Monday, August 29, 2011
How To Heal Your Life Itself? - Louise Hay & Gregg Braden
Louis Hay & Gregg Braden - How To Heal Life Itself
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Louise Hay Interview Gregg Braden - You Can Heal Your Life
http://www.greggbraden.com/
http://www.louisehay.com/
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Thursday, August 25, 2011
Truth about Burma/Myanmar and Their Struggles - Inside Burma Land of Fear & Burma VJ
More than a million people have been forced from their homes and according to the United Nations, untold thousands have been massacred, tortured, and subjected to a modern form of slavery. Burma, says Amnesty International, is a prison behind bars. John Pilger and David Munro go undercover in one of the world’s most isolated, and extraordinary countries, Burma, which AmnestyInternational calls ‘a prison without bars’. They discover slave labour preparing for tourism and foreign investment.
International Actual Award for Risk Journalism, Barcelona, Spain, 1996; Bronze Plaque in the category of ‘Social Issues – International Relations’, The Chris Awards, Ohio, 1996; Gold Special Jury Award, ‘Film & Video Production division’, WorldFest-Charleston, 1996; Award for Best Factual Programme, RTS Midland Centre Awards, Birmingham, 1996; Gold Apple in the category ‘Politics: Social organisations in other lands’, National Educational Media Network Film & Video Competition at The 1997 NEMN Apple Awards, Oakland, California, 1997; the updated version won a Gold Special Jury Award in the ‘Film & Video Production division’, WorldFest-Houston, 1999.
John_Pilger - Burma - Land of Fear
Burma VJ is a moving and shocking account of the popular protests that broke out across Rangoon in 2007. Reporting from a Closed Country is a 2008 documentary film directed by Anders Østergaard. It follows the September 2007 uprisings against the military regime in Burma. Some of it was filmed on hand-held cameras, and the footage was smuggled out of the country. Other parts of it were reconstructed, which caused controversy.
It relies entirely on documentary footage shot by undercover reporters which has been pieced together to form a picture of the events that took place over a few months. It covers the initial protests, which broke out in response to a rise in fuel prices, to the brutal crackdown by the authorities in response.
Burma VJ - Part 1
Burma VJ - Part 2
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The Story Behind Burma's Elections - Burma 
Watch on: Youtube
journeymanpictures on Oct 12, 2011               
In November 2010 Burma held its first  democratic election in 20 years. The gererals in power wanted us to  believe that it represented a historic step towards democracy but this  report, which was secretly filmed by exiled media group 'Democratic  Voice of Burma', highlights how this was not the case.
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Tuesday, August 23, 2011
Truth about Oil Tycoons, Standard Oil, General Motors, General Electric, Formation of Central Bank, Central Government, and World Wars

ufohypotheses | May 01, 2007
"UFO Hypotheses featuring Wendelle Stevens: UFO Crash Near Aztec, New Mexico: A Social Tragedy," in which 83-year-old Air Force Lt. Colonel (retired) Wendelle C. Stevens, one of the world's most renowned UFO investigators, describes for the first time on record the events surrounding his book regarding the crash retrieval of a downed alien spacecraft north of Los Alamos government laboratories from March 25,1948, the consistent government harassment of witnesses and investigators, the mysterious deaths of several researchers, an assassination plot discovered by California police on the life of co-author William S. Steinman, and Stevens subsequent harrassment and then five-year imprisonment on charges he claims to this day were untrue.
In the fourth DVD of the "UFO Hypotheses" series, we examine together the foundation of our modern ownership by a group of ruthless, genocide-promoting European banking "aristocracy" and the deeds of their corporate spawn, setting the stage for their control of the government and political direction of the United States at the time a UFO crashed in the high desert of nothwestern New Mexico on March 25, 1948, exactly 59 years earlier than the release of this documentary. Those in power who controlled the space-travelling vehicle of non-Earth origin were the representatives of this European banking syndicate, many of whom were part of the U.S. military and U.S. corporate leadership so this documentary presents, supported by a number of distinguished journalists and professors cited in this "Chapter One of Seventeen: The Rise of Big Oil" in another UFOHypotheses.com series by Under-Appreciated Science Productions. Intended for mature audiences.
