RedNepal, 2011. Powered by Blogger.

Prachanda's UN Speech

If you missed out on what Prachanda, as the head of the government of the Federal Republic of Nepal said in the UN, the transcript of his speech has been posted here.




Mr. President,
Mr. General Secretary,
Excellencies,
Distinguished Delegates

1.At the outset, allow me to congratulate you on your election as the President of this Assembly and to assure you of my delegation’s full cooperation in discharging your responsibilities. I also thank the UN Secretary General for his comprehensive report on the work of the UN and his positive reference to the situation obtaining in Nepal.



Mr. President,

2. It is indeed a historic opportunity for me to address this august Assembly as the first Prime Minister of Nepal of the newest republic of the world. As I stand here in front of the global leadership, I think of the long struggle that I and my party waged with single mindedness for the liberation of the common man from the clutches of the age-old suppression, deprivation, marginalization and outright negligence of the then existing polity. My fellow countrymen and women, toiling in the mountains and valleys, working day and night in the low lands and the urban areas and yet unable to ensure even the simple necessities of life for his or her family had a hope and expectation that one day they would lead a decent life with equal rights and opportunities and be recognized as respectful citizens of the country. We are at this significant turning point in the political history of Nepal.

And I and my party are proud to be leading force of that positive historical change. Today I see a great hope in the glinting eyes of the dalit boy from the far west, downtrodden women from the indigenous nationality in the east, homeless Tharu girl and landless Madhesi and other peasants from the hills living under the thatched roofs. I intend to lead them with conviction and sincerity towards a new journey of sustainable peace and equitable progress in a modern Nepal. I have therefore the honour and great privilege of bringing with me the greetings and best wishes of the people and government of that new Federal Democratic Republic of Nepal to this august Assembly.

3. Following the Comprehensive Peace Agreement in November 2006 after a decade long armed struggle, we began our peace process and eventually held elections to the Constituent Assembly in April this year. People have overwhelmingly voted for my party and made us the single largest political party in the Assembly with great hope and expectations. At its first meeting, the Constituent Assembly declared Nepal a Federal Democratic Republic formally ending the 240-year old monarchy and creating a new opportunity to transform the old feudalistic state into an inclusive and federated ‘new Nepal’. This was in keeping with the long-standing aspirations of the Nepalese people. They voted in favour of change and transformation that my own party had fought for so many years. After the historic political transformations, our agenda now is to bring equally historic socio-economic transformation of the country.

Today I must inform you with all humility that our Constituent Assembly is the most inclusive representative body in which all marginalized, oppressed ethnic communities, indigenous nationalities, dalits, disadvantaged and the people from backward regions and communities are its members which will herald a new beginning in the country. This may very well be an example of representativeness to the world in the first decade of the twenty first century.

4. The Government is committed to restore law and order, provide relief to the people affected by the conflict, fight against the cancerous growth of corruption and start an economic recovery package focusing on pro-poor growth, infrastructure development and public private partnership. The government will build an effective partnership with the international community in creating an atmosphere for unleashing a new socio-economic transformation that the Nepalese people are waiting for so long.

5. Nepal’s peace process is unique in its characteristics and is based on multiparty democracy, inclusiveness, accommodation, dialogue, and the recognition of the people as the ultimate arbiter. It is the outcome of our own creative disposition toward peace and we feel that it can also serve as a reference model for peace elsewhere.

6. We appreciate the United Nation’s continued support to the peace process, especially in monitoring the management of arms and personnel through the United Nations mission in Nepal (UNMIN). The UN Mission has undertaken its mandated tasks well. I also take this opportunity to thank our neighbors, friends, donors for their continued support in favor of the peace process and the institutionalization of democracy in Nepal. I am confident that they would do so for unleashing its development potentials also as per the wish of the Nepalese people.

Mr. President,
7. As we proceed along the peace process within the country, new problems in the form of global food crisis, rising oil prices and imminent dangers from climate change stare us in the face. These challenges also undermine our achievement of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). There will be no success in achieving MDGs without ensuring them in the LDCs. Solemn pledges were made in the 2000 Millennium Declaration and in the 2002 World Conference on Financing for Development held in Monterrey. Many of these commitments are yet to be fulfilled and achievement of the Millennium Development Goals remains elusive to most the world’s poor people.

