Dreams of Liberty: Panacea

Dreams of Liberty: Panacea is a 2011 American documentary film directed by Knox Harrington of BattleForJustice.com 93

Dreams of Liberty: Panacea was produced almost entirely by Harrington over the span of three years and partially filmed during Congressman Ron Paul's 2008 Presidential Run. The movie starts off with a quote inspired by a Darshan Pulse song in which the vocalist sings "For every hero that falls, a true believer takes its place" and also an interview of Presidential Candidate Chuck Baldwin explaining that the times we live in now resemble the times where the founding fathers of America risked their lives and sacred oaths to stand up to tyranny.

At about halfway through the film, a never before scene clip of Ron Paul at a book signing in Missoula, Montana is seen in which Harrington asks Ron Paul about the secretive Bilderberg Group meeting that took place in Chantilly, Virginia. the film also points out that former Senators Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barrack Hussein Obama (Philippines name Barry Soetorro) were illegally attending the treasonous meeting although Obama's staff denied his illegal attendance.

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The filmmaker documents how the New World Order elite who own the Federal Reserve and United States Federal Government have infiltrated politics in the highest positions and are working to create a North American Union through the deception of the war on terror. Dreams of Liberty: Panacea also touches upon how America is being turned into an authoritarian plutocracy, drawing parallels between America and Nazi Germany by using the speeches of survivor Kitty Werthmann and feminist author Naomi Wolf. At the end, Harrington provides what he sees as the solution to the New World Order and how to take America back to the Constitution, solving the nation's problems
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The film has been featured on the Irish news website Sovereign Independent and IMDB.com as well as SomethingMustBreak.net. Although newspapers and other media showed the film little regard and gave mixed reviews, critics have never refuted the facts shown in the documentary which Harrington backs with strenuous resources including news articles throughout.
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The film is the third independent documentary by Knox Harrington. His first film was "The Cost of a Coke" a short film he released over the Internet in 2006 and later revised in 2009 as "The Cost of a Coke: Revisited" which he made as a member of a student group while attending The University of Montana's Media Arts program. The film was in response to the school's administration's corrupt relationship with the Coca-Cola Company a.k.a. "Killer Coke"

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His second short documentary [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1344886/ "We Want to Be Sweat Free" (2008)] covered the nationwide anti-sweatshop movement in which his school took part in by occupying their president's office for hours. The film was featured in a New York screening of NewFilmmakers Summer Film Festival in 2009 and is featured at IndieFlix.com Indieflix.com
 
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