 Read the US Constitution:  US Constitution
Read the US Constitution:  US ConstitutionUFO Hypotheses - Aztec Chapter One - Part 5 of 14
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Wendelle C. Stevens, Lt. Colonel U.S. Air Force (retired), one of the  world's most renowned UFO investigators, shares personal insight  regarding his book UFO Crash At Aztec about the March 25, 1948 crash and  subsequent retrieval of a downed alien spacecraft northwest of Los  Alamos government laboratories. The Aztec crash retrieval case is  notable for the consistent government harassment of witnesses and  investigators, its toxic effect on the careers of both whistleblowers  and researchers including an assassination plot on the life of UFO Crash  At Aztec co-author William S. Steinman uncovered by California police.  CHAPTER TWO examines human enslavement and genocide by a group of  ruthless European banking aristocrats through their corporate spawn, and  how their military-industrial cabal instigated World War II, and had  already gained control of the U.S. executive branch and military when  alien spacecraft began crashing in New Mexico in the mid-to-late 1940s.  Specifically, Wendelle Stevens shares his views on World War Two,  including the Big Oil powers, the prelude to Pearl Harbor, Foo Fighters,  the Nazi flying disc program, and introduces some of the principal  Aztec witnesses and what they were doing during WWII. Stevens then  relates his defining experiences in the Pacific during WWII, including  his observations on the Army Air Force, the Japanese Surrender, the U.S.  atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Finally, Stevens reviews a  preliminary investigation into claims of a UFO crash retrieval near San  Antonio, New Mexico on August 16, 1945, and offers an overview of  Project Paperclip. Under-Appreciated Science Productions presents  Chapter Two: World War II and the Privatization of the Common Good from  the Aztec Crash series.
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Part 11 onwards is on Wendelle C. Stevens experience during the war. I have not added it in because it is to long to post a 24 part. I have added some important parts. Do catch the full version on youtube. Thanks.
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UFO Hypotheses - Aztec Chapter Two - Part 10 of 24
Part 11 onwards is on Wendelle C. Stevens experience during the war. I have not added it in because it is to long to post a 24 part. I have added some important parts. Do catch the full version on youtube. Thanks.
UFO Hypotheses - Aztec Chapter Two - Part 15 of 24
UFO Hypotheses - Aztec Chapter Two - Part 16 of 24
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Sunday, August 21, 2011
The Truth and History of Spain (Civil War). Francisco Franco Bahamonde

Francisco Franco Bahamonde AKA 'El Caudillo' (The Dictator) Spain
Source from: Moreorless
Kill tally:      Tens to hundreds of thousands. One source says 500,000 killed in the  Spanish      Civil War, another claims two million executed alone. More sober  estimates      for executions put the figure at 35,000 killed either summarily or  after      a hasty court martial. According to military historian Antony  Beevor, the      figure for non-combatants and surrendered troops killed by Franco's  Nationalists      during the war "must exceed 100,000 and may be closer to 200,000."    
Background:      Spain becomes a republic in 14 April 1931 when King so XIII  abdicates      and goes into exile. However, the country is unable to maintain any  political      stability. A provisional administration is replaced first by a  republican      left government in October 1931 then a conservative government in  November      1933 and finally by the Popular Front, a coalition of socialists and  left      republicans, in February 1936. Spanish conservatives become  concerned      that the Popular Front will turn the country into a communist state.  The      right-wing National Bloc openly appeals to the military to save  Spain.      The military acts in July 1936, sparking the Spanish Civil War.
Time Magazine Comrades: Francisco Franco (Spanish Civil War)
Mini biography:      Born on 4 December 1892 in El Ferrol in Galicia, northwestern Spain.  His      full name is Francisco Paulino Hermenegildo Teódulo Franco y  Bahamonde.      Franco's father is a paymaster in the Spanish naval administrative  corps.      His mother is a pious and conservative upper middle-class Roman  Catholic.    
1907 - At the age of 14 Franco  enters      the Infantry Academy at Toledo, graduating three years later and  receiving      his first commission as second lieutenant. 
1912 - He volunteers for active  duty      in the colonial campaigns against the Rif tribespeople in Spanish  Morocco. 
