Watch America: Imagine the World Without Her Online Movie

Watch  America: Imagine the World Without Her Online Movie

America is a 2014 American political documentary film by Dinesh D'Souza. It is based on his book, America: Imagine the World Without Her, in which he critically examines various complaints about America and explores what the world might look like without America as a nation. D'Souza was executive producer of the film and co-directed it with John Sullivan. Gerald R. Molen also produced. He had served as producer of D'Souza's previous film, 2016: Obama's America.A story that questions the shaming of the US through revisionist history, lies and omissions by educational institutions, political organizations, Alinsky, Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton and other progressives to destroy America


Movie Name:   America (I) (2014)
Directors: Dinesh D'Souza, John Sullivan
Writers: Dinesh D'Souza, John Sullivan,
Stars: Russell W. Reed, John Koopman, Tina Fortune
Genre :  Documentary
Released Date :  4 July 2014 (USA)  



Watch America  Full Movie Download :

 

America  Movie & details:

Directed by:
Dinesh D'Souza
John Sullivan
Produced by :
Dinesh D'Souza
Gerald R. Molen
Written by :
Dinesh D'Souza
John Sullivan
Bruce Schooley
Starring :Dinesh D'Souza
Music by :Bryan E. Miller
Dave Mustaine (Megadeth)
Edited by :Dinesh D'Souza
Distributed by :Lionsgate
Release date(s)    

June 27, 2014 (limited)
July 2, 2014 (wide)

Running time:103 minutes
Country :United States
Language :English
Box office:$13,720,04
     
Sources of information :

IMDb,Wikipedia,the free encyclopedia

Screenshots of  Saving Mr. Banks (2014)  :


Cast:
  •     Dinesh D'Souza – himself
  •     Don Taylor – President Abraham Lincoln
  •     Michelle Swink – Mary Todd Lincoln
  •     Josh Bonzie – Frederick Douglass
  •     Janitta Swain – Madame C. J. Walker
  •     Rett Terrell – Alexis de Toqueville
  •     Russell W. Reed – Actor at Ford's Theatre
  •     John Koopman – George Washington
  •     Tina Fortune – Hispanic worker
  •     Casey Allen – Crew member
  •     Rodney Luis Aquino – Hernan Cortes
  •     Joey Arguello – East Indian
  •     Michael D. Arite – Major Henry Rathbone
  •     Oscar Azul – Officer
  •     Andrew Baker – Lucayan Indian
  •     Chad Baker – Gustave de Beaumont
  •     Katy Baker – Audience member at Lincoln-Douglas debate
  •     Diana Baracaldo – Lucayan Indian
  •     Mateo Baracaldo – Lucayan Indian
  •     Chris Barber – Middle Eastern Sheik
  •     Crystal Barragan – East Indian Lucayan Indian
  •     Brian Rubright – Priest
  •     Rich Bentz – Saul D. Alinsky

Synopsis :


Setting the stage for a presentation of their views, D'Souza and Sullivan provide counterfactual histories in which George Washington is killed during the Revolutionary War, or the country is divided following civil war, creating a world without America that would be vastly worse off.[7] He claims modern leftists are “telling a new story”, however, contradicting traditional veneration for America in order to “convince a nation to author its own destruction” and “unmake the America that is here now.” He then challenges several "indictments" made against the country and American exceptionalism, including sociology professor and activist Michael Eric Dyson's claim that “Thievery" was the “critical element” for “American empire” and historian and activist Ward Churchill's assertion that the US is the world's new evil empire, and says that 1960s Chicago radical Saul Alinski, historian Howard Zinn, and others have promoted guilt and resentment regarding wealth inequality that has helped shape the political careers of Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton.

D'Souza argues that America's wealth has been created, not stolen. He says the $700 used to purchase colonial Manhattan from American Indians could buy many desolate parcels globally today, but that individual industry has made New York real estate worth billions. He states that in Europe, India, and elsewhere most countries have been founded on conquest, and observes that the American pattern of wealth creation hasn't been the universal norm. He cites examples like Arab historian Ibn Khaldun preferring looting to trade and says that merchants form Hinduism’s second-lowest social caste.

The film argues that American Indians exhibited this "conquest ethic" among themselves, and that most of what American Indian depopulation occurred during European colonization resulted from the accidental transmission of plagues that had earlier devastated Europe, not an intent to wipe out a people. It says modern American Indians have little interest in returning to their hunter-gatherer past. In an interview Senator Ted Cruz compares the Texas Revolution to the American Revolution. Professor and Reconquista advocate Charles Truxillo is contrasted with an interviewed American of Mexican descent who says he has no desire to return to a poverty and crime ridden Mexico and instead wants to live the "American Dream".

D'Souza says that slavery impeded American development, rather than boosting it. The film argues that slavery was an omnipresent phenomenon for most of human history, but that its abolition was "uniquely Western", noting the rarity of a "great war fought to end slavery" like the American Civil War. According to the film the Declaration of Independence essentially says “liberty is the solution to injustice,” a “promissory note” cashed throughout history by Americans such as Martin Luther King, Jr.. C.J. Walker, the black entrepreneur and daughter of slaves who is regarded as America's first self made female millionaire, is cited as an example of the type of individual success story the American system allows that is ignored by historians like Zinn because it undermines their leftist narrative. Columbia University economist Jagdish Bhagwati is shown saying that the “world is embracing the free market,” for which there is “no reason for us to be apologetic.” The film outlines how free enterprise, consumer choice rather than coercion, has raised living standards by making existing goods cheaper and creating new ones.

The film challenges the notion that America is a rapacious conqueror by arguing that Americans have sacrificed for human well being around the world, including places like Afghanistan, Iraq, Germany, and Japan, seeking in return only “enough ground to bury” their dead, as former Secretary of State Colin Powell is quoted as saying. A US veteran of Hanoi Hilton captivity is interviewed discussing his desire to liberate Vietnam. D'Souza reflects on Lincoln's assassination and the continuing cost of freedom, saying that we no longer have past heroes like Washington and Lincoln, but "we do have us” in “our struggle for the restoration of America

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