8. The United Nations agenda today has to tackle these development challenges and many other issues such as religious extremism and terrorism, proliferation of nuclear weapons and weapons of mass destruction, transnational crimes such as drugs, human trafficking and money-laundering, continuing conflicts within and among states, and gross violations of human rights, genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity. It is more than obvious that many of these global problems require global solutions. Together we can rise to the occasion and adopt a vision and strategy that the founders of the United Nations Organization charted in the purposes and principles of the Charter of the Organization. Multilateralism, not unilateralism is the answer to these problems.


9. The least developed countries like Nepal are faced with the special predicament in their development efforts. We are trapped in a vicious circle of poverty. For many historical reasons, we have low economic growth, low productivity, underdeveloped industries and traditional agriculture. Because of the low level of social indicators and less opportunities, conflict and crisis continue to be prevalent in these countries. Today, the growing gap between the rich and the poor within the country as well as between the nations is a sure sign of a looming disaster. It is also inhuman and unjust that such as high level of inequality is still so common in this age of human achievements, abundance and progress.

Equally important is the fact that islands of prosperity in the sea of poverty is not sustainable and certainly not in the enlightened self-interest of even the developed countries themselves, as it breeds resentment, fuels conflict and undermines their own progress in the long run. It also goes against the fundamental spirit of the United Nations. Because of the peculiar nature of the lDCs and their high level of vulnerabilities, I strongly urge that the issues of the LDCs should be looked at by the United Nations separately and with special focus programs. They should be ensured dedicated support and cooperation if we want to make our world just and inclusive that the United Nations so proudly espouses.

10. We are not only least developed but also land-locked. That is a double disadvantage in our efforts to fulfill the development aspirations. In fact, we feel further marginalized due to the overwhelming impact of the downside of globalization and the high cost of doing trade. We want full implementation of the respective global compacts, the Brussels Program of Action for the Least Developed Countries and the Almaty Program of Action for the Landlocked Developing Countries. In particular, I would like to highlight the need in the part of our developed country partners to fulfill the commitment and pledges in allocating certain percentage of their GNP to these countries and in making available trade concessions , debt relief like to commit that Nepal will fulfill its pledge to own its development programs in accordance with its national priorities including on poverty reduction and pro-poor governance policies.

11. We need to protect our people from the rising vulnerabilities of climate change. For example, in my own country Nepal, the meting of glaciers and shifting weather patterns, are threatening the life support systems, undermining the sustainability of agriculture and inducing extreme climate-induced disasters such as frequent floods and landslides. The Himalayan range provides life supporting water downstream for more than a billion people. The Mt. Everest, as the roof of the world, and the Himalayan range need to be protected and utilized properly to contribute to the humanity as a whole. So I strongly appeal to the international community to extend all necessary support and cooperation to protect and promote its pristine environment. We need to create a regime of common but differentiated responsibilities, in which the developed counties will lift the burdens of adaptation in the vulnerable countries, such as the least developed countries and small islands. The world will stand to benefit in addressing the climate change if we are able to harness the tremendous potentials of Nepal’s hydro-power as it a renewable and clean source of energy. For this, Nepal is ready to invite and encourage investment in its hydro-power projects.

Mr. President,

12. I am pleased that UN Regional Centre for Peace and Disarmament in Asia and the Pacific has been now operational from Kathmandu twenty years after it was established by this august Assembly. I thank all the members, courtiers from the region and the Secretary General and the officials of the Secretariat for the smooth relocation of the Centre from New York to Kathmandu. I would like to take this opportunity to reiterate Nepal’s commitment to make this Centre successful through the cooperation of all the countries concerned.