1913 - Franco is promoted to  first      lieutenant in an elite regiment of native Moroccan cavalry. He  quickly wins      a reputation for efficiency, dedication and concern for his troops'  well-being.      He also becomes known as a severe disciplinarian prepared to have  men      shot for minor infractions of regulations. 
1915 - He becomes the youngest  captain      in the Spanish Army. 
1916 - He is seriously wounded by       a bullet in the abdomen and returns to Spain to recover. 
1920 - Franco is appointed second       in command of the newly organised Spanish Foreign Legion, succeeding  to      full command in 1923. The legion becomes notorious for the  ruthlessness      and brutality of its attacks on Moorish villages and plays a  decisive      role in bringing the Moroccan revolt to an end. Franco becomes a  national      hero. 
1923 - Franco marries Carmen  Polo.      The couple will have a daughter. 
1926 - He is promoted to  brigadier-general,      becoming the youngest soldier of this rank in the whole of Europe. 
1928 - He is named director of  the      newly organised General Military Academy in Zaragoza. 
1931 - The Spanish monarchy falls       when King Alfonso XIII abdicates and goes into exile. Franco's  career      is halted when the leftist leaders of the new Spanish republic  (known      as the Second Republic) adopt a policy to reform the army. The  General      Military Academy is dissolved and Franco reassigned first as the  head      of the infantry garrison at La Coruna and then as commander of      the Balearic Islands district. 
The leaders of the Second Republic introduce numerous other  reforms.      Women are given the vote, the Catholic Church is excluded from the  education      system and divorce is legalised. Catalonia and the Basque provinces  are      given some political autonomy. Land reform measures seek to divide  large      estates in the south of the country among local peasants. 
However, social conservatives view the reforms with alarm; while  the Spanish      economy stagnates and unemployment rises as the Great Depression  grips      the world. 
1933 - Conservative parties led  by      the Spanish Confederation of the Autonomous Right (Confederación  Espanola      de Derechas Autónomas - CEDA) win control of the Republic in the      general elections held in November and begin to dismantle the  reforms      initiated by their predecessors, sparking political unrest in urban  and industrial      centres, Catalonia and the Basque provinces - areas where support  for      the reform agenda is strongest. 
The far right is spearheaded by a newly formed party called  'Falange'      (phalanx). Falange advocates the fascist ideals of Germany's Adolf Hitler and Italy's      Benito      Mussolini.
1934 - Franco is promoted to  major-general      and placed in a position in the Ministry of War. When he suppresses  an      uprising by miners in the northern province of Asturias in October  he      once again comes into prominence. In May 1935 he is appointed as the  army's      chief-of-staff. 
1936 - The conservative  government      is dissolved. At elections held in February the 'Popular Front'  coalition      of the left wins a narrow victory over the rightist 'National Bloc'  and      begins to restart the social reform program.
Spanish conservatives become concerned that the Popular Front,  which      has ties with the Soviet Union, will turn the country into a  communist      state. The tension soon boils over into open violence between rival      groups on the left and right. 
When the new government is unable to prevent the accelerating  collapse      of Spain's social and economic structure Franco calls on it to  declare      a state of emergency. His appeal is refused. 
Suspected by the leftist government of being an antirepublic  conspirator,      Franco is removed from the general staff and demoted to military  governor      of the Canary Islands. 
Meanwhile, rebels within the military conspire with civilian  Nationalists      in a plot to overthrow the Popular Front. Franco decides to join the  rebellion      just days before it is scheduled to begin. 
The military rebellion is announced on the Canary Islands on 17  July and      starts in earnest the following day. The Spanish Civil War has  begun. On 18      July Franco flies to Morocco, taking control of the territory and  the crack      Army of Africa troops garrisoned there. The army is composed of  elite Spanish      Foreign Legion battalions and native Moroccan units commanded by  Spanish      officers. At the end of July Franco declares that he is prepared "to       shoot half of Spain." 
Franco secures the use of Germany and Italian aircraft to transport  the      troops to Spain. On 6 August he crosses to the mainland himself. A  headquarters      is established at Seville, in the south of the country, from where  he coordinates      the Nationalist forces marching on Madrid. However, the capital is  successfully      defended, depriving the Nationalists (Nacionales) of a quick  victory. 
