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00:02:30This is a place. Well, how are you, Paul?
00:02:33I was just passing, and I thought I might possibly see your father.
00:02:35Won't you sit down? I'll send for him.
00:02:41Well, how is my remarkable patient, eh?
00:02:44I'll let you judge for yourself.
00:02:45Yes, Mrs. Eichmann.
00:02:46Please tell my father that the doctor wishes to see him.
00:02:49Dad will be glad to see you, I'm sure.
00:02:51He's often told friends that having the top of his skull blown off in the war was a blessing in disguise.
00:02:57Yes.
00:02:58Because, doctor, he says you must have put something in his head he didn't have before.
00:03:03I don't understand.
00:03:05Well, you see, Dad's greatest success has been achieved since the war.
00:03:09Oh, Paul.
00:03:13Smoke?
00:03:13No, thank you.
00:03:15But you know, Paul, your father always was a brainy man.
00:03:19It's too bad he went to America so soon after the war.
00:03:22Too bad his brains couldn't have served the country of his birth.
00:03:26Well, you know, Dad, he's a free thinker.
00:03:28He needed room to expand.
00:03:30You couldn't tie him down to any one country.
00:03:32Yeah.
00:03:33But the son is different, eh?
00:03:36What does your father think of your romance with the daughter of our beloved general, eh?
00:03:40Why, he's delighted.
00:03:42Came over to attend the wedding.
00:03:44You see, the general and father were boyhood friends.
00:03:47Of course they were.
00:03:50Of course.
00:03:52But, oh, time brings many changes.
00:03:55The war, now the new government, and, you know, it is rumored, Paul, that your father
00:04:01came over here to break off your romance with Norma.
00:04:03Oh, that's not true, doctor.
00:04:05Why, father and the general.
00:04:07Paul, Paul, well, well, my old friend, Paul, my old friend, Dr. Gere, as I live and breathe.
00:04:21I'm amazed that you still do live and breathe.
00:04:25Yes, you should be, doctor.
00:04:26Yes.
00:04:26Oh, it's seldom that a patient survive the surgery.
00:04:32And to think, you, with a silver plate for a skull for the past 16 years, you know it served me very well.
00:04:40Well, thanks to you.
00:04:41Let me see.
00:04:44Oh, not bad.
00:04:47Not at all bad for a quick job done behind the lines.
00:04:50Oh, your operation was all right.
00:04:52Came much closer to dying afterwards than an enemy prison camp.
00:04:55Here, here, don't you two start living the war all over again.
00:04:59It's a sign we're getting old, Paul.
00:05:01Old?
00:05:02You, not we, doctor.
00:05:03Just the same, Paul.
00:05:06Take my advice, and don't permit yourself to get too excited.
00:05:11Oh, I see.
00:05:12You're afraid I might get a short circuit?
00:05:15Oh, outside of occasional dizzy spells, doctor, I wouldn't know that my head was off the gold standard.
00:05:21Oh, well, it's your head.
00:05:25No, you're just as irresponsible as ever.
00:05:28Never obey a doctor when you're well.
00:05:30That's one of my mottos.
00:05:32They told me, Dr. Gere, what kind of an experiment is this country attempting in government?
00:05:38Well, I might ask you the same question about America.
00:05:42You see, Dad, you two can't keep from discussing major operations.
00:05:46Ah, which reminds me that I'm due at the hospital to perform on him in exactly 15 minutes.
00:05:52But I'll see you tonight at the dinner in your...
00:05:53Oh, these dinners.
00:05:56Doctor, it isn't my head that you should be worrying about.
00:05:58It's my stomach.
00:05:59Perhaps.
00:05:59Perhaps.
00:06:00Why, doctor, you're dropping again.
00:06:02Oh, thank you.
00:06:02I will, Paul.
00:06:03I'll see you tonight.
00:06:04Goodbye, old friend.
00:06:05Goodbye.
00:06:06Goodbye.
00:06:06Goodbye.
00:06:06Goodbye.
00:06:06Goodbye.
00:06:06Goodbye.
00:06:06Goodbye.
00:06:06Goodbye.
00:06:08Goodbye.
00:06:08Goodbye.
00:06:08Goodbye.
00:06:09Goodbye.
00:06:10Goodbye.
00:06:10Goodbye.
00:06:11Goodbye.
00:06:12Goodbye.
00:06:12Goodbye.
00:06:13Goodbye.
00:06:14Goodbye.
00:06:22Fine fellow, doctor, here.
00:06:24And a great surgeon.
00:06:26An awful bragger.
00:06:28What?
00:06:29You know, I don't see anything so remarkable about this operation he performed on my head.
00:06:35Why, Dad.
00:06:37Listen, son.
00:06:39Had he removed my brains and replaced them with sawdust.
00:06:42And then I had continued to function like a normal man, then he'd had something to crow about.
00:06:51May I see you, Minipaul.
00:06:53What is it, Tom?
00:06:54Why, some more cables the government has cancelled.
00:06:56What's this?
00:06:56Howdy, Mr. Franklin.
00:06:58Cancelling our newsflashes?
00:06:59Yes.
00:07:00Censorship is getting tighter every day.
00:07:02What'd they kill today?
00:07:04Why, the story of the burning of the censored books.
00:07:06Also, your article on the new government and its suppression of the freedom of the press.
00:07:11How long's this been going on?