13. Over the years, peacekeeping has evolved as the soul of the United Nations. With this in mind, Nepal has been regularly sanding its peacekeepers at the call of the United Nations since 1958. We are celebratory the 50th anniversary of Nepal’s continuous participation in the UN peacekeeping operations, I take this opportunity to reiterate Nepal’s commitment that we will continue to provide our troops for the cause of peace worldwide. Today, Nepal is the fifth largest contributor of troops and police personnel to UN’s peacekeeping operations. We are glad that they have earned accolades for their professional competence and performance both at home and abroad. We consider this our modest contribution to international peace and security

14. Enjoyment of universal human rights is absolutely essential in creating the environment of peace, justice, democracy and development. As a democracy, Nepal is fully committed to protect and promote the human rights of its people under all circumstances with constitutional and legal guarantees and implementation of the international human rights instruments to which Nepal is a party. The government is committed to end the environment of impunity. The proposed Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which will seek to arrive at a necessary balance between peace and justice, so that there is justice, and that the centrality of the peace process is preserved. We will continue to strengthen the National Human Rights Commission so that it can take up its statutory responsibility for protection and promotion of human rights in the country even more effectively. It goes without saying that the environment for the protection and promotion of human rights in Nepal has significantly improved, especially after the signing of the comprehensive peace agreement in November 2006.

Mr. President,
15. As a least developed country that entered the World Trade Organization not too long ago, Nepal is concerned at the lack of tangible progress in negotiations on the Doha Development Agenda. We think that the opportunities in world trade through multilateral trading framework of the WTO should not be delayed any further. The lest developed countries deserve a duty free and quota free market access for all their tradable products from all major countries with sincerity, together with more favorable rules of origin and the support for enhancing their supply side capacity. Only then the Doha Round would be development round in the real sense of the word. Without meaningful integration of the LDSs into the global regime, I do not know how we can make the global trading regime sustainable, equitable and inclusive. Similarly, the least developed countries need more aid for trade and trade facilitation measures to enhance trading capacity.

16. Today, the United Nations needs to reform and democratize itself to take on the numerous challenges in international peace and security effectively. And it should also reflect the current realities of the world. We should also give necessary credibility, legitimacy, competence and effectiveness to the world body in solving the global problems. I take this opportunity to reiterate Nepal’s solemn faith and commitment to the purposes and principles of the United Nations Charter. On behalf of the people and government of Nepal, pledge to work with all of you to take on the global challenges thought the United Nations in a spirit of goodwill, cooperation and mutual solidarity. It is with the belief that we have adopted them as one of the tenets of Nepal’s foreign policy. Nepal is an example of how swords have been turned into ploughshares. That is what the United Nations believes in. Therefore, as I address this gathering here, I have a special feeling about the whole objectives and ideals that the United Nations stand for and the co-relationship between those ideals and the political, economic and social transformation that we would like to achieve in our country. May we all succeed in attaining our common objectives thought our collective and sincere efforts as the united and inseparable members of the single global family?

I thank you!
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Prachanda's Speeches in the US

Okay, if you missed out on what Prachanda said in the US, check out his speeches in the UN here, and his speeches and discussions elsewhere in the US.

Here are the audio recordings of Prachanda's speeches in New York's New School, and remarks by others.

Speech by Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal (13:53)


Remarks by Professor Andrew Arato (12:10)

Remarks by Professor Andrew Arato (12:10)
 

Question and Answer with the Prime Minister (50:16)

To get a glimpse of what you'll hear, read this before!



Question from the Floor:

Lal Saalam. It's a very exciting time in Nepal. You are carrying out a national democratic revolution. You are also the first communist to become head of state in many years, in my lifetime — and I am not a young man.

How do you plan to reconcile the serious tasks of national democratic, even new democratic revolution in nepal with the crisis the world is going under — considering the actions of the United States government, the Europeans, and the hegemonists who believe a handful of nations can dominate the rest of the world into backwardness?

How you gonna do it?

PM Prachanda answers:

Concrete analysis of concrete conditions is the soul of Marxism. What we are doing is concrete analysis of concrete conditions and we are devising our policy and program according to the changed situation of the first decade of the 21st century.

And what we are doing, as Prof. Arato also raised this question– very savily and very provocatively, you know. I understand the depth of history and dynamics of its expression you know. But what we are doing in the first decades of the 21st century is concrete analysis of concrete conditions.

We are trying to understand the whole phenomenon of the change, the revolution and development of communication and electronic sciences, and the change that occur.

Time and again, when i have a serious debate and discussion with intellectuals from developed countries, many western intellectuals. Time and again I say that we are trying to understand the changed phenomenon, and we are trying to develop our ideology according to the changed situation.

But you always blame us from very sectarian and dogmatic, and very self centered understanding. I try to have a serious debate and discussion with that kind of intellectual. Why we can't have multiparty competition? Why we have raised the questions of election constituent assembly. Why we participate in government and the radical change, and radical restructuring of the state.

