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Eustace Mullins (1923-2010) - The Bobby Lee Show Interviews (DVDs) (ISO)

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Contains, to my knowledge, all the interviews Eustace Mullins ever did on the Bobby Lee Show:

The interviews are named after the titles of his books. The World Order interview is named on the screen as "The New World Order" but Mullins is talking about the world order at the time of the interview and before.

DVD 1: The World Order - Murder by Injection (two interviews, total: 1 hour, 30 minutes)

(includes scanned VHS cover artwork - two tapes)

DVD 2: The Magical Money Machine: The Federal Reserve, America's Central Bank (50 minutes)

Downloads:

http://81.167.217.174/mullins/

Descriptions
------------

- The World Order (1992)

For the first time Eustace Mullins, America's foremost bank examiner, appears in a full studio production interview with "The Mouth of the South," Bobby Lee. Mr. Mullins, a renowned author, lecturer and scholar reveals over 50 years of intensive research in an incredible true story and documentation of the conspiracy against the patriotic, hard working families of middle America.

- Murder by Injection (1993)

Eustace Mullins, America's foremost bank examiner, now turns his guns on the medical monopoly, the drug trust and the financiers behind the scenes. This startling interview with "The Mouth of the South," Bobby Lee, lays bare the bloody secrets of the monopoly sorcerers. Another incredible, true and documented story of the conspiracy against the patriotic, hard-working families of middle America.

- The Magical Money Machine

The Federal Reserve is not Federal; it has no reserves; and it is not a system at all, but rather, a criminal syndicate.

Number of files: 2
Run time: 2 hours, 30 minutes
Format: iso, DVD, 720x480, 4:3, NTSC
Source: VHS (4:3, NTSC)

PLEASE NOTE:

A problem has been reported: If you burn the "Murder by Injection" and "World Order" iso file straight to DVD, the DVD may not play properly on standard DVD players.

It should, however, play properly on your computer's DVD drive.

You can also open the ISO file in VLC (videolan.org).

If you kow how to do it: demux the audio and video and make a new DVD. The problem is that DVD/VHS recorders reset the time code at regular intervals (timecode breaks), which makes it difficult for DVD players to keep track of what they should be playing. This becomes a problem when copies are not made from an ISO file made from the original DVD, but rather a VIDEO_TS folder copied from the original DVD to a computer.

Otherwise: KEEP THE DVD! You or someone else might be abe to do it in the future.