00:07:12Started several days ago.
00:07:14They put a censor on at the cabling offices.
00:07:16And no news can leave the country, Dad, unless it meets with government approval.
00:07:20Well, looks like it's a good thing that I came over here.
00:07:23We're going to get the real news out of this country, my son, if we have to smuggle it.
00:07:27Maybe things will be different after Paul marries the daughter of the chief of the censorship bureau.
00:07:33Oh, maybe then he left us where to absolute secrecy.
00:07:36Oh, I see.
00:07:39Love, honor, and suppress.
00:07:43Nothing like that.
00:07:44Leave the copy here, Tom.
00:07:45I'll see what I can do about it.
00:07:46Okay.
00:07:48I, I, I don't know, son.
00:07:52I, I'm thinking maybe method in this romance.
00:07:58Oh, nonsense, Dad.
00:07:59Norman, I love each other.
00:08:01Oh, I have no doubt about that, Paul.
00:08:03And I think she's a wonderful girl.
00:08:05But knowing Felix Faulkner since a boy,
00:08:08I can see now that he is chief of the censorship bureau,
00:08:11how he would welcome a family tie with a junior member of the world's most powerful news syndicate.
00:08:16Are you inferring that I would permit sentiment to interfere with our business?
00:08:21Has happened, son.
00:08:23Listen, Dad.
00:08:24Norman, her father, do here any minute.
00:08:26The general wants to speak to you about your reception.
00:08:28Oh, splendid.
00:08:29Give me an opportunity to ask him just how far he intends to go with this suppressing of free speech.
00:08:34Listen, Dad.
00:08:35That's just what I don't want you to speak to in the lobby.
00:08:39General Bartlett and Dollar are here.
00:08:41Oh, show them in, please.
00:08:43Oh, careful what you say, Dad.
00:08:45Paul, if this new government intends to take away the freedom of speech and the freedom of the press...
00:08:50Good morning.
00:08:51May we interrupt this conference?
00:08:54At any time.
00:08:55Come right in, dear.
00:08:57Oh.
00:08:58Good morning, Felix.
00:08:59You know, I thought state officials never got up until noon.
00:09:03No.
00:09:06Oh.
00:09:07Well, you look pretty enough to kiss.
00:09:09Now, do you suppose your perspective, father-in-law, could...
00:09:12Of course.
00:09:13Why not?
00:09:15Hmm.
00:09:16There you are, son.
00:09:18Nothing like starting the day out right.
00:09:20Why, it makes me feel 20 years younger.
00:09:23Ah.
00:09:23She's a wonder, Felix.
00:09:27Must get all the charm from my mother, though.
00:09:31You know, he was a rascal as a boy, now.
00:09:34Yes, so Mother told me.
00:09:35Yes, and she knows.
00:09:37I haven't much time this morning, Paul.
00:09:40It will please me, if you do.
00:09:41Of course.
00:09:42You know, I thought this was just a social visit.
00:09:44Paul.
00:09:45If you and Norma will excuse us.
00:09:46That's not necessary.
00:09:47I mean, it may not be necessary, but perhaps advice.
00:09:50Come, Norma.
00:09:51Hmm?
00:09:51At your service, sir.
00:09:57Hmm.
00:10:01Well, sit down.
00:10:03No, I thank you.
00:10:06Felix, uh...
00:10:08You'll pardon me if I find it rather difficult to become accustomed to your formality.
00:10:13An author makes demands on one, Paul.
00:10:16Does he demand that one should take himself too seriously?
00:10:19Oh, come, come now.
00:10:20Here we are.
00:10:21You one of the foremost men of your country, and I one of the foremost news publicists.
00:10:26Yes, perhaps in the world.
00:10:28What does it all mean?
00:10:30I've seen reputations, positions made lost overnight.
00:10:34So have you.
00:10:35Uh...
00:10:36Living in a strange, changeable world, Felix.
00:10:39That's why we shouldn't take ourselves too serious.
00:10:42I, unfortunately, have no time for philosophizing, Paul.
00:10:47The dinner in your honor tonight...
00:10:49Oh, yes, that's dinner.
00:10:51Some time for that evening?
00:10:52Oh, yes, of course.
00:10:54You will be afforded, my dear friend, a most excellent opportunity of rendering a distinguished service to the country of your birth.
00:11:00Hmm?
00:11:01In what you may say tonight.
00:11:03Oh, yes, I understand.
00:11:07And to be bribed with a dinner and flattered into becoming one of your chief propagandists, you see?
00:11:12I'm sorry, Paul, that I cannot appreciate your sense of humor.
00:11:16Oh, why, am it no offence, Felix?
00:11:19You see, we were, we were boys together.
00:11:26This is what I call a real conference.
00:11:30Norma, why don't you advance the date of our wedding?
00:11:33I'm willing, Paul, dear.
00:11:35But you know, Father, he insists that our marriage be a state affair.
00:11:40I simply have to weigh his pleasure.
00:11:42Don't tell me we're going to have to suffer all that pomp and ceremony.
00:11:45I'm afraid it's a penalty I paid for being the daughter of a general.
00:11:51Penalty you paid for making me love you.
00:11:56Why can't we steal away to some other country to be married?
00:11:59What?
00:12:00And start another world war?
00:12:03Don't be foolish.
00:12:05Oh, but Norma, I've waited so long.
