of the stock-market crash of 1929 and the Depression's onset? The younger historians always put in a word for Richard M. Nixon, the only American president forced to resign from office. Now, though, George W. Bush is in serious contention for the title of worst ever. In early 2004, an informal survey of 415 historians conducted by the nonpartisan History News Network found that eighty-one percent considered the Bush administration a "failure." Among those who called Bush a success, many gave the president high marks only for his ability to mobilize public support and get Congress to go along with what one historian called the administration's "pursuit of disastrous policies." In fact, roughly one in ten of those who called Bush a success was being facetious, rating him only as the best president since Bill Clinton -- a category in which Bush is the only contestant. The lopsided decision of historians should give everyone pause. Contrary to popular stereotypes, historians are generally a cautious bunch. We assess the past from widely divergent points of view and are deeply concerned about being viewed as fair and accurate by our colleagues. When we make historical judgments, we are acting not as voters or even pundits, but as scholars who must evaluate all the evidence, good, bad or indifferent. Separate surveys, conducted by those perceived as conservatives as well as liberals, show remarkable unanimity about who the best and worst presidents have been. Historians do tend, as a group, to be far more liberal than the citizenry as a whole -- a fact the president's admirers have seized on to dismiss the poll results as transparently biased. One pro-Bush historian said the survey revealed more about "the current crop of history professors" than about Bush or about Bush's eventual standing. But if historians were simply motivated by a strong collective liberal bias, they might be expected to call Bush the worst president since his father, or Ronald Reagan, or Nixon. Instead, more than half of those polled -- and nearly three-fourths of those who gave Bush a negative rating -- reached back before Nixon to find a president they considered as miserable as Bush. The presidents most commonly linked with Bush included Hoover, Andrew Johnson and Buchanan. Twelve percent of the historians polled -- nearly as many as those who rated Bush a success -- flatly called Bush the worst president in American history. And these figures were gathered before the debacles over Hurricane Katrina, Bush's role in the Valerie Plame leak affair and the deterioration of the situation in Iraq. Were the historians polled today, that figure would certainly be higher. Even worse for the president, the general public, having once given Bush the highest approval ratings ever recorded, now appears to be coming around to the dismal view held by most historians. To be sure, the president retains a considerable base of supporters who believe in and adore him, and who reject all criticism with a mixture of disbelief and fierce contempt -- about one-third of the electorate. (When the columnist Richard Reeves publicized the historians' poll last year and suggested it might have merit, he drew thousands of abusive replies that called him an idiot and that praised Bush as, in one writer's words, "a Christian who actually acts on his deeply held beliefs.") Yet the ranks of the true believers have thinned dramatically. A majority of voters in forty-three states now disapprove of Bush's handling of his job. Since the commencement of reliable polling in the 1940s, only one twice-elected president has seen his ratings fall as low as Bush's in his second term: Richard Nixon, during the months preceding his resignation in 1974. No two-term president since polling began has fallen from such a height of popularity as Bush's (in the neighborhood of ninety percent, during the patriotic upswell following the 2001 attacks) to such a low (now in the midthirties). No president, including Harry Truman (whose ratings sometimes dipped below Nixonian levels), has experienced such a virtually unrelieved decline as Bush has since his high point. Apart from sharp but temporary upticks that followed the commencement of the Iraq war and the capture of Saddam Hussein, and a recovery during the weeks just before and after his re-election, the Bush trend has been a profile in fairly steady disillusionment. * * * * How does any president's reputation sink so low? The reasons are best understood as the reverse of those that produce presidential greatness. In almost every survey of historians dating back to the 1940s, three presidents have emerged as supreme successes: George Washington, Abraham Lincoln and Franklin D. Roosevelt. These were the men who guided the nation through what historians consider its greatest crises: the founding era after the ratification of the Constitution, the Civil War, and the Great Depression and Second World War. Presented with arduous, at times seemingly impossible circumstances, they rallied the nation, governed brilliantly and left the republic more secure than when they entered office. Calamitous presidents, faced with enormous difficulties -- Buchanan, Andrew Johnson, Hoover and now Bush -- have divided the nation, governed erratically and left the nation worse off. In each case, different factors contributed to the failure: disastrous domestic policies, foreign-policy blunders and military setbacks, executive misconduct, crises of credibility and public trust. Bush, however, is one of the rarities in presidential history: He has not only stumbled badly in every one of these key areas, he has also displayed a weakness common among the greatest presidential failures -- an unswerving adherence to a simplistic ideology that abjures deviation from dogma as heresy, thus preventing any pragmatic adjustment to changing realities. Repeatedly, Bush has undone himself, a failing revealed in each major area of presidential performance. * * * * THE CREDIBILITY GAP No previous president appears to have squandered the public's trust more than Bush has. In the 1840s, President