A junta of generals forms a Nationalist government. Backed in Spain  by      the Catholic Church, the Falange and monarchists, the rebel  government      is promptly recognised by Germany and Italy. Franco is declared  'generalisimo',      (commander-in-chief), and 'jefe de estado' (head of state) of the  Nationalist      regime on 29 September. He appeals to Adolf Hitler and Benito  Mussolini      for help in the war effort. Both fascist leaders provide personnel,  aircraft,      tanks and artillery on favourable terms. Germany stipulates that its  military      aid should only go to the forces under Franco's command. 
Soon after, Franco allows the Germans to organise under an  independent command      called the 'Condor Legion'. The size of the legion will vary between  5,000      and 10,000 men. 
The Nationalists also receive substantial aid from Spanish  multi-millionaire      Juan March, former King Alfonso XIII and international businesses,  including the      Texas Oil Company, Standard Oil of New Jersey, Ford, Studebaker,  General      Motors, and Dupont of Nemours. 
The Republican forces are composed of those military units that  remained      loyal to the government along with socialist, communist and  anarchist      militias. 
On 26 August the leader of the Soviet Union, Joseph Stalin, decides to      back the Republic. Beginning in October the Soviets provide a steady       stream of support, including arms and advisers. Between 700 and  1,000      aircraft are purchased from the Soviet Union, along with about 1,200       armoured vehicles, about 1,500 field guns, four million shells,  15,000      machine guns and 500,000 rifles. 
Mexico sells the Republic about 20,000 rifles, 30 field guns and  provides      supplies of ammunition and food. 
Communist organisations from around the world enlist recruits for  the      'International Brigades'. Independent volunteers also come to the      Republic's aid. United States      writer Ernest Hemingway will base his novel 'For Whom the Bell  Tolls'      on his experiences of the war. British writer George Orwell's book  'Homage      to Catalonia' documents his time in one of the Republican militias. 
However, the Republic is unable to secure the committed support of  the major      Western democracies, including Britain, France and the US. These countries,      along with the League of Nations, adopt a non-interventionist policy  and      refuse to supply the Republic with arms. 
The Republic is also shunned by the international business  community,      although it does control the country's 700 tonnes of gold which, at  the time,      is the fourth largest reserve in the world. In September and October  1936      about 70% of the gold is sent to the Soviet Union for safe-keeping  and as      collateral for Soviet supplies. The gold is never returned. 
The war will last for just under three years. During this entire  period      the Republicans will win only one of the many major battles fought.  Franco's      Nationalists suffer some setbacks but finally succeed in encircling  the      Republican forces, executing tens of thousands as the noose  tightens. Franco      declares that the Nationalists have a list of two million "reds" who       are to be punished for their "crimes". The Catholic Church openly      supports the generalisimo. 
In the course of the war the Republican forces also commit  atrocities,      targeting Catholic clergy and others who they believe are opposed to  their      ideals. At the end of the war the Nationalists will state that 7,937  religious      personnel were killed by the Republicans. 
1937 - In January Franco sets up a  joint      German-Italian general staff. Germany increases its contribution to  the war      effort. 
Following the signing of a secret pact between Franco and  Mussolini, Italy      also increases it's military aid to the Nationalists. Italian  infantry are      grouped into a 'Corps of Volunteer Troops'. Italian air support,  known as      the 'Legionary Air Force', is boosted to 5,000 men. 
On 19 April Franco restructures the Falange, merging it with the  other      Nationalist groups and making it the regime's official political  arm. Franco      is proclaimed chief of the new party. His brother-in-law is made the  leader      of the party executive. The party is later renamed the 'National  Movement'.      Labour groups are consolidated into one large organisation that is      completely subordinated to the Falange. 
In one the most notorious actions of the war, planes from the  German      Condor Legion bomb the Basque town of Guernica on 26 April. The  attack      lasts for about three hours. Guernica is destroyed, 1,654 of its  occupants      are killed and 889 are wounded. The Nationalist forces occupy what  remains      of the town two days later. 
The Spanish-born artist Pablo Picasso later paints a masterpiece  inspired      by the bombing. The monochrome canvas is simply titled 'Guernica'. 