00:12:12I'm afraid we've left them alone too long already.
00:12:15My son is merely living up to the principles of the business, I found him.
00:12:23Giving to the public the truth at all times.
00:12:26These articles plainly criticize our policies.
00:12:29They should not only have been cancelled by our censor,
00:12:32but confiscated and destroyed.
00:12:35Felix, why, how dare you?
00:12:37Let this be a lesson to your son.
00:12:40If he thinks that his engagement to Norm
00:12:41entitles him to take liberties...
00:12:43What?
00:12:44Wait a minute, Paul, please.
00:12:46The trouble with you is
00:12:48you're too internationally minded.
00:12:51No, no, you think that I am too much of a...
00:12:53Wait a minute now.
00:12:55I'm going to tell you just what you are.
00:13:03You're just two sweet, lovable old fools.
00:13:06And I hereby declare this international battle a draw.
00:13:13Draw?
00:13:14Oh.
00:13:15Well, I guess that's fair enough, Felix.
00:13:18I guess so, Paul.
00:13:21And to think of my giving a dinner tonight in your honor.
00:13:25Yes.
00:13:26No, by the way, Felix.
00:13:30Since you are suppressing a free press and the right to free speech,
00:13:34I hope you don't suppress free eating.
00:13:36Paul, you're in pocket.
00:13:38Come, Norma.
00:13:40Goodbye, Mr. Franklin.
00:13:41Goodbye, Norma.
00:13:43Goodbye, darling.
00:13:45See you later.
00:13:46Dad, General Buckner is ruthless.
00:13:53Oh, you think you know him, but you don't.
00:13:55He'd stop at nothing,
00:13:56even to the breaking off of my engagement with Norma.
00:13:58Oh, you do nothing of the kind, son.
00:14:00Now, don't you worry.
00:14:01You just leave these things to me.
00:14:02I don't know how to do care of him.
00:14:03Now, forget it.
00:14:05Stop worrying, son.
00:14:06And excuse me now.
00:14:07I must get to work on my speech for that dinner.
00:14:10All right, man.
00:14:11Boom.
00:14:12See?
00:14:13Ladies and gentlemen, the radio audience is at the station F.B.Y.
00:14:20Taking you to the reception given by General General Buckner.
00:14:24I now give you a warning for honor of his friends.
00:14:27I don't know how to report all right.
00:14:29They're a sound of the world.
00:14:31Ah, there's all right.
00:14:33You're kind of a stranger, sir.
00:14:34You're kind of a stranger, sir.
00:14:34You're kind of a stranger.
00:14:35You're kind of a stranger.
00:14:36You're kind of a stranger.
00:14:37Well, well.
00:14:38All right, sir.
00:14:39I'm going to get you to the next time.
00:14:41I'm going to get you to the next time.
00:14:42And tonight, we welcome back to his native land a man whose name has become an editorial
00:15:00byword in every language and hamlet of the civilized world.
00:15:04We pay a former citizen the rich homage that is his due, and we ask him to give us his impressions
00:15:14of our beloved country under the new government.
00:15:19Permit me to have the honor of presenting the eminent Paul Franklin, Sr.
00:15:25Father gave him a good send-off.
00:15:39Splendid.
00:15:41Friends of my native country.
00:15:43My dear friend, Felix Bachner, you know, it isn't easy for me to address you as chief
00:15:53of the censorship bureau.
00:15:57Perhaps it's because I think of you as a boy when there was no one to censor us for the
00:16:02many pranks that we played.
00:16:04Oh, those were long, long years ago, Felix.
00:16:13But I'm wondering if we are not, after all, still boys under the skin.
00:16:18I'm wondering if both of us wouldn't like to go back to those carefree, fun-loving days,
00:16:28and to our country at a time when its people were joyous and free, with a happy song on
00:16:34their lips and in their hearts, laughter in their eyes.
00:16:38There is before we men grew up to an exaggerated sense of our own importance.
00:16:49This may occur to you as a digression, my friends.
00:16:54Yet I cannot feel that it is so, for I know that I cannot blot out the past and the heritage
00:17:01it has left for me, without jeopardizing all that I hold most dear in my present.
00:17:11Knowing all this, I feel, I feel that I must say to you that I have been profoundly shocked
00:17:24on returning to the country of my birth, to find that an inhuman censorship bureau exists.
00:17:43This new administration has turned its back on the efforts, the constructive efforts,
00:17:49of centuries.
00:17:50It has incited racial hatred, brought about religious intolerance, and is ruthlessly destroying
00:17:59the liberties of the people.
00:18:01Careful, Paul, careful.
00:18:02Why?
00:18:03Do you realize that the suppressing of the freedom of speech and of the free press means
00:18:10the surrender of your own personal freedom?
00:18:13the decline, the downfall of this country?
00:18:20I don't understand that.
00:18:22And if this danger has tended to be pressed to other nations, to plunge the world into another
00:18:30dark age.
00:18:31How dare you to murder?
00:18:33This is an insult.
00:18:34Wipe out all the gains that mankind has made in its long climb of power.
00:18:39to the present stage of civilization.
00:18:40The radio.
00:18:41Cut off that radio.
00:18:42You must stop it, I tell you.
00:18:43You must stop this insanity now, before this beloved country is drenched with blood.
00:18:44You said enough.
00:18:45You were hidden of all.
