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Watch "Zeitgeist: Addendum" Full Movie Online

Information

Year: 2008
Rating: 8.7(4494)
Listed in: Documentary, History, War
Directed by: Peter Joseph
Actors: Jacque Fresco Jiddu Krishnamurti John Perkins Roxanne Meadows

Cast

 Directed by
Peter Joseph  
 Actors
Jacque Fresco as Himself
Jiddu Krishnamurti as Himself
John Perkins as Himself
George Carlin as Himself
Ron Paul as Himself
 Actresses
Roxanne Meadows as Herself

Movie info

Languages: English

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Goofs

  Fact errors: (At 73:55) In the chapter 'Scarcity', the narrator states: "We don't usually pay for air and tap water, because it is in such high abundance..." But most of us do pay for tap water, with prices usually soaring after privatization (as is even explained elsewhere (at 42:10) in this documentary).

Quotes

  Narrator: So, what do we do? How do we stop a system of greed and
corruption?
Narrator: The true terrorists of our world do not meet at the docks
at midnight, or scream "Allahu Akbar" before some violent action.
The true terrorists of our world wear 5000 dollar suits and work in
the highest positions of finance, government and business.
Narrator: The fact is, efficiency, sustainability, and abundance are
enemies of profit. To put it into a word, it is the mechanism of
scarcity that increases profit.
Jacque Fresco: War, poverty, corruption, hunger, misery, human
suffering will not change in a monetary system. That is, there will
be very little significant change. It's going to take the redesign
of our culture and values.
Narrator: It is important to point out that regardless of the social
system - whether fascist, socialist, capitalist, or communist - the
underlying mechanism is still money, labor, and competition.
Communist China is no less capitalistic than the United States. The
only difference is the degree by which the state intervenes in
enterprise. The reality is that "Monetary-ism", so to speak, is the
true mechanism that guides the interest of *all* the countries on
the planet.
[last lines]
Jiddu Krishnamurti: What we are trying in all these discussions and
talks here, is to see if we cannot radically bring about a
transformation of the mind. *Not accept things as they are* - but
to understand it, to go into it, examine it, give your heart and
your mind with every thing that you have to find out. A way of
living differently. But that depends on you and not somebody else.
Because in this there is no teacher, no pupil. There's no leader,
there is no guru, there's no master, no savior. You yourself are
the teacher, and the pupil, you're the master, you're the guru, you
are the leader, you are everything! And, to understand is to
transform what is.
Narrator: Our true divinity is in our ability to create. And armed
with the understanding of the symbiotic connections of life, while
being guided by the emergent nature of reality, there is nothing we
cannot do or accomplish.
Narrator: We have to alter our behavior to force the power structure
to the will of the people. We must stop supporting the system.
Narrator: The real revolution is the revolution of consciousness and
each one of us first needs to eliminate the divisionary,
materialistic noise we have been conditioned to think is true;
while discovering, amplifying, and aligning with the signal coming
from our true empirical oneness. It is up to you.
Narrator: Corruption is not some by-product of monetary-ism, it is
it's very foundation.
Narrator: The world is being taken over by a handful of business
powers who dominate the natural resources we need to live, while
controlling the money we need to obtain these resources. The end
result will be world monopoly based not on human life but financial
and corporate power.
Narrator: As the inequality grows, naturally, more and more people
are becoming desperate. So the establishment was forced to come up
with a new way to deal with anyone who challenges the system. So
they gave birth to the 'Terrorist'. The term 'terrorist' is an
empty distinction designed for any person or group who chooses to
challenge the establishment.
Narrator: Of all the social institutions we are born into, directed
by, and conditioned upon, there seems to be no system to be taken
as granted, and misunderstood, as the monetary system. Taking on
nearly religious proportions, the established monetary institution
exists as one of the most unquestioned forms of faith there is. How
money is created, the policies by which it is governed, and how it
truly affects society, are unregistered interests of the great
majority of the population.
Narrator: The fractional reserve policy, perpetrated by the Federal
Reserve, which has spread in practice to the great majority of
banks in the world, is, in fact, a system of modern slavery.
Narrator: In a world where 1 % of the population owns 40% of the
planet's wealth... In a world where 34,000 children die every
single day from poverty and preventable diseases, and where 50% of
the world's population lives on less than 2 dollars a day... One
thing is clear. Something is very wrong. And whether we are aware
of it or not, the lifeblood of all our established institutions and
thus society itself is money.
Narrator: Physical slavery requires people to be housed and fed.
Economic slavery requires people to feed and house themselves.
Narrator: It is interesting to note that twice as many people die
from peanut allergies a year than from terrorism.
Narrator: Without money, a great majority of the crimes that are
committed today would never occur. Virtually all forms of crimes
are a consequence of the monetary system.
Narrator: Being wrong is erroneously associated with failure, when,
in fact, to be proven wrong should be celebrated, for it elevates
someone to a new level of understanding.
Narrator: Our outmoded social systems have broken apart. It's time to
claim the unity and work together to create a sustainable global
society, where everyone is taken care of and everyone is truly
free.
Jiddu Krishnamurti: [opening lines] We were saying how very important
it is to bring about, in the human mind, the radical revolution.
The crisis is a crisis in consciousness, the crisis that cannot
anymore accept the old norms, the old patterns, the ancient
traditions and considering what the world is now, with all the
misery, conflict, destructive brutality, aggression and so on. Man
is still as he was, is still brutal, violent, aggressive,
acquisitive, competitive and... he has built a society along these
lines.
Jacque Fresco: American industry is essentially a fascist
institution. The minute you punch that time clock you walk into a
dictatorship.
[first lines]
[lines from Zeitgeist, 2007, repeated]
Carl Sagan: The old appeals to racial, sexual and religious
chauvinism, to rabid nationalist fervor are beginning not to work.
Richard Alpert: The business of who I am and whether I'm good or bad,
or achieving or not, all that's learned along the way.
Bill Hicks: It's just a ride. And we can change it any time we
want...
Narrator: The illusion of democracy is an insult to our intelligence.
In a monetary system, there is no such thing as a true democracy,
and there never was.

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