On 28 August the Vatican officially recognises Franco's regime. 
Meanwhile, the Republican forces begin to fight among themselves,  with      communist and anarchist factions battling over ideological  differences      and for control of strategic sites. 
1938 - Following the signing of  treaty      between Britain and Italy in April, the prime minister of the  Republican      Government attempts to open negotiations with the Nationalists for a       peace settlement. However, Franco will accept nothing other than  total      surrender. 
When Germany, Italy, France and Britain sign the 'Munich Agreement'  on      29 September ceding the Sudetenland, the German-speaking area in the  north      of Czechoslovakia,      to Germany the Republic's hope that the outbreak of a general war in  Europe      will bring an end to the non-interventionist policy of the Western  democracies      and save it from defeat is dashed. 
1939 - Britain and France  officially      recognise Franco's regime on 27 February. 
On 28 March the Nationalists take Madrid. The Civil War ends on 1  April.      Franco has won a complete and unconditional victory. Up to 500,000  people      are estimated to have died during the conflict and much of Spain's  infrastructure      has been ruined. The population is further depleted as between  250,000      and 500,000 Republican refugees stream out of the country to find  safety      abroad. 
The new regime faces massive debt, owing 400 million Reichsmarks to  Germany      and five billion lira to Italy alone. 
Now commander-in-chief of the armed forces, head of state, and  leader      of the government, Franco quickly acts to impose order, suppressing  all      those who present a potential threat to the new regime. "The war is      over," he declares, "But the enemy is not dead." 
A state of martial law remains in effect until 1948. Hundreds of  thousands      of Republicans are imprisoned. Between 1939 and 1943 nearly 200,000  are      summarily executed or killed. 
Criticism is regarded as treason, political parties are outlawed,  universal      suffrage is eliminated and the Catholic Church is restored as the  official      religion of Spain. The National Movement is made the country's only  legal      political organisation and the parliament is turned into a puppet of  the      executive. 
Civil marriage is banned, divorce and abortion are made illegal and  the      church regains complete control of the education system. Most of the       reformist legislation introduced by the Republicans is revoked.  Strikes      are banned, the media is muzzled and the moves towards granting  autonomy      to Catalonia and the Basque provinces are reversed. 
Spain becomes a cultural wilderness as artists and intellectuals  are      either forced into exile or silenced by censorship. Trade unions are  destroyed      and their funds and property confiscated. Former supporters of the  Popular      Front are banned from entering public life. 
Franco introduces the 'Nuevo Estado' (New State), a system based on  the      fascist ideas of unquestioning loyalty, the denial of individual  rights      and freedoms, and state intervention in economic and social  management.      The Nuevo Estado is legitimised when it receives the support of the  Catholic      Church. 
The Second World War begins in September. Though sympathetic to the  fascist      powers and prepared to provide them with assistance Franco keeps  Spain      out of direct involvement in the conflict, apart from sending a  division      of troops to fight alongside the Germans on the Eastern Front. 
As the war shifts against the Axis block, Franco moves Spain  towards      a more neutral position, although at wars end Spain is still viewed  as      a pariah state by the rest of the world. Franco is seen as the "last       surviving fascist dictator" of a country prepared to provide asylum      to thousands of Nazi's fleeing justice. 
Spain receives no aid from the Marshall Economic Recovery Program  and      is excluded from membership of the United Nations (UN) and the North      Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO). Franco's attempts to implement a  policy      of economic self-sufficiency leads to further international  isolation,      as well as stagnation of the domestic economy. 
But, as the Cold War bites, Franco begins to be seen as a potential  anticommunist      ally by the West and relations start to thaw.

1947 - Following a referendum,  the      monarchy is reinstated. Franco's position as head of state is  confirmed.      He is to be regent pending the choice of a king, a position he  retains      for the rest of his life.    
1950 - The US resumes diplomatic  relations      with the Spanish Government and begins to provide financial aid. The  UN      also starts to normalise relations, retracting a call made in 1946  for      its members to withdraw their ambassadors from the country. 
1953 - An agreement is signed  with      the US granting aid in exchange for access to Spanish military and  naval      bases. Franco's image is further rehabilitated when he signs an  agreement      with the Vatican that entrenches Catholicism into the life and  institutions      of Spain. 
