

Jan
8
Jan
8

Daffy Duck takes on the Nazis in this old cartoon. It was referred to as "banned" where I got it, but people keep saying they've seen it on TV recently so I guess it's just rare. :P The two cards that provide the English translation appear to be blank, but I put the translations in through the miracle of annotations!
Jan
8
Jan
8
Jan
8

After a considerable delay, here's part 1 of "Duck Soup", the fifth Marx Brothers film and the last they made for Paramount (and incidentally the last Marx film with Zeppo). It bombed in 1933, but is now (rightfully, IMO) considered to be one of the funniest movies of all time. BTW, "Duck Soup" also marks (no pun intended) the first time Margaret Dumont worked with the Marxes on a script written directly for the screen- her two previous films with them had been based on stage plays.
Jan
8
Jan
8
Jan
8

An episode of Duck Tales dealing with the negative consequences of inflation. for more information visit www.mises.org http://www.blogsmonroe.com/liberalpolitics/

Music video by 3 Doors Down performing Duck And Run with Marc Webb, William Boyd (C) 2000 Universal Records, a Division of UMG Recordings, Inc.
Jan
8

Donald Duck single-handedly takes out the Japenese troops...another piece of military propaganda from the folks who brought you today's society!
Jan
8

This is an original Walt Disney cartoon with Donald Duck. It's really funny and I uploaded it for all Disney fans like me so enjoy!
Jan
8

Duck and Cover was a suggested method of personal protection against the effects of a nuclear detonation which the United States government taught to generations of United States school children from the late 1940s into the 1980s. This was supposed to protect them in the event of an unexpected nuclear attack which, they were told, could come at any time without warning. Immediately after they saw a flash they had to stop what they were doing and get on the ground under some cover—such as a table, or at least next to a wall—and assume the fetal position, lying face-down and covering their heads with their hands. Similar instructions were given in 1964 in the United Kingdom by Civil Defence Information Bulletin No. 5. and, in the 1980s, by the Protect and Survive series. Critics have said that this training would be of little, if any, help in the event of thermonuclear war, and had little effect other than promoting a state of unease and paranoia. The United States' monopoly on nuclear weapons was broken in 1949 when the Soviet Union tested its first nuclear device, and many in the government and public perceived that the United States was more vulnerable than it ever had been before. Duck-and-cover exercises had quickly become a part of Civil Defense drills that every American citizen, from kids to the elderly, practiced so as to be ready in the event of nuclear war. In 1950, during the first big Civil Defense push of the Cold War; the movie Duck and Cover was produced (by the Federal Civil Defense Administration) for school showings in 1951. At the time, it was believed the main dangers of a Hiroshima-type nuclear blast were from heat and blast damage: radioactive fallout itself was not clearly identified until 1954, after the Castle Bravo nuclear-weapon test in the Marshall Islands caused sickness and death in Japanese fishermen on the Lucky Dragon fishing vessel.

Look at this episode with Donald Duck. A friend of mine played it in slowmotion when Chip and Dale speaks... You can hear what they say clearly Watch this and please comment... All credits for making this video should be going to my friend Faxandu































