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本帖最后由 billzhao 于 2015-6-27 19:45 编辑 V* w# \! I& f3 {
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3HTtLHgU9tY
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9 p& ?7 F r- b& QCNN documentary& T9 d P+ d; Q. H, M5 @) e
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New documentary explores Jonestown mass suicide/ o# ` _5 ^$ o6 m3 w. R! a
! v4 {- W6 E# q- y0 j7 hTwenty-eight years later, what's left to say about Jonestown? Nine hundred members of a religious cult followed their fanatical leader to Guyana and willingly committed suicide by drinking a Kool-Aid-like mixture laced with cyanide.
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" T' @: W0 u, R- w) SWhat more could there be to the story? Plenty, it turns out.
6 V1 A) o# U) J3 LI watched an advance copy of the new documentary, "Jonestown," by filmmaker Stanley Nelson on Sunday, and found myself drawn deeply into a macabre tale that I had little prior knowledge of.2 |/ ^! |( l8 z
: h& O$ C9 H0 ^1 a0 z5 yNelson interviewed more than two dozen former members of Jim Jones' controversial Peoples Temple, including some who survived the Jonestown mass suicide -- which, by the way, looks more like mass murder now. And Nelson has unearthed dramatic video and sound recordings -- never seen or heard before that shed new light on the establishment, development and downfall of the Peoples Temple, right up until the moment Jim Jones passes out the cups.
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8 K: h- C7 e5 iThe most chilling part of the film is the audio tape of Jones urging his followers to choose death over persecution. I heard, for the first time, the emotionally-pitched debate between Jones and parishioners who would rather live than die in the South American jungle. It was like a scene out of Apocalypse Now, only this time, the killing was real.
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I also learned that Jim Jones didn't suddenly take a hard left onto the highway of darkness. He was deeply disturbed from childhood, and is even suspected of abusing animals, something many experts believe is a hallmark of an emerging psychopath.5 W9 o! f: L: v. F& }) p9 z8 D
3 H/ D5 K: R; ^( r+ UWhat's most tragic though is that Jones' followers don't come off as a cult of religious deviants. They were -- for the most part -- earnest people, attracted to the Peoples Temple for the sense of community they couldn't find in their own lives. It gave them a feeling of belonging, though as the years wore on and Jones' insanity escalated, membership came at an ever-increasing, and in the end, ultimate price.
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