1955 - Further respectability  comes      when Spain is admitted to the UN. 
1957 - The government is  reorganised      to give a more professional approach to economic management, with  military      administrators being replaced by civilians with business expertise. 
Meanwhile, Spain grants asylum to Ante Pavelic, the fascist      dictator of the 'Independent State of Croatia' during the Second  World War.      Pavelic's reign was one of the bloodiest of the war, resulting in  600,000      to one million deaths. 
1958 - Spain joins the  Organisation      for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) and the  International      Monetary Fund (IMF). 
1959 - Spain opens further to the       world under an IMF stabilisation plan that requires the  liberalisation      of trade and capital flows, including direct foreign investment.  This      overturning of the earlier isolationist economic policies will  result      in a burst of growth and prosperity. 
1960s - The Spanish economy grows       spectacularly as industry is modernised and the country becomes a  popular      tourist destination, with gross domestic product rising by 40%. At  the      same time, popular discontent with the strictures of the regime  starts      to grow and become vocal. Franco responds by slightly loosening his  control. 
1965 - Workers are given the  right      to strike over non-political disputes. Media censorship is relaxed  the      following year. 
1969 - A wave of strikes and  rebellion      in the universities causes Franco to proclaim a "state of exception"       throughout Spain. The rights to freedom of expression and assembly  are      suspended. The state of exception if lifted in March. Franco  designates      32-year-old prince Juan Carlos de Borbón, grandson of former King      Alfonso XIII, as heir to the Spanish throne and his successor. 
1973 - Franco resigns his  position      as leader of the government but remains head of state,  commander-in-chief      of the armed forces, and head of the National Movement. 
1974 - Opposition to the regime  continues      to mount. Strikes spread across the country. Universities are in  turmoil.      Increasing Basque terrorist activity sees the government place the  Basque      provinces under martial law in April 1975. 
1975 - Franco dies on 20 November       in Madrid. His body is entombed at the 'Valley of the Fallen', a  giant      necropolis to the south of Madrid built for Nationalist soldiers  killed      during the Civil War. 
King Juan Carlos I begins to dismantle the authoritarian  institutions      of Franco's regime and encourages the revival of political parties.  Within      three years of Franco's death Spain has become a fully democratic  constitutional      monarchy. 
Postscript
2001 - The Spanish parliament  passes      a motion that officially recognises the existence of victims of  "repression      of the Francoist dictatorship' and denounces "the violent imposition       of ideologies." 
2003 - On 1 December the Spanish  parliament      pays homage to the victims of the Franco regime. However, the  governing      People's Party boycotts the proceedings. 
2004 - A government commission is  created and      provided with funding of about US$1.3 million to investigate ways to  compensate victims      of the Franco regime. The commission is likely to recommend that the  government help      finance the exhumation of mass graves from the Civil War and provide  compensation      payments for people wrongly convicted by the Franco regime. 
The commission will extend the work of organisations like the  Association for the      Recovery of Historical Memory. The association estimates there are  600 mass graves      in Spain and says it has helped find the remains of just over 300  people. 
2005 - The last publicly  displayed statue of Franco      remaining in Madrid is removed from the Plaza de Oriente on 18  March. 
At the same time, the Spanish Government plans to convert the  Franco-era mausoleum      at the Valley of the Fallen to an education centre. 
On 19 July Britain's 'Guardian' newspaper reports that Amnesty Insternational has called on      Spain to "provide justice for tens of thousands of people killed by  General      Franco's death squads during and after the Spanish Civil War." 
"Instead of truth about crimes of the past, its place has been  filled      with silence and in some cases denial, in the absence of an  exhaustive and      impartial investigation," the newspaper quotes a report from Amnesty  as      saying. 
According to the paper, Amnesty has "urged the creation of a truth      commission or an equivalent body to investigate atrocities by both  sides during      the war." 
Amnesty also calls for an end to the impunity extended to those  guilty of      crimes committed on behalf of the Franco dictatorship and the  annulment of      thousands of death sentences handed down by Franco's military  courts. 
Meanwhile, a poll run by the Cadena Ser radio station in November  finds that      30% of Spaniards do not know that Franco overthrew a democratically  elected      government. Over half those polled believed that Franco's influence  could still      be felt. 63% believed that Franco's dictatorship was negative for  Spain. 
