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  1. Aug 2, 2018 · As badly as “Death of a Nationfails as history, it's even worse when judged on cinematic terms; he and co-director Bruce Schooley have really outdone themselves here, if that is quite the right phrase to describe it.

    • From bondage to spiritual growth – Great civilizations are formed in the crucible. The Ancient Jews were in bondage for 400 years in Egypt. The Christian faith and the Church came out of 300 years of persecution.
    • From spiritual growth to great courage – Having been steeled in the crucible of suffering, courage and the ability to endure great sacrifice come forth.
    • From courage to liberty – As a result of the courageous fight, the foe is vanquished and liberty and greater justice emerges. At this point a civilization comes forth, rooted in its greatest ideals.
    • From liberty to abundance – Liberty ushers in greater prosperity, because a civilization is still functioning with the virtues of sacrifice and hard work.
  2. Death of a Nation was released in the United States on August 3, 2018, received strongly negative reviews and grossed $5.9 million. Film critics criticized the film as propaganda, [5] [6] [7] and both critics and historians noted its falsehoods and misrepresentations.

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  4. Jul 31, 2018 · In “ Death of a Nation ,” the latest smirky documentary screed from the fake-historical-news factory of Dinesh D’Souza, there’s an astonishing section in which the filmmaker displays the...

  5. Nov 23, 2015 · On March 1, 1870, at Cerro Corá—at the heart of Paraguay’s present-day border with Brazil—Brazilian troops destroyed the remnants of López’s command and killed Vice President Domingo Francisco Sánchez. Wounded and with Brazilian troops close behind, López himself made it to the nearby Aquidabán River.

  6. History tells us that technology, religion and politics are capable of being adopted by other nations without the need to subjugate and colonize them. Mostly through trade. Humans all over the world were able to obtain, understand and iterate on technologies they had received from other parts of the world without the need for colonial occupation.

  7. The Black Death shows how critical junctures —significant, disruptive historical events—can drive rapid change towards either inclusiveness or extractiveness, depending on the context in which they occur.

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