According to my understanding, this is the development of ideology. This is the development of science itself. And we do not want to be rigid, to be static, to be sectarian and dogmatic. We want to be more vibrant.

Discussions during War

When we were in the war itself, just after the initiation of the war, 5 years after the initiation of war, we had a serious debate and disucussion inside our ranks, one and a half years of debate about the democracy.

Either we should support multiparty competition or not.

We devised this multi party competition while we were in the war. We were waging war and we were victorious at that time, you know.

At that time we have a serious discussion and what we devised is that if Lenin had lived another 5 or 10 years he would also introduce multiparty competition, this is my understanding. (Applause, few words from Prahanda unclear).. so creative and so dynamic that, during this New Economic Policy, just after the October Revolution and this War Communism had finished, and the civil war had finished, he introduced NEP, this NEP was in essence a capitalistic economic policy. He gave the slogan" Organize Socialist Competition in the Economy"… When he introduced the slogan of organizing competition in the economy. If he would have lived another 5 years he would have introduced competition in politics.

Therefore it is not something we are suprisingly making this multiparty competition. Because Stalin had made a serious mistake of ideology, in philosophy, in science- and all of the workers movement has taken so much loss from this deviation from dialectical materialism. This is our understanding — what we think and believe.

We are fully confident that we are developing the ideology from Lenin, not from Stalin. And this multi-party competiton is the product of that ideological development.

Thank You.

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On God. My Ramblings.

Well, to begin with I've had many discussions with my friends about the existence of God. Not only friends, with my mom and grandmom, who are extremely religious and random people I meet on the street. God might or might not exist but it's really hard to talk with people who choose to believe in either of these views and strongly express their views.

Religions claim that God exists. Well, religion seems to be like an ancient "Science" or "Philosophy" in that it tried to explain why things were as they were. But, unlike modern day science, which uses logic and experiments to verify truths, religion seems to have an explanation based on belief. And, that belief is, to a great extent, what modern scientists would call irrational.



I had been a very religious child. My family, which had a strong belief in God, cultivated these religious sentiments in me. I used to go to many of the "Pravachans" - preachings - by saints and other people, who were considered to be holy. Initially, everything what these preachers said about god, demons, and everthing else made sense. Not later. Not when I began asking more Why questions. Then religion could not give answers to most of the questions I had in my mind. Science didn't either. But, science seemed to be a better alternative because you knew what you were doing, usually things were at your command - but in religion, everything else lies on some supernatural belief that we can't say for sure exists or not.

I have also seen people claiming to have God coming to their bodies. They would vibrate, and speak in a drunken sort of way. Actually, I've met around 4-5 of them. Some would have certain Goddesses come into their bodies - and would start slapping people who came to worship them. That would be easily taken by the audience as a blessing by the Goddess. In my school days, there was a girl, who once had a certain Devi come into her body. She started crying, laughing, and then we all were taken outside. School authorities examined her for a while, and later they bowed in front of her and asked for her blessing. I was shocked. The girl happened to be sort of my ex-girlfriend. We hadn't actually been in a relationship - we were about to - and then I fell in love with another girl, so I dumped her. This was in Class 7. For around a week, I couldn't sleep. I was afraid that this girl, now a Devi, would punish me for dumping her. Nothing happened. So I started becoming normal.

Now let's talk of how fanatic some religious people are. I've seen a lot of my relatives, who worship idols, day and night. Yet, when they meet a beggar on the street - they look in the other direction. When they are together in a group - they start gossipping about such things that makes you think they would worhip devils - but no they claim to worship gods. They do most things what religion would prohibit to. Yet, they do them, and also claim that they are the true worshippers of God. What ironies!

Does God exist? Now what do I think. I don't know. I guess everyone else doesn't know. They claim to. Religious people claim God exists. People, who call themselves atheists, claim God doesn't exist. Both of them do not have any proofs. So, in the absence of any proof - it'd be best to say that God might or might not exist. But, after expressing (my) this knowledge (or lack of) on God, people who chose to believe either of the extreme views simply get annoyed. The religious say - Damn! You'll burn in hell. Some atheists I've met say - "You are an illogical retarded person. Have you seen God?" No, I haven't. Then they give the replies of the Pink Unicorn or the Flying Spaghetti monster. Then I get a chance to reply back - "I don't say they don't exist. If god exists, the pink unicorn might be what the god looks like. For now, I am not sure if any of these things exist, or if they don't".