2006 - In July a survey by 'El  Mundo'      newspaper finds that a third of those polled believed that Franco  was right      to overthrow the republican government. 
The same month the Spanish Government unveils a draft law dealing  with      some of the legacies of the Civil War and Franco era. Under the  draft law      assistance would be provided for the exhumation of mass graves;  victims of      the war and dictatorship would be compensated; the far right would  be banned      from holding rallies at Franco's grave; members of the International  Brigades      would be given the right to take on Spanish nationality; and funds  would be      set aside to sort out wartime and Franco period archives. 
2007 - On 31 October the lower  house of      the Spanish Parliament passes a bill removing many of the last  vestiges of      the Franco era. 
Under the bill, known as the Law on Historic Memory, the summary  military      trials of the Franco regime are declared illegitimate, along with  their      sentences. All statues, street names and other public symbols  honouring      Franco must be taken down. Political assemblies at the Valley of the  Fallen      are banned. The citizenship of Spaniards forced into exile by the  dictatorship      can be reinstated. The descendants of those exiles will be able to  apply for      citizenship. The program for the exhumation and identification of  victims of      the war is expanded. 
Meanwhile, on 29 October, the Vatican beatifies 498 Spanish priests  and nuns      killed by Republicans during the Civil War. 
2008 - Baltasar Garzón, the  Spanish      judge who famously tried to prosecute Chilean dictator Augusto  Pinochet in      1998, opens a criminal investigation into forced disappearances  during the      Franco era. By October, Garzón has compiled a list of 114,266  disappeared.      However, on 18 November, Garzón drops the case after state  prosecutors      question his jurisdiction. 
In November, Franco's home town of El Ferrol in Galicia strips him  of his      titles of honorary major and favourite son. Later, Franco's heirs  are ordered      to open his summer estate to the public. 
At the end of December the descendants of those who left Spain  during the      Civil War and Franco's regime are given the right to apply for  Spanish      citizenship. 
Comment:      Opinions tend to polarise when it comes to Franco and the Spanish  Civil      War. Creative geniuses like Hemingway and Picasso have ensured that  the      war remains, in the minds of many, as one of the most romantic yet  tragic      conflicts of the 20th Century, especially among those whose  political      beliefs tend to lean to the left. From this perspective Franco can  take      on the bearing of a monster. 
Another view sees Franco as the saviour of a nation, sparing it  from      a communist takeover and the political inflexibility that would doom  the      Soviet Union and its Eastern Block satellites. 
That may be, although the flexibility of the Franco regime was  really      just a reflection of the hollowness at its core. When ideological  questions      are no longer permitted matters of practicality come to the fore.
More information (Links are to external sites)
- Spain - A Country Study (Library of Congress Country Studies Series)
- History of Spain: Primary Documents
- Spanish Civil War Archive
Revolution, Counter-Revolution & Terror - 6 Parts
Source from: grummeper — 1. The origins of the Spanish Civil War - (1/6)
The Spanish Civil War - Granada UK MCMLXXXIII
Playlist: http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list...
Interviewees: Alvaro Delgado (Young Republican), Justino De Azcarate (Under-secretary of Justice), Narciso Julian (Socialist Worker), Timoteo Ruiz (Peasant's Son), Manuel Vazquez Guillen (Land Laborer), Felix Moreno De La Cova (Landowner), Jose Jevgara (Land Reform Official), Pilar Primo De Rivera, Marcel Giro (Catalan Autonomist), Manuel Diez Alegria (Army Officer), Frederica Montseny (Anarchist Leader), Socrates Gomez (Socialist Youth), Manuel Montequin (Asturian Miner), Dolores Ibarruri ('La Pasionaria,' Communist M.P.), Tomas Garicano Goni (Army Officer, Emissary for Mola), Ramon Serrano Suner (Franco's Brother-in-Law), Captain Bebb (Freelance Pilot), Alfredo Leon Lupion (Assault Guard Officer), Juan Manuel Molina (Anarchist Militant), Josep Tarradellas (Minister in Catalan Government).
