Knowledge is power. The High Priority Party is not a left or right leaning political association. The High Party bases it issues, views, and political stances based on information. Anyone who makes a decision to support or argue against a viewpoint, based on the source of its political party is foolish, and blindly indoctrinated to follow, whether a point is right or wrong. We shall not be marching robots, but alive living- breathing, bleeding, Stewarts of our communities. We will struggle to pull our fellow marching robot patriotic Americans from throwing our national experiment off the edge of the cliff. If we do not inform ourselves, if we do not track the public actions of our elected officials, if we continue to lie to ourselves about the heavy Corporate pressures on our democratic system, this great American experiment will cease to exist.
Inform Yourself will be our blog documentary series, where we will present informative films about issues in our communities. Viewers can use a number of viewer choices including Netflix, itunes, or Amazon Prime. We recommend a monthly subscription to Netflix, as most of our documentaries are featured on Netflix to reduce costs. Remember not to be forced into purchasing these films. Some will be available at local libraries and so, this educational exercise should not be an expensive one. This week's choices are Inequality for All (2013) and The Big Fix (2012).
Inequality for All (2013)
A documentary that follows former U.S. Labor Secretary Robert Reich as he looks to raise awareness of the country's widening economic gap.
The Big Fix (2012)
A documentary that examines the April 2010 oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico following the sinking of the Deepwater Horizon oil rig.
Feel free to leave your comments about each of the films. Express what you liked or did not liked. No work of art is without flaw. And watch with as many people as possible. Thank you.
"The struggle is real."
-Cowan F. Amaye-Obu
Inform Yourself will be our blog documentary series, where we will present informative films about issues in our communities. Viewers can use a number of viewer choices including Netflix, itunes, or Amazon Prime. We recommend a monthly subscription to Netflix, as most of our documentaries are featured on Netflix to reduce costs. Remember not to be forced into purchasing these films. Some will be available at local libraries and so, this educational exercise should not be an expensive one. This week's choices are Inequality for All (2013) and The Big Fix (2012).
Inequality for All (2013)
A documentary that follows former U.S. Labor Secretary Robert Reich as he looks to raise awareness of the country's widening economic gap.
The Big Fix (2012)
A documentary that examines the April 2010 oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico following the sinking of the Deepwater Horizon oil rig.
Feel free to leave your comments about each of the films. Express what you liked or did not liked. No work of art is without flaw. And watch with as many people as possible. Thank you.
"The struggle is real."
-Cowan F. Amaye-Obu


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