http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-7644857907453201814
Think of the subject line as not unlike the movie - Clue, which was subject to being viewed with multiple endings. In this sense and with respect to alternate points of view likely to be found upon sampling, for instance, the big wide mainstream world, there might easily be a wide range of appropriate subject lines .... multiple beginings, attributed to this interview. From the early part of this one hour and thirty eight minute moment with Eustace Mullins, Eustace begins to provide numerous revelations from the knowledge gained through his historical research on numerous inter-related topics. He explains who it was that had enlisted him to conduct much of his earliest research; Ezra Pound. He tells of some of the people that Ezra had helped make wonderfully famous. Who knew that Pound was, for instance, Hemingway's editor? The interviewer then asks a series of questions and Eustace answers. He answers, for instance that in his opinion the relatively recently reconstituted state entity broadly referred to as "Israel" is synonomous with Zionism. He also links the various interests that brought this modern state into existance with some of the more visible interests currently leading the charge of protecting this Israel on a global scale. Therefore, from the point of view of a sample mainstream alternative, the subject line might read something like "a day with that damn anti-semite Eustace Mullins", or perhaps "a day with the unpatriotic unAmerican Eustace Mullins". The interview eventually delves into the seedy nature of the Federal Reserve Bank, naming many names from a broad cast and history of international characters. Thereofore another sample mainstream alternate subject line might begin with something like "a day with that paranoid conspiracy theorist hate-crimes promoter Eustace Mullins". Eustace expounds upon numerous critical facts of the recent' 100 year's worth of history, like the history behind world wars, the history behind the use of fluoridated water, the history of E.M. House, and the like. From the perspective of anyone who inclined to object to these kinds of revelations, the subject line might be more appropriately worded, "a day with that despicable anti-fluorodite Eustace Mullins", etc. Enjoy.