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America: Freedom
to Fascism
The Authorized
Final Director's Cut
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The
film that's changing the face of America is
available to you for a new low price! |
- Directors Cut in retail
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America: Freedom to
Fascism is a compelling and
troubling account of how the wealth of
our nation was silently passed from its
citizens to a handful of powerful
bankers in 1913. That's the year the
Federal Reserve Act and the 16th
Amendment were introduced, giving a
privately held corporation the means to
control our finances while ensuring its
interest payments through the strong
arms of the newly-formed Internal
Revenue Service. Ever since then, Russo
suggests, Americans have been gradually
conditioned to accept fewer freedoms and
a lower standard of living... all the
while considering debt and servitude as
distinctly American values.
Russo's first and most cogent point is
simple: Americans are not required to
pay a federal income tax. That's a bold
statement to make, as few people believe
that such a fraud could be perpetrated
for so long. My father, himself an
accountant, insists that the income tax
is a very real thing. Russo takes that
same belief to IRS employees and simply
asks them to cite where it says an
unapportioned income tax is required of
us all. Guess what? They can't. In a
telling segment Sheldon Cohen, former
commissioner of the IRS, goes so far as
to reject Supreme Court rulings and the
Constitution as benchmarks over what is
legal with regards to taxation. Russo
also interviews members of the tax
honesty movement as well as
disenfranchised IRS agents who agree
that no law on the books conjures up a
requirement to send the government part
of one's hard-earned paycheck. Russo
then showcases court cases where those
accused of tax evasion have won
precisely because the prosecution cannot
provide evidence of a legal federal
income tax law.
It's shocking to have it hammered into
your head over and over that you've
thrown your money away for nothing, but
repetition is good; it helps knock loose
the deeply entrenched belief that we owe
a portion of our livelihood to our
government. |
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