In Debt We Trust
Filmmaker and former journalist Danny Schechter (WMD: Weapons of
Mass Deception) investigates Americans' ongoing love affair with
credit cards and the staggering level of personal debt it's
created, paying special attention to the relationship between
Congress and the credit card industry. In a modern society
that's increasingly "financialized," consumer debt is so common
that extending credit has become highly lucrative.
http://www.netflix.com/Movie/70067362?trkid=73
In Debt We Trust - A Danny Schechter Film - America Before The
...
In Debt We Trust is a documentary film by Danny Schechter about
the national and personal debt crisis in the US.
http://www.indebtwetrust.org/
"In Debt We Trust". I hope to get a copy of this film to screen
at this weekend's
MORE:>>
WHAT'S MONEY.....
http://www.apfn.org/apfn/money.htm
Market Crisis: In Bernanke We Trust?
The Gate - National Journal, DC - 7 hours ago
... an independent central bank; a (no, seriously) fairly
modestly sized debt and budget deficit; and most importantly, we
all borrow in our own currency."
MORE:>>>
=====================================
View all web results for NATIONAL DEBT
=====================================
Two-time Emmy winner Danny Schechter has produced and directed
many television specials and films, including Timothy Leary
Lives (1997), Seeds of Peace (1996), Prisoners of Hope (1996)
and Countdown to Freedom: Ten Days that Changed South Africa
(1994), narrated by James Earl Jones and Alfre Woodward.
Educated at Cornell and the London School of Economics where he
received his Master's Degree, Schechter was a Nieman Fellow in
Journalism at Harvard University. Among the first producers
hired at the fledgling CNN, Schechter later logged eight years
as a producer for ABC's 20/20.
Today he is executive producer at Globalvision, the independent
New York-based television production company he co-founded in
1988. With Globalvision, Schechter has produced two
award-winning weekly television news magazines. For 156 weeks,
South Africa Now chronicled the social, political and economic
changes that culminated in the dismantling of apartheid. For
five seasons, Rights and Wrongs: Human Rights Television
presented the many faces of the global struggle for human rights
to viewers around the world, including the United States where
the program aired on 150 public television stations and cable
outlets.
Schechter has reported from 45 countries, written for leading
publications and lectured at many schools and universities on
topics including human rights, self-determination, national
policy and the role of media in a democracy. This is his first
book.
He lives in New York City.
http://www.globalvision.org/moreuwatch/the-author.html