People: King Alfonso the Thirteenth, Federico Lorca, General Francisco Franco, General José Sanjurjo, the CNT-FAI, Benito Mussolini and the Fascist Party, Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party, the Nationalist Socialist Party of Germany, José Calvo Sotelo, José Antonio Primo de Rivera, General Emilio Mola, Francisco Largo Caballero, Lieutenant José Castillo, Indalecio Prieto, Casares Quiroga.
Places: Belchite, Barcelona in Catalonia, Bilbao in the Basque Country, Andalusia, Astorias, Estremadura, Madrid, Pamplona in Navarre, Spanish Morocco.
Terms: Civil War, Democracy, Fascists and Fascism, Idealists and Idealism, the Second Spanish Republic, Military Coup, El Nina Bonita ("The Beautiful Girl"), Monarchists and Monarchy, Liberals and Liberalism, Dictatorship, Dictators, Agrarian and Working Class, Socialists and Socialism, Social and Land Reforms, Farm Laborers and Industrial Workers, Unemployment and Recession, Economic Exploitation and Wage Slavery, Poverty and Impoverishment, "Neither Property Nor God Nor Bosses," the Catholic Church, Riots, Protests, and Popular Uprisings, Fanaticism and Terrorism, Public Education, Catalan Autonomist Movement, Autonomy, Industrializing and Industrialization, the Right Wing and Rightists, the Left Wing and Leftists, Nationalism and National Unity, Anarchists and Anarchism, Anarcho-Syndicalism, Revolutionary Syndicalism, Casas Viejas, Parliamentary System and Electoral Politics, Women's Suffrage, the General Strike, Overthrow of the State, the Asturias Uprising, the Popular Front, Land Seizures, Carlism and the Carlist Movement, the Spanish Foreign Legion, "the Dictatorship of the Proletariat," Assassinations and Political Extremism.
http://82.143.209.25/1936-1939/spanie...
Second Spanish Republic (1931-1939):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_S...
Documentos de y sobre La II República Española y la guerra de España de 1936-39:
http://er.users.netlink.co.uk/biblio/...
Spanien:
http://da.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanien
Spaniens historie:
http://da.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spaniens...
Spanien 1936-1939 (the Spanish Antifascist War):
http://82.143.209.25/1936-1939/
Spain: Chronology, 1933-1996
http://www.staff.brad.ac.uk/sardouin/...
Internationale Brigader:
http://82.143.209.25/1936-1939/interb...
International Brigades order of battle:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internat...
Spanish Civil War - 1 of 6
Spanish Civil War - 2 of 6
Spanish Civil War - 3 of 6
Spanish Civil War - 4 of 6
Spanish Civil War - 5 of 6
Spanish Civil War - 6 of 6

Revolution, Counter-Revolution & Terror - 1 of 6
Revolution, Counter-Revolution & Terror - 2 of 6
Revolution, Counter-Revolution & Terror - 3 of 6
Revolution, Counter-Revolution & Terror - 4 of 6
Revolution, Counter-Revolution & Terror - 5 of 6
Revolution, Counter-Revolution & Terror - 6 of 6

Battleground for Idealists Part 1 of 6
Battleground for Idealists Part 2 of 6
Battleground for Idealists Part 3 of 6
Battleground for Idealists Part 4 of 6
Battleground for Idealists Part 5 of 6
Battleground for Idealists Part 6 of 6

Franco and the Nationalists - Part 1 of 6
Franco and the Nationalists - Part 2 of 6
Franco and the Nationalists - Part 3 of 6
Franco and the Nationalists - Part 4 of 6
Franco and the Nationalists - Part 5 of 6
Franco and the Nationalists - Part 6 of 6

Inside the Revolution - Part 1 of 6
Inside the Revolution - Part 2 of 6
Inside the Revolution - Part 3 of 6
Inside the Revolution - Part 4 of 6
Inside the Revolution - Part 5 of 6
Inside the Revolution - Part 6 of 6

Victory and Defeat - Part 1 of 6
Victory and Defeat - Part 2 of 6
Victory and Defeat - Part 3 of 6
Victory and Defeat - Part 4 of 6
Victory and Defeat - Part 5 of 6
Victory and Defeat - Part 6 of 6
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