This site is crazy albuterol package insert Not as inventive as Gore’s film, Jacob Kornbluth’s “Inequality for All” presents Reich’s position by patching together lectures from his “Wealth & Poverty” course at the University of California, Berkeley. That, and many, many charts and graphs. The latter repeat variations on the same theme: how the pattern of increased concentration of wealth in the top 1 percent of the population, combined with a policy of tax cuts and reduced federal spending, exactly mirrors the major economic declines since the Great Depression of 1929. Point taken, and often repeated, and though the film includes hard-luck stories from victims of the latest downturn, it doesn’t quite have the resonance of images of receding glaciers and stranded polar bears.
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