Captain America Truth
2009 May 12

Obama should give weapons to the pirates to free Captain America as the greatest peacemaker President Reagan?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R67CH-qhXJs Speak truth to power. Mr. News
He should take them to hold him until the next election, then he can win his freedom that would help him be reelected. Just as Reagan in his campaign against Carter.
Captain America : THE TRUTH pt.1
|
|
Adventures of Kit Carson V02 $7.98 Legendary western hero Kit Carson and his dependable side-kick, El Toro, ride from one dangerous situation to the next, always fighting for truth and justice. Bill Williams, who had a long film and TV career in westerns, crime dramas and science fiction, plays the upright scout Carson with rugged believability. The role of Kit’s girl-crazy Mexican pal is humorously handled by Don Diamond, who later played Cpl. Reyes in the Zorro series (1957-1959) and Crazy Cat in F Troop (1965) before lending his voice to a series of animated cartoon characters. The Adventures of Kit Carson is an early rough-riding treasure from the golden age of TV westerns that brought iconic shows like The Lone Ranger, The Cisco Kid, Roy Rogers and Wild Bill Hickok to small screens across America.Wild Horses of Pala: Kit is carrying $30,000 from the Army to pay an Indian tribe for a thousand horses, but a scheming agent plans to steal the money. Bandits’ Blade: When stolen U.S currency plates are quickly recovered, traces of printer’s ink on the plates reveal an unusual counterfeiting plot. Snake River Trappers: Food supply wagons bound for an Indian reservation are hijacked by fur trappers trying to drive the tribe off of their land. Ghost Town: To prevent interference with their gold shipment robberies, outlaws kidnap a Cavalry captain’s wife. Starring: Bill Williams DVD Details: Run Time: 103 minutesNumber of Discs: 1Originally Released in 1951Black WhiteNo region encoding; For global distribution. |
|
|
Altered States of America: Icons and Outlaws, Hitmakers and Hitmen $1.99 Altered States of America is a riveting collection of journalism by outlaw-turned-author Richard Stratton. Stratton’s years as an international marijuana smuggler, his 8-year bid in a federal prison system, and subsequent ascendance to acclaimed author and filmmaker, give him the credibility with which to wrest an uncommon truth from his subjects. The stories in this collection read like adventure fiction. To name a few: the story of Greg Scarpa, a Columbo mob captain turned informant; Bonecrusher, a guard at Corcoran penitentiary who witnessed the bloody gladiator fights between convicts; the CIA’s top-secret MK-ULTRA program in which the CIA secretly dosed unsuspecting civilians and its own agents with LSD, or the heartbreaking profile of Joe Stassi, America’s oldest living gangster, who was ordered to murder his best friend. Each piece is linked by Stratton’s reflections on and connections to the people and places he describes. Whether he is talking with Oliver Stone or a prison guard, Hunter S. Thompson or a gangster, Sean Penn or a CIA agent, Stratton has an empathetic understanding of his subjects. This collection truly embodies Bob Dylan’s famous line: “To live outside the law, you must be honest.” |
|
|
American Literature; A Text-Book For The Use Of Schools And Colleges $20.12 Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free.This is an OCR edition with typos.Excerpt from book:AMERICAN LITERATURE. COLONIAL LITERATURE. As The physical analysis of the Universe begins with protoplasm, so must intelligent study of a literature begin with examination of the inchoate material upon which the literature is based.. Literature in the higher sense is a criticism of life. But the Colonial days of America were days of action, not of thought about action. The men who crossed the sea in quest The condi- of civil and religious liberty, came not to write, but to aoiu and . the charac- do. Two subjects occupied them,—the Fear of God, terofthe and the Conduct of the Colony. Such things as they beglnnlng:. wrote either told the bald story of their daily life, or discussed religion, or mingled the two. They took up the pen only in the intervals of grasping the Bible, the sword, or the plough-handle. As literature, their productions are, in almost all instances, destitute of value. They are tedious, lifeless and repulsive. Yet, if you have imagination and human sympathy enough, you may detect in this protoplasmic rubbish the germs of qualities which, in their perfect development, made the genius of such men as Webster, Emerson and Hawthorne. The first American writings are not only not literature; they were not even written by Americans. There were no , Tin- source American born people, except the Indians, in those of our first days. American literature, then, begins with books books’ written about America by foreigners. Character. Captain John Smith (1579-1631) wasthe first American annalist. He was a daring, restless, impetuous but shrewd man; of imagination too warm and vanity too inordinate to allow of his telling plain truth. He was more quick to magnify virtue in speech than to illustrate it by deed. But, considering how easily, in tho |
|
|
Avengers vs. Pet Avengers $8.9 Used – Basic Truth: It’s very hard to protect the earth when you’ve been turned into a frog. The Pet Avengers Return! Good thing, too, cuz dragons have decided that it’s time to take over the world and oppress the silly humans once and for all!!! And since Captain America, Iron Man & Thor are all green and hopping about, here’s hoping they can get used to their new flippers in time to flight alongside Earth’s Mightiest Pets! Plus: Frog-Thor meets Spider-Man! |
No comments yet