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The Road to Ruin is a 1934 pre-Code exploitation film directed by Dorothy Davenport, under the name "Mrs. Wallace Reid", and Melville Shyer, and written by Davenport with the uncredited contribution of the film's producer, Willis Kent. The film, now in the public domain, portrays a young woman whose life is ruined by sex and drugs.
The Road to Ruin: The Global Elites' Secret Plan for the Next Financial Crisis, a 2016 book by James Rickards Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Road to Ruin .
His fourth book The Road to Ruin: The Global Elites' Secret Plan for the Next Financial Crisis was released on November 15, 2016. In The Road to Ruin, Rickards promulgates a conspiracy theory that "global elites" are using the "stalking horse" of climate change to advance a "new world order" that includes a global currency. [14] [15]
The Road to Ruin was made on a budget of either $15,000 or $25,000, making it one of the least expensive films made that year. [3] Director Norton S. Parker later told his wife that lead actress Helen Foster was much like her character in that she was relatively naive; during the filming of the strip poker scenes, Parker kept a bottle of hard alcohol to offer Foster "liquid courage".
James Rickards, a well-known lawyer and investment banker, has made notable predictions regarding the future pricing of gold. Initially estimating that gold could reach $15,000 per ounce, Rickards ...
The Road to Ruin is an Australian melodrama film directed by W. J. Lincoln. [2] It was one of the first movies from Lincoln-Cass Films and is considered a lost film. [3]
And that leads Rickards to the final step of his calculation. “Applying the $7.2 trillion valuation to 261.5 million troy ounces yields a gold price of $27,533 per ounce,” he wrote.
Human Wreckage is a 1923 American independent silent drama [1] propaganda film [2] that starred Dorothy Davenport and featured James Kirkwood, Sr., Bessie Love, and Lucille Ricksen. The film was co-produced by Davenport and Thomas H. Ince and distributed by Film Booking Offices of America , with a premiere on June 17, 1923. [ 3 ]