More than some rowdy atheists, I think theists have been the cause of the majority of problems. Many preach -"Woship God. Make Him Happy. Then you'll get a place in heaven." Wow, and doing that requires a Teacher, they say. And, they lure innocent people towards themselves with this fake message from heaven.

I've read several religious texts. Mahabharat, Ramayan, Swastani, and the Bible. Now, most religious people use these books to prove god's existence. They say, "God exists because he killed Ravan in Ramayan, or he resurrected on the third day in the Bible." Wow. It's like saying A exists in reality because A's in a book. In that case, Harry Porter should exist, and also all those wizards.

I don't know if I've made any sense by what I wrote. There are several theories of why god exists, or doesn't, but I am in no mood to go over and analyze them. This is already starting to get boring.

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Cheating

Today I went out of my house in a nearby cafe to drink a glass of juice ( only juice because of the restrictions on my diet because of my recent jaundice infection). There was a guy sitting on the table next to mine. He was alone for a while, then a young lady, who seemed to be his girlfriend came to him. She had just finished her exam. "It was good", she was yelling. Then came the punchline - "I had made a plan with three others to come to the restroom at 1:00 pm, and we discussed there for a while. They helped me with everything I didn't know."

It strikes me that cheating and plagiarizing are so common in Nepal. It's not that big a crime. In schools, and colleges, there's a lot of cheating going on. I remember as a child that almost everyone would be going to the restroom mid-way through the exam. They would ask someone else to come there at a spcified time with a book or a note copy, and help them look at it. If caught, they would be asked to go back to the class and only in severe cases would their exam papers be cancelled.

I remember my SLC (School Leaving Certificate) exams when even the exam administrators would come and help some students. That might have been because of their personal relations or because of the involvement of money. In turn, we stayed in our benches as normal, and tried to peek at the papers of our friends nearby. Such involvement of the authorities themselves would encourage everyone else in the class to share each others' answers.

There were also such matters beyond examinations as well. There were a few people in my class room, who never did their assignments at home, but copied them from others before the class. Everyone else knew but accepted it as a normal part of life. Teachers, who caught students engaged in activities as such, would bit the students - that would be the maximum punishment.

Accustomed to this sort of a lifestyle, I was quite shocked when I went to study in a college in the US. They had Honor Codes and What Not! People were extremely sensitive about cheating and plagiarizing. We used to have Take Home Exams in which we would take the exam in our rooms - and yet we were supposed to not cheat. Things like that never happened in Nepal - If you had someone take an exam at home, without any administration, it would be imporbable that he wouldn't cheat.

In the  US, students would be expelled from the college for academic dishonesty - which never was the case in Nepal. Sometimes, I think if this difference is also a factor in our backwardedness. Cheating in exams destroys the purpose for which exams exist. Then the exam results would not show who's more capable - Just numbers that would mean nothing. But, since people are chosen for jobs and are given other opportunities based on these insignificant numbers, the chances of a right person getting to the desired position would be greatly diminished. Then, we'll have incapable people at crucial positions. That is somewhat the case in Nepal.

I hope that soon cheating and plagiarizing would be treated strictly. We should remove these disgusting traits of Old Nepal in the much-hyped New Nepal.
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Change of Course

Almost for the first time, I am posting here with a more personal approach. When I started this blog, I wanted it to be something that followed the steps of Maile Baje. His blog was an inspiration for me to open this blog - and hence the similarity in our addresses - nepalinetbook and nepalijournal. But, a lot of time has gone by, and I've realized that I am not that good at making political conjectures. Also, I find it hard to realize what's currently going on in Nepalese politics.

This does not mean that I have decided to stop writing about political stuffs. On the contrary, I might write more political articles than I did previously, but, the site won't be exclusive to politics only - as you might have seen from the last few months on this blog.