00:18:46Oh, there is much more that I have to say.
00:18:47You must hear me.
00:18:48I hear you.
00:18:49I hear you.
00:18:50I hear you.
00:18:51You must stop it, I tell you.
00:18:52You must stop this insanity now, before this beloved country is drenched with blood.
00:18:57You said enough.
00:18:58You were hidden of all.
00:18:59Oh, there is much more that I have to say.
00:19:01You must hear me.
00:19:02I hear you.
00:19:03I hear you.
00:19:04You must close my heart.
00:19:09Look.
00:19:10I caught dirven.
00:19:12Oh, I hear you.
00:19:13Oh, dear.
00:19:14I hear you.
00:19:15Ah.
00:19:16I see your father out here.
00:19:17Oh, I caught right.
00:19:18For me, dear, in my heart.
00:19:20I must say this thee.
00:19:22If you, Mr. Omar, come with me for my sake.
00:19:33But, Paul, if you, if you could only, if you could only, if you could only, if you could
00:19:41and we could only enjoy it.
00:19:51Keep following.
00:19:55Captain!
00:19:56Captain!
00:19:57That's why I want you to come.
00:20:01Okay.
00:20:0417.
00:20:05Park Place.
00:20:06Okay, Captain.
00:20:07Captain?
00:20:08Oh, Father, you won't let any harm come to Mr. Franklin.
00:20:15It may get out of my hands.
00:20:17Word of this will spread like wildfire.
00:20:20But some action will have to be taken.
00:20:22We cannot let this offense pass on record, guys.
00:20:25Come with me, gentlemen.
00:20:26Paul Franklin must make a public apology.
00:20:28Right.
00:20:28If he were not the father of the man who is to marry...
00:20:30He will not refer to that again, soldier.
00:20:35Come, Norma.
00:20:36An apology is the only thing that will save him.
00:20:42I'm wondering whether he should be saved.
00:20:45Well, if he is not, it may lead to international complications.
00:20:50But if he lives, it may not be a greater menace.
00:20:53Careful, soldier.
00:20:54Such words are dangerous.
00:20:56Come on.
00:20:57Well...
00:21:06You will take my daughter to our home.
00:21:10Yes, sir.
00:21:10I'm sorry, sir.
00:21:11Dad, your speech tonight may be the cause of our having to leave this country.
00:21:35Not me, son.
00:21:37I've never run away from anything in my life.
00:21:39And I'm not starting now.
00:21:41But you haven't lived here recently.
00:21:43You can't tell what they might do.
00:21:44I've never been afraid when I know that I'm right.
00:21:47But, Dad, your life may be at stake.
00:21:50Oh, there, there, son.
00:21:51But you worry about that.
00:21:53Why, they wouldn't dare.
00:21:54Oh, they might.
00:21:56I've seen men's lives crushed out right before my eyes.
00:21:59What you've said to General Bochner tonight has to be squared.
00:22:06I'm going to Norma and try to get her to intercede with her father.
00:22:10Oh, no.
00:22:10That'll just be a waste of time, son.
00:22:14My old friend, General Bochner,
00:22:17doesn't feel the injustice of what he has done in his heart and in his soul.
00:22:22Or even Norma.
00:22:23But it's worth trying, Dad.
00:22:25She's the only one that has any influence with him.
00:22:27No, no, no.
00:22:28To go to her would be dangerous.
00:22:31If she mistook your motive, why, you may lose her.
00:22:35Love and political intrigue won't mix.
00:22:37Just the same, I'm going.
00:22:39I won't be long.
00:22:45Dad.
00:22:54Whatever happens,
00:22:56I just want you to know
00:22:58that I'm with you all the way.
00:23:02When I heard what you said tonight for the first time,
00:23:05I realized what it all meant.
00:23:09You know, I was proud of your father.
00:23:11Thank you, my son.
00:23:27So long, Dad.
00:23:27Lord, you shouldn't have rest coming here.
00:23:45Oh, I can't do it, Norma.
00:23:46Don't you understand?
00:23:47Dad's life may be in danger.
00:23:59Yes, but so may yours.
00:24:01Where is your father?
00:24:02He's gone to your house.
00:24:03He's terribly angry.
00:24:05I don't think he'll listen.
00:24:06Oh, I'm sure he will if you'll only appeal to him.
00:24:08Hey, here's a hot one.
00:24:17What's that, Bill?
00:24:18Well, the psyche,
00:24:20the psychology of our human existence.
00:24:25Hey, here's another one.
00:24:32The evolution of the species.
00:24:36Hey, look at these.
00:24:37It ought to be burned, huh?
00:24:40Look at this one, would you?
00:24:41Can you imagine a bird having books like these?
00:24:47Yeah, that's a waste of time when you get that stuff.
00:24:52What's this?
00:24:53What are you men doing here?
00:24:55Government orders.
00:24:57Orders for what?
00:24:58Destroying all books on the condemned list.
00:25:00Oh, but you can't.
00:25:02Here, here, here.
00:25:04Well, you can't do this.
00:25:06You can't do this, I can't.
00:25:07Oh, who says we can't?
00:25:08These books have been censored.
00:25:11But you, you men don't realize what you are doing.
00:25:18Why, why, this is a rare collection.
00:25:22Some of these books cannot be replaced.
00:25:25I say they can't.
00:25:26Not when we get through with them.