James Polk gained a reputation for deviousness over his alleged manufacturing of the war with Mexico and his supposedly covert pro-slavery views. Abraham Lincoln, then an Illinois congressman, virtually labeled Polk a liar when he called him, from the floor of the House, "a bewildered, confounded and miserably perplexed man" and denounced the war as "from beginning to end, the sheerest deception." But the swift American victory in the war, Polk's decision to stick by his pledge to serve only one term and his sudden death shortly after leaving office spared him the ignominy over slavery that befell his successors in the 1850s. With more than two years to go in Bush's second term and no swift victory in sight, Bush's reputation will probably have no such reprieve. The problems besetting Bush are of a more modern kind than Polk's, suited to the television age -- a crisis both in confidence and credibility. In 1965, Lyndon Johnson's Vietnam travails gave birth to the phrase "credibility gap," meaning the distance between a president's professions and the public's perceptions of reality. It took more than two years for Johnson's disapproval rating in the Gallup Poll to reach fifty-two percent in March 1968 -- a figure Bush long ago surpassed, but that was sufficient to persuade the proud LBJ not to seek re-election. Yet recently, just short of three years after Bush buoyantly declared "mission accomplished" in Iraq, his disapproval ratings have been running considerably higher than Johnson's, at about sixty percent. More than half the country now considers Bush dishonest and untrustworthy, and a decisive plurality consider him less trustworthy than his predecessor, Bill Clinton -- a figure still attacked by conservative zealots as "Slick Willie." Previous modern presidents, including Truman, Reagan and Clinton, managed to reverse plummeting ratings and regain the public's trust by shifting attention away from political and policy setbacks, and by overhauling the White House's inner circles. But Bush's publicly expressed view that he has made no major mistakes, coupled with what even the conservative commentator William F. Buckley Jr. calls his "high-flown pronouncements" about failed policies, seems to foreclose the first option. Upping the ante in the Middle East and bombing Iranian nuclear sites, a strategy reportedly favored by some in the White House, could distract the public and gain Bush immediate political capital in advance of the 2006 midterm elections -- but in the long term might severely worsen the already dire situation in Iraq, especially among **** Muslims linked to the Iranians. And given Bush's ardent attachment to loyal aides, no matter how discredited, a major personnel shake-up is improbable, short of indictments. Replacing Andrew Card with Joshua Bolten as chief of staff -- a move announced by the president in March in a tone that sounded more like defiance than contrition -- represents a rededication to current policies and personnel, not a serious change. (Card, an old Bush family retainer, was widely considered more moderate than most of the men around the president and had little involvement in policy-making.) The power of Vice President Dick Cheney, meanwhile, remains uncurbed. Were Cheney to announce he is stepping down due to health problems, normally a polite pretext for a political removal, one can be reasonably certain it would be because Cheney actually did have grave health problems. * * * * *BUSH AT WAR* Until the twentieth century, American presidents managed foreign wars well -- including those presidents who prosecuted unpopular wars. James Madison had no support from Federalist New England at the outset of the War of 1812, and the discontent grew amid mounting military setbacks in 1813. But Federalist political overreaching, combined with a reversal of America's military fortunes and the negotiation of a peace with Britain, made Madison something of a hero again and ushered in a brief so-called Era of Good Feelings in which his Jeffersonian Republican Party coalition ruled virtually unopposed. The Mexican War under Polk was even more unpopular, but its quick and victorious conclusion redounded to Polk's favor -- much as the rapid American victory in the Spanish-American War helped William McKinley overcome anti-imperialist dissent. Thanks, SEAN WILENTZ Posted Apr 21, 2006 http://www.rollingstone.com/news/profile/story/9961300/the_worst_president_in_history
  15. *August 20, 2008* *George W. Bush's Overall Job Approval Up to Highest Level Since January* George W. Bush's overall job approval is at 30%, the highest level recorded since January in monthly American Research Group polling, according to the latest survey from the American Research Group. Among all Americans, 30% approve of the way Bush is handling his job as president and 64% disapprove. When it comes to Bush's handling of the economy, 25% approve and 69% disapprove. Among Americans registered to vote, 31% approve of the way Bush is handling his job as president and 63% disapprove. When it comes to the way Bush is handling the economy, 25% of registered voters approve of the way Bush is handling the economy and 69% disapprove. A total of 60% of Americans say the national economy is getting worse, which is down from 76% in July, and 36% say their household financial situations are getting worse, which is down from 61% in July. A total of 18% of Americans say the national economy is getting better, which is up from 3% in July, and 19% say their household financial situations are getting better, which is up from 7% in July. The results presented here are based on 1,100 completed telephone interviews conducted among a nationwide random sample of adults 18 years and older. The interviews were completed August 16 through 19, 2008. The theoretical margin of error for the total sample is plus or minus 2.6 percentage points, 95% of the time, on questions where opinion is evenly split. Overall, 30% of Americans say that they approve of the way George W. Bush is handling his job as president, 64% disapprove, and 6% are undecided.