I have spent quite some time blogging. I started my earliest blog back in 2003. Then I had no incentive to earn money or to post anything sensible. I was just out there to blurt my feelings. I later deleted the blog. I do that every time. I start something, and I feel extremely annoyed at it after some time. I do the unthinkable, and later I regret. Things have been like that with my hair as well. I want to grow a really long hair, but everytime my hair gets a bit long, I don't like the feeling of having a big head, and a long hair. I go to the barber's and immediately ask him to cut my hair. A moment after cutting the hair, I again start aspiring for the long hair.

I hope things won't be like that this time. Let's see what happens!
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Documentaries for Download!

Below is a collection of documentaries and movies, apart from the mainstream media. Usually most of them are conspiracy theories, and many of these documentaries speak in favor of the oppressed and against the oppressors. I used to download and watch these movies back in the US, but as I am now in Nepal, I do not have the capacity to download such movies and watch them. Takes a whole night to download a movie - and even that is not enough sometimes.

Collection of the most unconventional, interesting and hard to find/buy documentaries/movies in the whole world. Even if you watch one of these, you're set on the way to unsettle your mind.

911 - Confronting The Evidence680.8 mb
911 - The Great Deception316.3 mb
911 - The Greatest Lie Ever Sold695.0 mb
911 Birth of Treason737.5 mb
911 Mysteries699.0 mb
911 Myths - David Ray Griffin260.0 mb
911 Press for Truth699.7 mb
911 Revisited v2301.4 mb
AFTF Authorized700.0 mb
Aerosol Crimes68.0 mb
Aftermath Live Panel233.5 mb
Aftermath: Unanswered Questions of 9-11464.4 mb
Aldoux Huxley - The Gravity of Light699.2 mb
Alex Jones Documentary Films13.3 gb
Alliance Weather Underground700.2 mb
Alternative 3 (Sequel to Iron Mountian)561.4 mb
America Freedom to Fascism699.1 mb
America's Disgrace Exposed266.7 mb
Angels Dont Play This HAARP254.1 mb
Anthrax Investigation27.7 mb
Aspertame - Sweet Misery - A Poisoned World695.1 mb
BBC Documentaries717.9 mb
Bad Trip To Edgewood26.9 mb
Banking With Hitler130.0 mb
Beyond Treason1.2 gb
Brainwashing: 10179.8 mb
Charlotte Iserbyt - The Deliberate Dumbing Down of America278.5 mb
Chavez - The Revolution Will Not Be Televised722.1 mb
Cointelpro35.3 mb
Conspiracy of Silence607.0 mb
Convoy of Death205.2 mb
Corporation700.4 mb
Crazy Rulers of the World (Nov 2004)980.7 mb
DRG Cspan2 - Very Good93.4 mb
David Cole At Auschwitz Nazi Jew Revisionism43.7 mb
Day 51 - The True Story Of Waco258.8 mb
Discovery Science - Owning The Weather26.7 mb
Dreamworlds 2 - Desire Sex and Power in Music Video550.0 mb
Echelon - The Most Secret Spy System118.2 mb
Election Hacking: Clinton Curtis Testimony Ohio 200419.5 mb
Everbody's Gotta Learn Sometime181.1 mb
Exposed: The Carlyle Group117.0 mb
Exposing The Illuminati From Within699.8 mb
Fabled Enemies545.0 mb
Fallujah: The Hidden Massacre88.4 mb
Fluoride Deception232.7 mb
Freemasonry - From Darkness To Light244.6 mb
Freemasonry Revealed535.5 mb
Frontline5.1 gb
Future Of Food: Genetically Modified Food484.2 mb
G. Edward Griffin2.8 gb
Gladio390.6 mb
Gulag USA: Concentration Camps In America560.7 mb
HAARP: Holes in Heaven357.3 mb
Hidden Wars of Desert Storm409.0 mb
Hijack Catastrophe Extras50.4 mb
Hijacking Catastrophe541.6 mb
History Documentary - The Rockefellers1.2 gb