00:25:28But you must stop it.
00:25:29You must stop it, I tell you.
00:25:30Here, here, you.
00:25:32Stop it, I tell you.
00:25:33You must stop it.
00:25:39Felix, Felix.
00:25:40Call off these men.
00:25:43See, look what they have done.
00:25:45But they're going to burn my son's library.
00:25:47We have come, Paul Franklin,
00:25:49to demand a public apology for your insult to our government.
00:25:55You wish a retraction of what I said at the dinner?
00:25:58Precisely.
00:25:59You wish a retraction of what you have done.
00:26:00Precisely.
00:26:01We do not allow foreigners to ridicule us.
00:26:06Foreigners?
00:26:08I who shed my blood for my native country,
00:26:11and because I prospered afterward in America,
00:26:13you call me foreigner?
00:26:15We did not come here to play with words.
00:26:19Do we receive your apology?
00:26:20You do not. Then you will leave this country at once.
00:26:27Your officers here are being dismantled, and your son will leave with you.
00:26:31Felix! Felix!
00:26:34You can send me out of the country.
00:26:38You can destroy my business.
00:26:41But my son, your daughter, Norma, Paul, their happiness...
00:26:50Why, always we dreamed they would be married.
00:26:57Little kiddies.
00:27:00Why, our grandchildren, Felix.
00:27:03You've said enough.
00:27:05Sergeant, when you have finished, carry these books into the street and burn them.
00:27:10You, you would destroy these books?
00:27:14Destroy the records of humanity's struggle throughout the ages?
00:27:17Well, you can't change one iota of what has happened.
00:27:22Though destroying books does not destroy the truth.
00:27:26Any more than taking the life of any human destroys life.
00:27:30You will obey your orders.
00:27:31Felix!
00:27:32How can you do this thing?
00:27:34If you could only remember what the human race has undergone,
00:27:38you would know that hatred only breeds more hatred.
00:27:42violence only breeds more violence.
00:27:48Bring out all the...
00:27:49No!
00:27:50All right, come on, sanitize.
00:27:51All right, now.
00:27:56Open those blocks, bring out all the...
00:27:58We have no time.
00:28:02Felix!
00:28:02Wait.
00:28:04Wait.
00:28:04You are going to see.
00:28:11I'm going to show you.
00:28:14I'm going to show you
00:28:15out of the very records of the books you would destroy.
00:28:20I'm going to take you back.
00:28:23Back to the time
00:28:24when this earth was born.
00:28:26I'm going to show you
00:28:52THE END
00:29:22THE END
00:29:52THE END
00:30:22THE END
00:30:38Into these surroundings came a new creature of superior intellect.
00:30:43Our earliest ancestor, primitive man.
00:30:46It took thousands of years for man to develop.
00:31:08But as he gained mastery over the animal world, his thoughts began to refine his physical body.
00:31:14Proud of his conquests over nature, man began with the aid of stone and charcoal to draw pictures on the walls of his cave.
00:31:27This marked the beginning of man's real progress.
00:31:32But the greatest invention that did more than all else to lay the foundation of civilization was the development of writing, which at first took the form of signs and symbols.
00:31:46And then, the alphabet.
00:31:53The printed word.
00:31:56Books like these and these have done more than anything else in the world to free humanity from ignorance and superstition.
00:32:05Haven't we heard enough of this drivel?
00:32:09What do we care about this primitive man stuff?
00:32:12Let the dead past bury us dead.
00:32:14And I say to you, what you call the dead past is not dead.
00:32:21It is alive in us.
00:32:24And we should study our past in order to determine our present actions.
00:32:29Think, gentlemen.
00:32:30Let us go back 3,000 years before Christ in the land of Egypt.
00:32:391,200 years later, Moses, founder of Judaism and the first outstanding spiritual leader, gave the world the Ten Commandments.
00:33:091,200 years later, Moses, founder of Judaism and the first outstanding spiritual leader, gave the world the Ten Commandments.
00:33:392,200 years before the birth of Christ, there was born a spiritual leader in far-off India, known as Buddha.
00:33:47Buddha taught that the three great sins in life are self-indulgence, ill-will, and ignorance.
00:34:14Millions of his followers now baptized themselves in the river Ganges, along which Buddha preached.
00:34:22At this time, Confucius, wise man of the East, gave not only to China, but to all mankind his spiritual teachings,
00:34:40that have spread to many lands, and have endured even to the present day in the hearts of millions.
00:34:46Mighty and tyrannical warriors followed in the wake of these spiritual teachers, Alexander, Hannibal, and then Julius Caesar, whose conquests changed the map of the then known world.
00:35:11The End
00:35:13The End
00:35:15The End
00:35:17The End
00:35:19The End
00:35:25The End
00:35:27The End
00:35:35The End
00:35:37The End
00:35:38The End
00:35:39The End
00:35:40The End
00:35:41The End
00:35:42The End
00:35:44The End
00:35:45The End
00:35:46The End
00:35:48The End
00:35:49And through the ages, gentlemen, during the tyrannical rule of these war lords, humanity suffered by a war.
00:35:56And through the ages, gentlemen, during the tyrannical rule of these warlords, humanity
00:36:11suffered untold misery and death, paying a tremendous price that civilization might be
00:36:20advanced.
00:36:31Paul, isn't that your outfit?
00:36:36Yes.
