Roger Sloman

Roger Sloman

  • Born: 1946-5-19
  • Height: 6' 2" (1.88 m)
  • Extended Reading
    • August 2022-02-02 08:16:20

      real history jack reed

      John Reed Biography A. Williams (1967) The first American city where workers refused to ship arms to Kolchak's army was Portland on the Pacific coast. On October 22, 1887, John Reed was born in this city. Reed's father, as Jack London described in one of his novels about the American West, was a...

    • Damien 2022-02-02 08:16:20

      The special taste of chowder

      I once recommended this film to a girl with mixed food habits, but she was euphemistically rejected. Maybe this has something to do with the label of this film - it is a series of depressing terms: labor movement, socialism, the October Revolution, and finally Is dispensable love. Obviously, this...

    • Jade 2022-03-25 09:01:23

      1. Ideals are worth living and dying for. 2. You can't estimate the power of a person and the power of love. 3. Sensitive words...

    • Hugh 2022-03-25 09:01:23

      A biopic of Reid, an American journalist who wrote "Ten Days That Shaked the World", but the focus seems to be on his love with Louis, so the Chinese name is more relevant than the English name. There is quite a bit about the socialist movements and leftist artists of the early 20th century in the West and Russia.

    Reds quotes

    • Eugene O'Neill: Jack dreams that he can hustle the American working man, who's one dream is that he could be rich enough not to work, into a revolution led by *his* party.

    • John Reed: All right, Miss Bryant, do you want an interview? Write this down. Are you naïve enough to think containing German militarism has anything to do with this war? Don't you understand that England and France own the world economy and Germany just wants a piece of it? Keep writing, Miss Bryant. Miss Bryant, can't you grasp that J. P. Morgan has loaned England and France a billion dollars? And if Germany wins, he won't get it back! More coffee? America'd be entering the war to protect J. P. Morgan's money. If he loses, we'll have a depression. So the real question is, why do we have an economy where the poor have to pay so the rich won't lose money?