In Search Of The American Drug Lords452.9 mb
Inside The Oklahoma City Grand Jury283.9 mb
Invisible Ballots687.4 mb
Iraq Death Squads343.1 mb
Iraq For Sale635.1 mb
Iron Mountain: Blueprint for Tyranny698.7 mb
Israels Secret Weapon254.4 mb
JFK II: The Bush Connection171.4 mb
John Pilger68.5 mb
Killtown 911TruthDVD.com - Hoodwinked at Shanksville592.9 mb
Koursk un sous-marin en eaux troubles637.0 mb
Last Chance 911 Timeline107.8 mb
Latin America - Life And Debt689.8 mb
Loose Change 911 - 2nd Edition698.4 mb
Loose Change Final Cut(2007)1.2 gb
Loss Of Liberty - 1967 Israeli War Documentary516.4 mb
Ludicrous Diversion - 7-7 London Bombings170.2 mb
Mind Control Out Of Control - MKULTRA (Lecture)567.2 mb
Modern Marvels - Surveillance Technology184.7 mb
Money Masters - How Int. Bankers Control America700.5 mb
Monopoly Men482.7 mb
Naomi Klein - A Canadian Perspective on US Media229.7 mb
Op Saddam255.1 mb
Orwell Rolls In His Grave682.1 mb
Our Friend Sadaam27.4 mb
Outfoxed682.7 mb
PS2WTO37.8 mb
Painful Deceptions (2005)699.0 mb
Painful Deceptions434.3 mb
Pallywood "According to Palestinian Sources..."38.5 mb
Pandoras Black Box492.0 mb
Psychology: The Power of Situation254.1 mb
Road to Guantanamo65.7 mb
Satan Rides The Media701.0 mb
Saudi America - Master And Servant55.9 mb
Secret History - Killer Flu404.8 mb
Secret Mysteries of America's Beginnings554.9 mb
Secret Weapons in Iraq18.3 mb
September 11th: Evidence to the Contrary192.3 mb
Sir no Sir12.8 mb
Skull & Bones (DutchTV) RM52.7 mb
Skull and Bones - Secret Society152.3 mb
Soviet Weather Engineering Over North America190.2 mb
Spin574.4 mb
Star Wars In Iraq47.0 mb
Sweet Misery: The FDA Aspartame Conspiracy348.8 mb
Ted Gunderson699.8 mb
Texe Marrs - The Blind And The Dead445.4 mb
The 13 Bloodlines of the Illuminati75.9 mb
The Brandon Corey Story696.1 mb
The Clinton Chronicles356.1 mb
The Dossier117.0 mb
The Eagle Has Landed: Illuminati Conquest of Outerspace700.6 mb
The Great Global Warming Swindle950.3 mb
The Greening of Planet Earth (An Inconvenient Truth.Global Warming)289.5 mb
The Hidden Agenda For World Government226.6 mb
The Illuminati698.7 mb
The Lightbringers: Emmisaries of Jahbulon349.4 mb
The Neo-Zionist Order - Who Rules your Rulers713.3 mb
The New World Order (Eustace Mullins)290.4 mb
The Oil Factor370.0 mb
The Other Israel51.5 mb
The Panama Deception459.4 mb
The Passionate Eye Blue Helmets Peace and Dishonour613.0 mb
The Perestroika Deception374.3 mb
The Philosophy of Zionism and Israel64.2 mb
The Power of Nightmares586.3 mb
The Real Face of the European Union356.7 mb
The Ringworm Children (Zionist genocide against Jews using deadly radiation)428.8 mb
The Truth and Lies of 911689.6 mb
Torture - America's Brutal Prisons367.9 mb
Torture - Guantanamo Guidebook402.7 mb
Trading Freedom: The Secret Life of the FTAA599.9 mb
Train Deaths - Government Drug Smuggling At Mena225.7 mb
Tranquility Bay402.9 mb
Trials Of Henry Kissinger730.6 mb
Triple Cross: Bin Ladens Spy In Amerca699.9 mb
Tsarion Expose97.2 mb
Ultrascience - War 2020151.2 mb
Unconstitutional496.9 mb
Uncovered - The Truth About the Iraq War315.8 mb
Votergate88.6 mb
Waco - The Big Lie129.1 mb
Waco: Rules of Engagement1.3 gb
Waking Life697.0 mb
We Become Silent149.9 mb
What is Fascism212.4 mb
What_Ive_Learned_About_U_S_Foreign_Policy438.4 mb
Zbigniew Brzezinski - After NATO Enlargement278.8 mb
Zeitgeist.(2007)693.8 mb
Zionism and Herzl - Herzl - The Antisemitic Side of Zionism91.7 mb

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