00:36:37I wonder what it's all about.
00:36:39Oh, Paul, please.
00:36:40You wait here.
00:36:41I'm going to see what's happening.
00:36:42Oh, no.
00:36:43Don't worry about me.
00:36:44You wait here.
00:36:45Be careful.
00:36:50What's going on here?
00:36:54Stop it, I say.
00:36:55Government office.
00:36:56Why, this is my office.
00:36:57You have no right to destroy my records.
00:36:59Oh, yes, we have.
00:37:00And then, and then, gentlemen, followed the greatest event in the history of mankind, known
00:37:10only to the wise men who followed a star, the star of Bethlehem.
00:37:20That is what she's missing.
00:37:21Only one will take forever.
00:37:22Help 회복ize it on the vessels of the royal rain.
00:37:23That is the Senhor, which turned their heads off into沒.
00:37:26morning darkness h Get out has worked with the σουitts
00:37:28Hy poids to persuade her this being as a lady.
00:37:29They are still up helping니7 T-RGS.
00:37:30All right.
00:37:31I will show you.
00:37:32I will continue today.
00:37:33This is my emergency room.
00:37:34I'll pick the yarrow afternothing.
00:37:35If I don't custom the 선생.
00:37:37They're my largest Together ofج rainbow policymakers.
00:37:39rests on the test technical framework.
00:37:40No, no, no, no.
00:37:41I'll check it out safely.
00:37:42Here we go.
00:37:43I will see you.
00:37:44No, no.
00:37:45It's not one more.
00:37:46There's not to POids.
00:37:47THE END
00:38:17IT WAS CHRIST WHO HAD SAID, ALL THINGS THEREFORE WHATSOEVER YE WOULD THAT MEN SHOULD DO UNTO YOU, EVEN SO DO YE ALSO UNTO THEM.
00:38:36WHAT DO WE CARE WHO LIVED BEFORE, OR WHAT THEY DID? WE'LL MAKE OUR OWN HISTORY.
00:38:47WE'LL MAKE OUR OWN HISTORY.
00:38:54DON'T, PLEASE.
00:38:56DON'T, PLEASE.
00:39:01DON'T, PLEASE.
00:39:06DON'T, PLEASE.
00:39:07Oh, man, it's not a star.
00:39:09You see the traitor roof exhibit?
00:39:11Yes, this old man is a traitor.
00:39:19Let me get him up!
00:39:21Get him up, boys!
00:39:23Let me go!
00:39:25Squeeze that out.
00:39:31Oh, man!
00:39:33Hey!
00:39:37If you don't like the country, why don't you get out?
00:39:39Yeah!
00:39:49Oh, please.
00:39:51Please.
00:39:53Oh.
00:39:55Sorry.
00:39:59You beat your murderer.
00:40:01You killed him.
00:40:03Kill him.
00:40:05Oh, Lord.
00:40:07Oh, Lord.
00:40:09Oh, Lord.
00:40:11Oh, Lord.
00:40:13And 500 years after Christ was crucified,
00:40:15there was born into the world
00:40:17Muhammad,
00:40:19the great prophet of the Arabs.
00:40:21Muhammad again reminded man of his sins,
00:40:25extended his faith
00:40:27to many lands.
00:40:29Extended his faith
00:40:31to many lands.
00:40:33to find the prisoners.
00:40:34At the inn,
00:40:43with his home states,
00:40:45he eux...
00:40:51how?
00:40:53The blood of countless millions of men, women, and children has been sacrificed in the onward
00:41:18in the march of civilization. Men of great courage throughout the ages have defied death to preserve the principles of freedom.
00:41:31We know all about him and his father. We know what they think of our government.
00:41:36Who's the girl with him? Are we going to let her disappear? No.
00:41:41Stand back, please. Stand back.
00:41:54I'll drive the cabin.
00:41:56Oh, but no, I must get to my father.
00:41:58I'm going to get you to the doctor, sir.
00:42:00You're all going to get you to the doctor.
00:42:02I'm sorry, miss.
00:42:04You should be. I've seen that you're severely reprimanded for this fruit wasn't told.
00:42:11Three great inventions now came as a great aid to mankind.
00:42:21Gunpowder, the sailor's compass, and the printing press.
00:42:27Gunpowder revolutionized war. It brought an end to the days of knights in armor.
00:42:34One man with a musket proved more deadly than a hundred men in metal suits.
00:42:40The compass enabled men to cross the seas and explore other lands, extending trade throughout the world.
00:42:52And the printing press set free a vast store of knowledge.
00:42:57Such a store of knowledge, gentlemen, as you are now trying to destroy.
00:43:06Why, half of the books printed are wrong.
00:43:09But what you were saying about gunpowder is true. It's useful.
00:43:15But gunpowder should be used to preserve, not to destroy mankind.
00:43:20Through aid of the printing press, the constructive thoughts of men were carried to the four corners of the earth,
00:43:27whetting man's appetite for more knowledge.
00:43:30Why, it was this thirst for knowledge that inspired the voyage of Christopher Columbus in 1492,
00:43:36which resulted in the discovery of America, the New World.
00:43:41Two hundred years later, the pilgrim, seeking religious freedom, landed on Plymouth Rock,
00:43:53and the colonization of America began.
00:44:09The colonists prospered for more than one hundred years.
00:44:16Then they rebelled against the King of England.
