Live Free or Die is a 2000 documentary film that follows Dr. Wayne Goldner, a New Hampshire OBGYN fighting on the latest front of the "abortion wars." The feature originally aired as part of PBS' P.O.V. series. It was directed and produced by Marion Lipschutz and Rose Rosenblatt of Incite Pictures.
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, 33minutes OriginUSA GenresDocumentary, Fantasy ThemesPregnancy films, Films about sexuality, Documentaire sur une personnalité, Documentary films about health care Rating53% The film begins by showing images of the Holocaust, and stating that Hitler sanctioned the killing of 11 million people. This is followed by Comfort interviewing people about Adolf Hitler; their responses indicate a lack of historical knowledge, although he also finds a neo-Nazi who claims to love Hitler. Comfort proposes a hypothetical situation to his interviewees, asking if they would kill Hitler if they had the opportunity at that time in history. He asks more hypotheticals dealing with what his interviewees might do in other circumstances related to the Holocaust.
GenresDocumentary ThemesPregnancy films, Films about racism, Films about sexuality, Documentary films about racism, Documentary films about law, Documentaire sur une personnalité, Documentary films about health care Rating76% The title comes from the Swahili term "maafa," which means tragedy or disaster and is used to describe the centuries of global oppression of African people during slavery, apartheid and colonial rule, while the number "21" refers to an alleged maafa in the 21st century (though beginning in the 19th), which the film says is the disproportionately high rate of abortion among African Americans. The film states that abortion has reduced the black population in the United States by 25 percent. It discusses some of Planned Parenthood's origins (formerly the American Birth Control League), attributing to it a "150-year-old goal of exterminating the black population." It attacks Margaret Sanger, along with other birth control advocates, as a racist eugenicist. The film features conservative African Americans who are associated with the Tea Party movement, including politician Stephen Broden, and Martin Luther King, Jr.'s niece Alveda King, who claims that Sanger targeted black people.
, 28minutes OriginUSA GenresDocumentary ThemesPregnancy films, Films about sexuality, Documentaire sur une personnalité, Documentary films about health care Rating51% Dans ce film, Bernard Nathanson, ancien avorteur repenti, sert à la fois d'expert médical et de narrateur. Il décrit les événements de l'avortement « du point de vue de la victime ». Le film compile une série d'images floues de nature échographique. Nathanson montre au grand public les instruments utilisés pour un avortement typique et prétend que la tête, même à la gestation de 12 semaines, sera trop grande pour entrer dans le dispositif d'aspiration ; il montre alors comment les forceps sont utilisés pour écraser le crâne, où les ondes cérébrales, d'après lui, ont été actives pendant six semaines.