  16. Montgomery Clift was in the film _From Here to Eternity_ W./Donna Reed! *NEW STAR: Donna Reed!*
  17. Laurence Olivier was in the film _The Prince and the Showgirl_ W./Marilyn Monroe! *NEW STAR: Marilyn Monroe!*
  18. Wendell Corey was in the film _Holiday Affair_ W./ Robert Mitchum! *NEW STAR: Robert Mitchum!*
  19. *George Bush* *Someone who* 1. Turned the largest US surplus into the largest deficit in American history, then gives tax cuts when he should be raising taxes to get more money for the country. (And of course, he only gives tax cuts to all of his rich buddies.) 2. Blamed bin Laden for 9/11 (which is okay), but when he couldn't find him, made Americans forget about him by diverting their attention to Saddam Hussein, who had absolutely nothing to do with 9/11. Has he found bin Laden? Has he found any WMDs? Didn't think so. 3. Feels the need to stick his nose in Iraq's business and "improve" their government while bombing and completely destroying Iraq-it's obvious it's just an excuse to go to war. 4. Lies about there being NO terrorist attacks since 9/11, when there have been quite a few that he covers up or makes America forget about. (Like that anthrax threat a few years ago for example.) 5. Passes the Patriot Act to keep America safe from terrorists while arresting people who aren't terrorists, never catching the people who are, and violating SIX AMENDMENTS of the Constitution. 6. Passes "Clean Air Act" which actually makes the air dirtier. 7. Makes every country in the world besides Britain and Poland hate us. 8. Quits the Kyoto Protocol because it would make his rich buddies actually spend some money to reduce global warming, and God forbid anyone has to spend money. 9. Throws ultimatums at the American people that only a complete idiot could fall for (and a lot have) like "You're with us or you're with the terrorists" and basically just gets America to be loyal to him out of fear. 10. Only gets into Yale because of his father and passes with a C- average. 11. Has said enough stupid things to fill 265 pages of "Bushisms" books. 12. Gets elected into office after losing by over 10,000 votes. Do you think it's a coincidence that his brother was the governor of the state that the whole election depended on in 2000?? George Bush is a COMPLETE **** **** who never should have been elected, is one of the worst people in the country to earn the job of president and definitely is the worst president we have ever had or will ever have. Thanks, Urban Dictionary.
  20. *They should show Oliver Stone's _W._ as a double feature W./the film: _Omen III: The Final Conflict_ (the film charts the progress of the now-adult Damien Thorn to a position of earthly power (becoming United States ambassador to the United Kingdom with an eye on the U.S. Presidency) as a springboard for triggering the Apocalypse.).....This would make it worth seeing it!*
  21. RAY MILLAND was in the film "_Rhubarb_" ( I love this film!!) W./Jan Sterling! *NEW STAR: Jan Sterling!*
  22. _Twilight's Last Gleaming_ was directed by Robert Aldrich who also directed "_What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?_" & "_The Killing of Sister George_". "_Twilight's Last Gleaming_" was a great film.
  23. John Ashley was in the film _Beach Party_ W./Robert Cummings! *NEW STAR: Robert Cummings!*
  24. *Well, it's now it's pouring rain here in Phoenix, Az (08/28/08), & it got me thinking what were some of the best "Classic Movie Scenes" with rain....* *_Four (4) that come to my mind:_* *_Casablanca_ (1942)* ...The train and rain! What a way to say good-bye! *_Breakfast at Tiffany's_ (1961)* ...The ending is so beautiful! *_Singin' in the Rain_ (1952)* ...Gene made dancing in the rain look so good! *_Four Weddings and a Funeral_ (1994)* ...
  25. *Marlon Brando, Bette Davis, & Grace Kelly*
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