00:44:19And under the leadership of George Washington, won their political freedom.
00:44:24During this revolution, the Declaration of Independence was written.
00:44:29A document which stands today as an inspiration to liberty-loving people throughout the world.
00:44:36A document which proclaimed that all men are created equal.
00:44:41That they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights.
00:44:45That among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
00:44:51It is for such rights, gentlemen, that humanity has shed its blood.
00:45:01Soon after independence was achieved in America, revolution broke out in France.
00:45:07The King and Queen and thousands of the royalty and nobility were beheaded by the inflamed populace.
00:45:14And out of the French Revolution sprang Napoleon Bonaparte,
00:45:18who led his nation through many bloody wars, only to end his days in exile.
00:45:39And less than one hundred years later, gentlemen, the United States of America,
00:45:44which had extended its boundaries from the Atlantic to the Pacific,
00:45:48was torn by a great civil war.
00:45:52Father against son.
00:45:54Brother against brother.
00:45:56South against the North.
00:45:59In a bloody conflict to decide issues upon which the very destiny of the New World depended.
00:46:05Abraham Lincoln, the loved and martyred president, whose guidance during these days of strife preserved the nation,
00:46:25and helped heal the wounds of his fellow countries.
00:46:49Beginning with the 19th century, inventions came thick and fast.
00:46:53Modern improvements leaped from the minds of men and revolutionized industry.
00:46:58of the nations.
00:46:59additional investment in those cities.
00:47:01Quite the very table of Montreal.
00:47:02The National Copyright Humanekers have been fulfilled either.
00:47:04Orphan, the Commeven ski.
00:47:05That's kind of a happy place.
00:47:06But the loans were accepted and partnered with the realtors.
00:47:07Orphan, the conquistated black.
00:47:08And the enslaved men.
00:47:09To be a small village, let's admit to them.
00:47:10You can certainly remember n wichtig in the world of the to grown up mater.
00:47:11And theaper Se sine Veilers had been dedicated about friday.
00:47:13That's come in.
00:47:15That is all right.
00:47:16They had made suddenly now that everything starts acting like with the elder hunter.
00:47:19it was bewildering humanity became dizzy trying to adjust itself to the conditions which the use of
00:47:47machinery had brought about
00:48:11after all these modern developments one would presume that the world at last weeks the first
00:48:18stages of a real civilization but with all our support culture and enlightenment think gentlemen
00:48:28think what happened
00:48:36so
00:48:38so
00:48:40so
00:48:42so
00:48:44so
00:48:46so
00:48:48so
00:48:50so
00:48:54so
00:48:56so
00:49:00so
00:49:02so
00:49:04so
00:49:06so
00:49:08so
00:49:10so
00:49:12so
00:49:22so
00:49:36so
00:49:38so
00:49:52so
00:49:54so
00:50:07so
00:50:09so
00:50:11so
00:50:25so
00:50:27so
00:50:29so
00:50:31so
00:50:47so
00:50:49so
00:50:51so
00:50:57so
00:51:13so
00:51:15so
00:51:17so
00:51:23so
00:51:39so
00:51:41so
00:51:43so
00:51:49so
00:52:04so
00:52:14so
00:52:30so
00:52:32so
00:52:34so
00:52:40so
00:52:54so
00:52:56so
00:52:58so
00:53:00so
00:53:16so
00:53:18so
00:53:20so
00:53:36so
00:53:38so
00:53:40so
00:53:46so
00:54:01so
00:54:11so
00:54:15so
00:54:29so
00:54:31so
00:54:33so
00:54:49so
00:54:51so
00:54:53so
00:54:55so
00:55:11so
00:55:13so
00:55:15so
00:55:17so
00:55:35so
00:55:37so
00:55:39so
00:55:43so
00:55:45so
00:56:12so
00:56:14so
00:56:15does it look
00:56:16does it look as though the people of the earth have any greater faith or love in one another than they had in the past centuries?
00:56:24look about you
00:56:26not a very pleasant or hopeful picture, is it?
00:56:31hardly designed to promote peace on earth, good will to man.
00:56:40today
00:56:41today
00:56:42the people of many nations are trembling on the face of another great war, a war more terrible, more horrible, more devastating than the last conflict, a war that threatens not alone soldiers on battlefields, but a war aimed at the ruthless destruction of cities and the merciless slaughter of innocent humanity.
00:57:08what is all this leading to?
00:57:10do countries of the world prepare in this manner if they really trust one another?
00:57:13do countries of the world prepare in this manner if they really trust one another?
00:57:15do countries of the world prepare in this manner if they really trust one another?
00:57:20can't humans realize that another great war means suicide, the absolute destruction of everything that anyone holds gear and worthwhile?
00:57:25do countries of the world prepare in this manner if they really trust one another?
00:57:38can't humans realize that another great war means suicide, the absolute destruction of everything that anyone holds gear and worthwhile?
00:57:50can't you men see what such actions as yours are breeding?
00:57:56can't you see what intolerance has done throughout the ages?
00:58:01now then, is man going to awaken in time?
00:58:08or is it going to take some great catastrophe to awaken him?
00:58:13if man doesn't destroy himself, will mother earth, nauseated by man's ways, turn upon him the full wrath of her elements?
00:58:25fire, storm, tidal wave, earthquake, just to remind man that he isn't as mighty or as haughty as he thinks
00:58:55no i ought no, i've he didn't die
00:59:01huh!
00:59:04coworkers!
00:59:07some burgers!
00:59:11we syncs
00:59:15motion
00:59:18guidance
00:59:20This isn't a dream, gentlemen.
00:59:42This is a reality.
00:59:46You are sowing the seeds for a terrible harvest.
00:59:50It is not the destroying of a few books.
00:59:53It is the destroying of something in here.
00:59:58Here.
01:00:01Gentlemen, perhaps even at the eleventh hour,
01:00:06it is not too late.
01:00:08Perhaps mankind may yet save itself from the cataclysm of the ages.
01:00:15Perhaps one day,
01:00:19humans will learn to truly love and trust one another.
01:00:24Now, this has gone far enough.
01:00:26Haven't you had your fellow this, General?
01:00:29An hour of senseless threatening.
01:00:31General, what he has said has been very, very instructive.
01:00:37By his philosophy, if nothing he can say can change our ideas of government.
01:00:45You are right, Salter.
01:00:47Paul Franklin, you and your son will leave this country tomorrow,
01:00:52or the government will deport you.
01:00:54Why, Felix!
01:00:56Felix!
01:00:57Sergeant, hurry out your orders.
01:01:04What?
01:01:05What Felix?
01:01:06Felix!
01:01:07My upper side.
01:01:10Oh.
01:01:25Oh.
01:01:29Oh.
01:01:31Millions
01:01:37He shot.
01:01:38He shot.
01:01:42He shot.
01:01:45He shot.
01:01:47He shot.
01:01:48He shot.
01:01:49He shot.
01:01:50Hear me, hear me, you the people of this beloved country I speak, do you know what you
01:02:17are doing? It isn't these books, it is the principle of human freedom you are destroying.
01:02:26What's he blabbing about? A lot of Sunday school stuff. Don't you people realize that you are
01:02:33really destroying yourselves? Are you blind to the danger of suppressing individual
01:02:41liberties? Are you helping keep fuel upon a fire that can only lead to your own destruction?
01:02:50Well that's old man Frank. Why he's not even a citizen. He doesn't even belong in this country.
01:02:56Now shut the old windbag up.
01:03:00Oh!
01:03:12Get it, Brad!
01:03:24Seems to be badly injured, general.
01:03:26This is horrible.
01:03:28Carry him into his home.
01:03:30Don't do it.
01:03:31Take him inside.
01:03:32You go with him.
01:03:33You go with him.
01:03:34Do everything possible.
01:03:35Don't do it.
01:03:36He will corrupt you.
01:03:37This is caught in severely punishment.
01:03:39Careful.
01:03:40Let's go to the men.
01:03:41God.
01:03:42Find the man who did this.
01:03:44Now let's go.
01:03:56How is he, Doctor?
01:03:59Good.
01:04:00Good.
01:04:01Good.
01:04:02Good.
01:04:03Good.
01:04:04Good.
01:04:05Good.
01:04:24How is he, Doctor?
01:04:25I'm afraid, General.
01:04:28His old war injury.
01:04:29You mean?
01:04:31His plate.
01:04:32I'm afraid that the blow has...
01:04:34Don't.
01:04:37Don't you worry about my plate, old friend.
01:04:47It's all right.
01:04:51You...
01:04:52You did a fine job.
01:04:55You did a fine job.
01:05:06I wonder what all this is about.
01:05:07I hope nothing's happened to Father.
01:05:08Oh, Doctor?
01:05:09Oh, no.
01:05:10Old man Franklin.
01:05:11Old man Franklin's son.
01:05:13Dad, I...
01:05:14Dad.
01:05:16Dad.
01:05:18Dad.
01:05:19Father.
01:05:20Father.
01:05:21Father.
01:05:22They destroyed Paul's office.
01:05:24He tried to stop them but couldn't.
01:05:27They're beating them terribly.
01:05:31Father, you must do something to protect Mr. Franklin and Paul.
01:05:34Can't you see that you must?
01:05:36You must...
01:05:43To Franklin.
01:05:57No, Norma.
01:05:58He can't see.
01:05:59He's blind.
01:06:00Blind...
01:06:01Blind...
01:06:02To the inevitable.
01:06:03But I can see.
01:06:04I can see that mankind will never be truly civilized...
01:06:09Until all races become one in spirit, understanding, brotherly love.
01:06:35Brotherly love.
01:06:42It's all...
01:06:43So easy.
01:06:47Yet men are...
01:06:48Making it...
01:06:49So hard.
01:06:53So...
01:06:55Difficult.
01:06:58It's true, Paul.
01:07:01You are right.
01:07:04You are right.
01:07:13You are right.
01:07:14You are right.
01:07:15Oh...
01:07:16If men...
01:07:17Could only see...
01:07:21If...
01:07:22If they could only...
01:07:24If...
01:07:27If Paul...
01:07:29Paul, my boy...
01:07:31Where are you?
01:07:33Here, Father.
01:07:35Here.
01:07:39You, you know.
01:07:44You must tell them.
01:07:49My son.
01:07:52Paul.
01:07:55My boy.
01:07:58You.
01:08:01You will tell them.
01:08:03Tell them.
01:08:05Tell them.
01:08:17I shall not fail you, Father.
01:08:31I shall not fail you.
01:08:35I shall not fail you.
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